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NuggetHead

Jun20
by Greg Cravens on June 20, 2013 at 7:35 pm
Posted In: Non-Hubris comics

Hubris doesn’t pay all the bills around here, and so I sometimes share the sort of things I do otherwise.  Here’s a slideshow about the process involved in creating a web training site that I worked on recently (how’s that for a roundabout way to see some drawings?).  CLICK HERE to see the thing.  It doesn’t necessarily look very Hubris.

 

└ Tags: Kevin Thorn, Nuggethead, process, slideshare
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No flick of the wrist

Jun20
by Greg Cravens on June 20, 2013 at 11:34 am
Posted In: Talk About Toys

I have written about wrist guards BEFORE, but I have some new ones.

The last wrist guard gloves I had and wrote about were by Harbinger.  Harbinger quit making them, even though they still make some very slick looking weightlifting gloves. I liked their wrist guards very much, even after my puppy chewed them up a bit.  After long enough, though, you just have to move along, so I tried to order a pair of HillBilly wrist guards from Unicycle.com (the same place that had offered the Harbingers).  The HillBillys seemed to have the same design and materials as the Harbingers- like maybe somebody saw the need for really nice wrist guards and said, “We’ll make ’em if Harbinger won’t!”  “Good” I thought, and ordered some.  The problem arose when I opened the box.  I received Kris Holm Pulse wrist support gloves instead.

Damn.

They look good, too, but they weren’t what I ordered.  It was easy to see at a glance why such a switchup could occur, the package was marked in such a way that it could have been either glove.  I had to look twice to realize they weren’t what I ordered.  Some rushed kid filling boxes all day, mostly with unicycles and parts, isn’t going to spend a lot of time double-checking to makes sure the right gloves are coming out of the bin and going into a box.  I mean, how many different kinds of wrist guards do they sell, right?  Right.  They sell two.  Damn.

I intended to send them back to get the right things, but the cost isn’t too crazy, I like the look of them, and I thought I might just reorder the Hillbillys and keep these, too, “I can use them for stuff other than skating, even if they don’t have a rigid wrist piece in them.”

My mistake.  I took them out of the package, thinking I’d check ’em out, decide where I could use them, and then go order the HillBilly’s again.  But they DO have a rigid piece of plastic in them, just not where the Harbingers do.

I thought these were going to be ‘wrist support’ gloves in the same way that my high-top skate shoes are ‘ankle support’ instead of ‘ankle brace’ shoes.  (I have a wonky ankle.  Gotta watch it or it folds like origami. The difference between ‘ankle brace’ and ‘ankle support’ has become important to me.)

These gloves, though, had the rigid plastic bit along the BACK of my hand, with nice thick goatskin pads on the palm.  “Hmmmm”  I said, while trying them on.  “This might work.”

So I’ve tried them out.  I admit I was nervous.  Up to this point, I’d been using my Harbingers as little wrist skis.  If I went down, I’d slide along on my padded knees and my palms (like a cow on ice, see?), then hop up and go again.  These Kris Holm gloves weren’t designed to slide so much.  And I worried that with the rigid spine, that if I fell badly, my wrist (that I use a lot when I draw, right?  You guys get that the reason I’m cranky about my wrists is that I draw for a living?) would get mangled without the plastic between it and the nice concrete surface of our skatepark.

Not so much.  In fact, I haven’t had to panic and think about how I’m falling or anything.  There have been no rude surprises.  The gloves are nice.  I fall, I get up, it hasn’t impinged on my mind which gloves I have on yet.  That’s a good sign.

I won’t say they’re an improvement over the Harbingers, just that I feel confident wearing them to skate.  (keep in mind that Kris Holm is, after all, a unicyclist- and an amazing one at that.  These gloves, unlike the Harbingers, were probably never intended for the kinds of falls taken in a skatepark, but then, the kinds of falls I take from a skateboard and the kinds of falls I take from my offroad unicycle are pretty similar.)

