Dan Wagstaff interviews Fantagraphics Books art director Jacob Covey. I love his cover for Supermen! The First Wave of Comic Book Heroes (1936-1941); perhaps inspiration for my next Tumblr theme.
A transmission from the deep south.
Dan Wagstaff interviews Fantagraphics Books art director Jacob Covey. I love his cover for Supermen! The First Wave of Comic Book Heroes (1936-1941); perhaps inspiration for my next Tumblr theme.
Hallowe’en cover for The New Yorker by Chris Ware. The story continues in comic form here and here. (via Mike Hudack)
Superb Where the Wild Things Are tribute by former comic book artist Mark Masztal. (via Terrible Yellow Eyes)
Wilson, a new graphic novel by Daniel Clowes will be published in May 2010. (via Peter Nidzgorski)
Charlie Brown portrait by Tim O’Brien. (via Peter Nidzgorski)
Joe Lambert reimagines Erik Larsen and Randy Emberlin’s The Amazing Spider-Man cover. (via Spaceships)
“To the Rescue” by Jonathan on DeviantArt. (via Danny Garcia)
In an interview with LetterCult, Mojo’s Corey Holms discusses his work on the print campaign for Zack Snyder’s Watchmen film, and other recent work. In particular, he gives insight into how his agency redrew the Watchmen logotype to correct a previous typographic blunder, talks about the growing trend towards hand-drawn type, and has some candid words on ubiquitous film poster typeface Trajan.
“Who watches the watchbabies? A good babysitter is hard to find.” Watchbabies illustration by Glen Brogan. (via Super Punch)
Rorschach gets his own Watchmen poster. (via I Watch Stuff)
Written and designed by Matthew Buchanan. Colophon. Please give credit. Email