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Posts posted by theflashunc
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7 hours ago, Bronty said:
Actually, this is probably a great place to ask:
I am a fan of his artwork but only tangentially aware of the comics his work appeared in (Blueberry etc).
If someone wanted to dive in and get familiar with his work, where should they start?
If you want arguably the lowest barrier of entry, his Silver Surfer limited series is familiar characters through the lens of Moebius.
But yes, otherwise, Incal.
- Twanj and Sideshow Bob
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One approach I've not seen much elsewhere is Dale Eaglesham's work on FF with Hickman and Mounts. Dale just did super tight pencils for each page -- no inks -- and Paul would color digitally based on the pencils.
- BuraddoRun, ThierryX, PixelPusher and 2 others
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First, I'd keep this page from my Evan Dorkin Eltingville pages I've got. Tough to pass up this Kirby homage in a book about toxic fandom.
Second, I have a couple pages from Dale Eaglesham's run on Hickman's early Fantastic Four (which is Solve Everything might be my second favorite FF arc ever). The Multiverse Council of Reed Richards is the obvious choice, with Dale's crazy tight pencils and no inks. Mounts colored all of the pages digitally direct from the pencils.
Last but not least, another Hickman series, Secret Warriors. It's a tough call since Alessandro's Vitti's stuff on the series was incredible, but I'd go with Nick Fury finally putting one in Baron Strucker's head after all these years.
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Having gone through Spencer's stock he brought to a convention, I can attest what he's got for certain artists far exceeds what's on the website, and the hunt it seems is very, very real when sorting through requests from potential buyers.
I've bought from him both on the site and in person. The site is quirky and the process ain't Amazon Prime, but communication was always clear and under promised and over-delivered in my book. Just have some patience. Or just go to a show he's at and hunker down wading through the pages yourself.
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I keep them in box. Like a bag and board designed for it, so why not? Not like they're easy to store anyways. The box doesn't add any complication for a lot of upside.
If anything the Chris Samnee Daredevil one I have came box-less, so that one sticks out as the oddity in my collection. Reminds me I need to go pull the Simonson Thor off the shelf and flip through it...
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I've kept them as well.
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23 minutes ago, ESeffinga said:
To me, that’s just silly fun and I have no beef with that at all, no matter how weird it is. I’m thinking more of things like rape party, or the illustration of the dad setting his enormous engorged member on his very young daughter’s head, at the family barbecue.
But hey, naked Boo Berry is fun too, right?
I just don't understand the need to sexualize a cartoon character on a cereal box aimed squarely at kids. But hey, formative years and all that. Agreed, on the spectrum, quite harmless compared to some of the other stuff out there.
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The most particular one I've seen is the the seasonal Kellogg's Halloween cereal characters -- Frankenberry, Count Chocula, Boo Berry -- turned into topless pin-up ladies.
I'm horrified but also applaud anyone who's found their extremely specific niche interest. Topless Count Chocula, who'da thunk.
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As always comes down to supply and demand as others mentioned.
This thread did remind me I was at Isotope in San Francisco not too long after moving here, looking to pick up comics for the week. I didn't have a pull list set up yet, and there was this dude standing in front of the comics wall rack totally in the way, thumbing through an issue of what I think was Hulk. And I'm trying to get a copy of the newest Thor.
Guy turns around, and it's Erik Larsen. Couldn't have been nicer, even if he did block the rack for a bit.
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1 hour ago, ESeffinga said:
I may be the only board member who’s wife has a degree in sequential art?
So... there’s that.
My partner's got an art history degree with a focus on 20th century modernism. She gets it. Her only request is we don't have comic art dominate the walls, and I stay within a reasonable budget that doesn't impact broader finances.
So easy peasy on this front.
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The Joe Kelly Deadpool run is the reason the movies happened. He's not Deadpool without that run, not to mention McGuinness and others art on that run, as others mentioned.
I'd wager stuff from that run is more scarce and pricey. But yes, there's oversaturation too.
As others mentioned, some unique circumstances but it ain't like there's no demand for it.
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100% serial Batman. Which is both incredible for what it brought to the mythos -- Alfred, the Bat Cave, etc -- but ye Gods watching some poor schmoe whip a heavy wool cape around while trying to hit his marks in a fight scene was...tough to suspend the disbelief for a bit.
TCM shows the serials from time to time. Great for a watch.
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Work work work.
I do love the art from the earlier days of the series.
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14th or 15th what everyone else has said. Mark even expedited a piece to me to get signed at a convention. Top notch.
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How has this gotten to three pages with no mention of Mike Allred?
For the "who's doing the yeoman's work out there" question, tough to beat Chris Samnee for that imo. Guy just flat out works.
Matt Kindt is another I'd throw out there for his watercolor work.
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On 7/18/2019 at 12:42 PM, Rick2you2 said:
Indirectly raising an interesting question: have we ever seen a super-hero get sh*t-faced drunk in a comic and then do something stupid (like Green Lantern tying one on and then etching Carol Ferris's picture on a planet?). Would make for an interesting story line.
Jason Aaron has done a few drunk Young Thor stories in his recent run on the character. The Thor across eras concept he brought in was genius.
Demon in a Bottle is less funny and more sad.
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Prelim roughs of Eltingville Club #2, and the finished cover from Evan Dorkin. Evan's lettered pages are filled with adjustments and corrections, and the backs of some pages are littered with head sketches. Lots of cool process in his work.
Your collecting style: Eras? Artists? Titles? A mix?
in Original Comic Art
Posted
Three main areas for me:
1) Eltingville Club
2) mix of childhood stuff that was important to me personally, but maybe not considered top tier stuff (Paul Ryan FF)
3) Modern stuff I've enjoyed reading (Matt Kindt's Mind MGMT)