Here’s the details of the gloves themselves.  Fingerless (fingered gloves are also available) and fitted well for my hand (I ordered the Large. I have trouble with gloves.  My palms are probably more nearly a Medium, but my finger length is mutant long and my wrists are skinny, so fitting fingered gloves is an issue.  I roll the dice with fingerless- it could go either way. Large turned out to be right) Nice goatskin suede palms.  Plastic spine on the backs of the gloves, held in place by the wrist support wrap, which is held both at the back of the glove with a small bit of velcro (an improvement over the Harbinger, I think) and by the long piece of velcro of the whole wrap.

Good solid construction.  Feels like it’ll be hot and sweaty, but I haven’t noticed it while riding.  I sweated the Harbingers through so many times that white salt lines formed in the leather.  Haven’t had that so far with the Kris Holm, but time, and a LOT more riding/skating, will show whether that’s a factor.

I like ’em.  If you do stuff that requires wrist guards and, like me, you don’t like the little Ace Bandage/Grandma style thingies you can get at Target/WalMart/Sportsmart etc., then these are well worth the $30 they cost.

And if your job means that your wrists aren’t worth $30 to you, then I envy your freedom to ride unencumbered.

 

└ Tags: gloves, Harbinger, Hillbilly, Kris Holm, skate, skateboard, skatepark, unicycle, Wrist guard, wrist support, wristguard
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Student of the Art

Jun18
by Greg Cravens on June 18, 2013 at 11:23 am
Posted In: Blog

Are you planning to go to college anytime soon?  Got cartooning in mind?  You need to go to OSU.

HERE’s why.

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Cartoonist Awards

Jun18
by Greg Cravens on June 18, 2013 at 11:17 am
Posted In: Dirty Pictures

Last month, all the big ol’ hotshot cartoonists got together for the annual meeting of The National Cartoonist Society.  I didn’t go this year, but went to New Orleans instead- sometimes you have to pick and choose when things overlap.  Ah, well.

Here, however, are photos from the previous year…  I’ll do the namedropping, and you can go look up the ones you don’t know.  Then you’ll know how big a hotshot I am for hanging out in my pink autographed hat with all these cool people.

Here, you’ll see Daryl Cagle, two-time Pulitzer winner Mike Ramirez, Chad Frye, and Tom Stemmie (with me thrown in there. Proof!) All fine gentlemen! There were women there, too, as cartoonists are NOT just guys, but they’re not nearly as entertained by ridiculous hats as you’d think.

So, in November, there’s a SouthEast Chapter meeting for the cartoonists that live in the spaces between Arkansas, Virginia, North Carolina, and the north edge of Florida, roughly.  Florida gets it’s own chapter, of course… Plenty of cartoonists running around there.  I’ll be doing a talk about getting started in webcomics, which I’ve barely done.  (If you have some input you feel would improve my powerpoint extravaganza, please let me know.  Or, by golly, come on by.  You can be a visual aid.)

First weekend in November, I think… In Knoxville, I believe.  Anyone’s welcome, so make plans to come by and visit.  Some of us are wildly egotistical and love to autograph things, so there’s an opportunity to make some bucks on eBay.

 

└ Tags: Chad Frye, Daryl Cagle, Greg Cravens, Las Vegas, Michael Ramirez, NCS, Tom Stemmie
2 Comments

Bare bones

Jun15
by Greg Cravens on June 15, 2013 at 5:37 am
Posted In: Dirty Pictures

I can’t recall if I posted this before, but for anyone who is entertained by such stuff, here’s what an unfinished Hubris cartoon looks like:

I print out these 8.5X14 sheets with boxes of the right height and width, divided into quarters and thirds.  There are also lettering guides printed all over the space.  I lay out my lettering, draw in the balloons and boxes, then fill in the space left with little drawings.

Then the thing gets slapped onto a huge light table drawing board that I have.  A nice clean sheet of 100 lb, hot press surface slick thick paper gets laid over the penciled page, and all the ink gets put down.  And the white-out.  And then the correct ink, til the whole thing is done.

Then it goes in the scanner, it’s colored in photoshop, I save two different sizes, and I post the smaller one to the web here.

And if all that stuff sounds like it ought to take an hour, tops, well it sounds that way to me, too.  And we’re both wrong.

└ Tags: color, draw, hubris, ink, pencil
3 Comments
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