Boston, Ho
Gotta hit the road, this is gonna be quick:
- Interview with Danielle Corsetto from Stumpton Trade Review conducted during the recently-concluded Emerald City con.
- MoCCA‘s education series continues, and the sessions of interest to anybody doing any kind of comics, anywhere, ever, have got to be four Tuesdays in April and May on anatomy with R Sikoryak and Kriota Willberg:
Through PowerPoint presentations, in-class exercises, and at-home assignments, students will learn to see and draw the structures and tissues that give the body shape and character. Willberg will—literally!—draw on live models to trace muscle groups and bony landmarks. Sikoryak will demonstrate the application of anatomical understanding to any cartooning style. Students will practice drawing from live models in class and learn to apply the lessons to their own characters.
Details at the MoCCA site; $275 tuition, $250 for members.
- On ideas, scarcity and plenitude: two viewpoints, from Howard Tayler and Olaf Moriarty Solstrand. Tayler’s taking exception to the most common question that creative types get, Where do you get your ideas? and giving it a right kicking. Solstrand (webmaster of the largest webcartooning network in Norway and writer of Donald Duck comics, which makes him one of the biggest deals in comics everywhere on this planet except America) has set himself the project of:
[A] brain exercise to keep the blog updated and also to keep myself on the toes at all times: I’m trying to come up with one hundred comic ideas in one hundred days.
For the first six days, I’ve succeeded pretty well: One idea a day, and I already have the next three ideas planned in advance. The level of ideas we’re talking about ranges from simple plot ideas to ideas on completely different ways to make comics. If everything goes well, I’ll publish idea #100 June 24 this year.
Of course, the more people actually looking over my shoulder and expecting me to update something, the bigger is the chance I’ll actually succeed.
I must confess, I hadn’t heard of Solstrand’s blog (and since I live in America where Donald Duck comics aren’t so common), nor was I familiar with his comics work. But since he wrote me a few days ago, I’ve been perusing his blog and enjoying the hell out of myself. Start reading, start learning, and take some inspiration.









