Monday, March 23, 2009

Old Stuff--Crime and Punishment

Recently, I was asked about my older works, which are really just the pencil sketches that I haven't Photoshopped yet, and it occurred to me that those versions are more to the tastes of some than the more elaborate colored versions. I supposed there is more warmth to the pencil line, and Photoshopping make take a little of the "life" of the picture out of it.

Anyway, most of my old posts have disappeared into the internet ether, so they're a little tricky to find (best bet: Boilerplant's Google group, http://groups.google.com/group/boilerplant), but I was specifically asked about a series called Crime and Punishment. In this, Patty Van Dyke commits yet another violation of Cracker County's decency laws and pays a heavy, corporal penalty. Eventually, I'll get around to Photoshopping these too, but here they are, with captions added with ComicLife, in all their 2007 glory.









Saturday, March 7, 2009

While You're Waiting...

While you're waiting for me to come up with some new material (I'm working on it--honest!), here's a few older things I didn't even consider for dA.






Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Promises, Promises

I took things off of my dA page--pics that I figured would be banned--and promised to post them here. As a slacker, there's no point in trying to explain the delays, so let me get to posting...

...dang, now I have to remember what I took down...oh, yeah...

Had to comb through the thread I post my stuff at www.thedarkspot.com to find the text, so...

Being employed only part-time at the Cracker County Library, Patty Van Dyke's story is one of many temporary jobs, including when she took a short-term teaching position at the Junior College. When her contract was up, her students loved her so much that at her farewell, they asked her to be a special judge for the science project grand prize, awarded to the best of the best of each category.

Here, the winner in the robotics category was being displayed to her as the winners in the medical and physics categories waited their turn.