polexiac asked: What was your favorite cartoon as a kid?
Tiny Toons was. Babs the rabbit was a lady character who was the comedian in the Buster/Babs duo. I think that was a rare thing and really cool!
Tiny Toons was. Babs the rabbit was a lady character who was the comedian in the Buster/Babs duo. I think that was a rare thing and really cool!
I did not go to art school! This is probably rather apparent in my work. But I had a similar problem when I was that age. I really wanted to be an artist, but we were in such a small backwater that no one really knew what to tell me about art school and how to get in. I was really discouraged, and I didn’t even apply. I feel for these students! Absolutely keep asking around for advice on portfolios for them, if anyone like that showed up for me at the time, it would have meant a lot. I bet you’re a good teacher. If it is worth anything at all, what I do does show that you don’t necessarily need to go to art school to be an artist.
If it is as good as Lackadaisy Cats, I’m all for it!
I don’t. Do you?
I still walk around with a sketch book and pencils, but doodling is a lot of fun with these hard tipped brush pens I get off jetpens.com! I also draw comics with them! I keep it pretty simple.
I have not I think, and that is a good point! But I would probably rather celebrate a cool African figure like Patrice Lumumba than some horrible white colonial person.
That’s hard! I have definitely had those days. I usually recognize then that I need a change of pace. I need to work from a different location, I need to go for a walk and think without any internet, I need to sit in a library. Remove myself from what is eating at me, even just to get something done. You need to jog your brain back to a place where humour can come out, because you know it’s there. There is no one who is going to feel funny every day, and that’s ok.
My family is very good about the comics I make about them. Mostly they are just observations of day-to-day things, and in the end, those comics are about love and connection. I’m really glad when other people like them or can relate to them, because it makes me feel closer to my readers as a human being. The fact that I make them is just part of the wallpaper at home now, though publishing them would be a different story. I don’t cross lines that would make my parents uncomfortable.
No, I never was quitting comics! The website will always be something I aim to maintain. There came a time when I branched out into other work, and I had to slow the website down because it was not my main source of income anymore. But I always come back to it, even when the updates are less than I’d like.
I think that Cape Breton culture is one that values humour, though this is true for a lot of places. I definitely give credit to the rural, tight knit gaelic sort of sensibilities - poking affectionate fun at the human failings in your friends and neighbours - in how I grew as a humourist myself.
Yes! You should definitely read Octopus Pie by Meredith Gran, and Bad Machinery by John Allison. I always recommend those. And you should read anything by Jillian Tamaki or Emily Carroll.
Hi! Hark A Vagrant is a project that officially started in September 2007, but unofficially, I was making comics for my university newspaper before then, in 2003-2005. Those comics developed into something like you see on H!AV, because I was studying history at the time. I was a double major in History and Anthro.
Ok! Welcome to my Tumblr Answer Time! I’m going to open this mailbox full of questions! I had to make a gif of myself! Weird! I’m nodding into infinity.
Good morning to you from Toronto! I’m joining the fabulous roster at Tumblr’s Answer Time tomorrow, Sept 10th! Here’s what is going on and what you need to know: