Splinter of the Mind’s Eye – Part 17
New to Blue Milk Special? Start reading from the beginning!
BMS is sooooo not for kids and yet the art style often attracts that very age group. The fact that Leia has her cigarettes back in today’s strip reminded me of something that happened to Leanne and myself while at New York Comic Con. A kid came up to the table and looked at some of the BMS artwork then looked up at me and pointed at a picture of Leia and asked “Why is Leia smoking?” I immediately felt awkward. The six or so year old asked me with that mixture of innocence and morality that young children are able to wield devastatingly, leaving adults speechless and desperate for answers. I can’t even remember what I said in response. I think I must have been so stunned and lost for words that I just blanked and he walked off.
In retrospect I realize now that I should have told the kid that Leia’s actress Carrie Fisher used to smoke, drink and do illegal narcotics. Is BMS corrupting the innocent? Next time you see a kid looking at our webcomic, do us a favor and cover their eyes. ;=
A little about the illustrator…
Anyway, there’s a mission for today’s blog. A while back (before this website was hacked in January 2010 and had to be rebuilt) we used to have banner links in the right sidebar. The first and foremost of these was to Leanne’s professional website. As you may, or may not know, Blue Milk Special is a husband and wife collaborative effort. I thought it was high time that I gave Leanne’s work a plug. Without Leanne’s unique cartoon style and her natural affinity for visual humor, BMS wouldn’t exist at all.
For the first time we’re going to give readers a real behind the scenes look at the making of Blue Milk Special. While I write the strips and dabble in some of the art, Leanne handles the bulk of the original art you often see appearing in the strips.
Leanne is the primary illustrator for the BMS webcomic. However, being a collaboration both Leanne and I divide some of the art chores and she also contributes ideas for some of the strips. The process is multifaceted. Leanne does a rough sketch in blue pencil of the characters required for an upcoming strip. She then uses a light box to ink the work and give me line art to scan and color. While we frequently use stock poses that we prepared well in advance, our strips often require something a bit special and so Leanne is frequently contributing new pieces as the storyline progresses.
Unfortunately, sometimes Leanne is wrapped up with other commitments and so the responsibility for the art falls on me. When I create characters myself, like Thalassa Tarkin, many of the Cantina aliens as well as modified poses, I do it digitally using Photoshop. I take care of the composition of the strips, the lettering, effects, etc, meaning I take care of the post production that results in the finished strip. You can see a scan of some of Leanne’s raw line work pictured above.
Leanne and I both share a love for animation, comics, children’s books, sci-fi etc etc. Just as it has shaped my creative interests, it has defined Leanne’s illustration style which I would describe as cartoon pop-art. However, what a lot of people probably don’t know is that it’s not the only style she plays with. Some of her more realistic pieces of pop art are up in her gallery, like Harry Potter’s Order of the Phoenix, V for Vendetta and her Hammer Horror film tributes.
Leanne took her artistic bent to a professional level by pursuing work as a freelance artist and has worked on several comic books in the last 5 years. She most recently wrapped up Ardden’s Casper and the Spectrals and is currently editing and illustrating Rob Zombie’s Whatever Happened to Baron Von Shock. If you are interested in seeing Leanne’s broader range of art styles check out her website LeanneHannah.com. Give her a boost on Twitter by following her.
Love this one! and as I was passing out your cards at CV, I was sure to tell those with kids that it was more of an adult comic. =)
Thanks dude. You and Paul are the true grunts of BMS. You guys need a special BMS badge for your uniforms. ;=
A patch or a challenge coin would be great!
Send us ref on what it might look like.
Sent
Were the kids parents with him ?
The parents were nearby but paying attention to something else. The family walked off while I tried to formulate words but the ability to speak had blue-screened.
You should have just told him it was a Death Stick and left it at that.
Now I want a lightsaber lighter. If BMS ever develops a merch line, that’d be a best seller.
There’s one for Lucas to think about! ;=
Bloody right. The ultimate sell-out product.
Thanks for the insight into the way the strip’s created Rod and Leanne. Reminds me of my old animation days. The blue roughs are really lovely. I believe some illustrators do final dark linework – animation style – onto the blue roughs, scan them and remove the blue. Removing the blue is tricky though. Not something I’ve mastered. Nice to have the roughs archived anyway!
Perhaps something for Leanne to retire on 😉
Good stuff!
I’m and animator myself so I LOVE seeing this rough work! ^_^
Please have more behind the scenes!
Hey!
Maybe you can do a few Behind the Scenes Parody strips! That might be neat!
Illustrate the scene at NYCC with the kids coming up and asking if you have the rights and why Leia is smoking, then have Grammel come out and flying kick them in the mouth!
I love that HP drawing. Should have bought a print at the con…boo.
We sold out during the show and I had to print more… although we sold out of those too!
The last panel is made of WIN! That made me laugh out loud!
And I adore the drawings of Peter Cushing that Leanne did! But I’m really biased when it comes to him anyway.
….but, uh, there’s something decidedly naughty about the whole “Yuzzem’s voracious tongues” line. In fact, I wondered if that’s why Leia had to light up afterward. You cheeky devils, you! ; )
Thanks Karen! As far as we’re concerned, YOU are made out of WIN! Great singing voice too, by the way! ;=
Wait – you’ve heard me sing? You checked out my website? Cool!
If you’re in Wisconsin around December 12th, I’ve got a Messiah concert, and what you heard on my website pales in comparison to what I can do now. : )
Checked your website link and couldn’t resist listening to the sample MP3s! As Vader would say in understated calm “impressive… most impressive.” Good luck with your Messiah concert!
Agreed, not my type of music but its definitely “Impressive”.
Ah, some day you’ll appreciate it.
There is a difference between “appreciating” it and liking it.
Hrm. To be completely honest, I’m surprised that a 6 year old can -name- Leia as being Leia. I know that’s crazy to say.. but it’s just.. surprising.
Maybe he was 6 1/2? Or perhaps… at a stretch… maybe even 7 years old. Pretty short for a 7 year old.
Phew – site’s running again. I was afraid you’d been hacked.
Didn’t even know it had been down. You’re on this site more than we are!
Why is that John ?
Something about cannot access – server down or something
I was talking about being on the site so much…
I think that its the fact that this site is for adults that people come to look at it and can have a laugh about what you are saying because they know what it means, whereas a small child(4-11) would have no idea what you are talking about. I stop at 11 because ive seen and know in my childhood some pretty corrupted 12 and up kids. and by corrupted i mean knowing those of which they shouldn’t until MUCH later. And there was something i wanted to ask for long time but never knew about. do you have any children? I assumed no but id like to know for sure cause i have never seen you before in the flesh.
I think if I ever get to be as popular as you guys, I’ll probably have that trouble as well when it comes to blurring the lines of gearing towards kids or adults. After all, I barely do any swear words (if they’re not bleeped out), since I know I don’t have to include them to be funny as Homestar Runner taught me, and the art style suggests kiddie material. It’s just the topics that send it straight to a mature crowd. I enjoyed your behind-the-scenes commentary, observing I’m beginning to take such steps myself. It’s amazing what an artist can achieve by cutting a few corners.
And this comic episode cracked me up throughout. Despite the simplicity of it all, Leia’s expressions “do it” for me.