Posts Tagged ‘Usagi Yojimbo’

A Life Lived in Comics Day 18: My World and Welcome to It

May 1, 2012

The view into my office when I’m not in it. When I moved here from my old cubicle I began to put up posters and art, but for some reason stopped. My apartment’s the same way. Stuff in the window’s the upcoming gender-swap issue of Archie, a New Yorker cover full of injured musical Spider-Men, an Art Baltazar and Franco postcard, and a cover from Dell’s Kona. I love how he’s fighting a giant cat; not a giant lion or panther or anything, just obviously a house cat.

One way I know my job is cool is that people are constantly visiting. School field trips, journalists, visiting artists (like yesterday, when Stan Sakai hung out for a few hours), all kinds. It’s normal wherever you work for a friend to occasionally drop in for you to go to lunch together or something, but Dark Horse is the first place I’ve worked where an extensive tour of the place is actually interesting.

My friend Liz Conley (in town for Stumptown and mentioned in recent Stumptown and pre-Stumptown drink and draw posts) visited the DH offices today for lunch and a tour, which gave me the idea for today’s post. Editorial was sort of quiet, as several editors were involved in meetings with the Conan licensors, so it was a perfect day to wander around and see the different parts of the company, which are spread across three buildings on Milwaukie’s Main Street.

My tours started out really brief when I was still new to the company, not much more than a few minutes of the editorial offices, the digital art department, and sometimes the warehouse and marketing offices. Basically, I didn’t know the place or the people all that well yet, and while happy to introduce visitors to whatever I was familiar with, I’d hurry them past the people and places I couldn’t explain. These days, I know the whole editorial staff, most everyone in digital art and maketing, and a few people in the warehouse and business offices, so tours are a lot more informative.

On a few occasions I’ve brought non-comics friends through, and those are shorter as well, but as Liz is an actual artist, we talked with people from several departments, and she had several questions for some. We walked past digital artist Ryan Jorgensen as he was adjusting and cleaning some pages for an upcoming Eerie archive, and he took a moment to explain to us how the particular Photoshop tool he was using worked.

Naturally, it occurred to me that this was good post fodder only later in the day, so I didn’t actually document the tour. Maybe that would make a good future post. But I did take a few pictures of what’s going on in my own office, which could possibly be interesting.

Continuing the theme from the photo up top, I don’t use my wall space all that well. Several editors’ walls are completely covered with clipped papers, each one representing a comic they’re working on, a cover on top and the most current versions of the script and line art underneath. I still have a few, a habit leftover from working more closely with Scott and Sierra, but I organize work mostly digitally, and so there aren’t many, and when the ones that are there come down I likely won’t replace them. The exception is archival projects like Archie (the contents of the next few volumes are pictured), where I often refer to large chunks of pages and opening them on a computer isn’t practical. My mostly unused corkboard has pictures of me with Osamu Tezuka characters, taken in Japan (this will be a later post), small drawings from other editors, a Post-It with proper names from Mass Effect, and sheets with Canadian price conversion, the assistant editor job description, DH phone directory, and proofreading marks.

These shelves house copies of the books I’ve worked on, as well as additional volumes in series I currently work on, like Conan and Usagi Yojimbo, for reference, plus more general reference like The Overstreet Price Guide, Comics Between the Panels, The Best of Archie, etc. To my shame, those boxes on the floor contain submissions that I am years behind on. I really should get to them soon. On top of the lefthand shelf is a stack of Little Lulu volumes replaced by the Giant Size Little Lulu books I edited, some posters, a Quimby the Mouse statue, and a robot I made out of binder clips. The righthand shelf is topped with some Spirit figures and reference copies of all the stapled comics I’ve worked on.

More shelves, and more reference material, including the Chicago Manual of Style, which is Dark Horse’s bible, a college dictionary and unabridged dictionary, Story by Robert McKee, which I’ve never opened, and a volume of Robert E. Howard’s Kull stories (my Conan prose collection is currently loaned out). The pair of hardcovers with the spines facing into the shelf and filled with flagged pages are the two volumes of Fantagraphics’s Usagi Yojimbo: The Special Edition set, which is our reference guide for creating the digital editions on sale at the DH digital store. Below the photo are tons of Dell Tarzan comics and two complete sets of Another Rainbow’s huge Little Lulu hardcovers. Naturally, this being a comics office, I have the requisite statues and action figures. Underneath the Usagi poster are a print of characters from The Wire drawn in the style of The Simpsons, by Steve Lieber, and framed original drawing of Tamsin and Kitsune from Skeleton Key, which Andi Watson sent me for Christmas. Wotta guy. (Don’t forget the new issue comes out tomorrow.)

My untidy desk and the stacks of crap on it. Bottom left is mostly recent comics, but with a set of raw scans of material for the next Brothers of the Spear on top (it ran as a backup in Tarzan, which is why those are on top). Next to that, Silly Putty, naturally. The stack on the right is all kinds of proofs and other papers, with a pitch I received at Stumptown on top. I’ve only just noticed that my lamp is about to fall off the desk.

And closer in on the desk. My Cookie Monster mug is very popular and matches assistant editor Shantel’s Oscar the Grouch mug. To the left is Brian Wood’s most recent script for Conan the Barbarian and some lettering proofs for a story from Creepy #9, which correspond to the balloon placements I showed on Day 14. On screen are new pencils from an awesome project that it is too early to announce, and way to the right is a big stack of mostly Tarzan comics, though there is Conan sticking out at the bottom, topped by a list of the tip sheets due next Monday, color coded by who they’re for. Thanks to newly having someone to get them started for me, I’m in the rare position of being ahead on tip copy.

Did I cover everything? Anything in these photos that needs further explanation?

Tomorrow: Wednesday shenanigans, I’d imagine. And a MIND MGMT announcement.

Why’m I doing this, again?

Walking the Warrior Pilgrimage with Stan Sakai

December 9, 2009

Seems that I’ve been on a Stan Sakai kick of late. (Actually, I have several reviews, not to mention a couple of interviews, that probably should have come before my second Sakai post in as many months, but I am too lazy. Such a bad blogger).

Today, I’ve got an interview with Sakai that I conducted for darkhorse.com in May, but which went live today to publicize the recent release of Sakai’s Usagi Yojimbo twenty-fifth anniversary graphic novel, Yokai. It’s somewhat shorter than my usual interviews, a little more rigorously edited, and, for obvious reasons, a bit more promotionally minded, but there are still lots of interesting details about Sakai’s artistic process, his influences, and the evolution of the Usagi series.

Plus, in keeping with my last post, another exclusive back-of-the-art doodle!


Usagi Yojimbo’s twenty-fifth anniversary demanded something truly special, and what could mark the occasion better than taking the opportunity to break new ground? Stan Sakai’s covers for the Usagi book collections have showcased his incredible talent with watercolors, but Stan rarely has the chance to paint entire stories. Recently, Stan talked to me about the inspiration for Yokai’s story and the process of taking Miyamoto Usagi’s world from black-and-white to fully painted color. A shorter version of this interview ran in the Yokai graphic novel, but this is the whole deal.

Was Yokai a story you’d been planning for the regular Usagi series, or did you come up with it once you knew you’d be creating this color graphic novel?

I wrote it for the color graphic novel. I wanted the story to be special, because I had never done a painted story on this scale before. Two stories came to mind. One was the return of Jei, one of my more popular characters, and this story about the yokai, the ghosts, goblins, and haunts of Japanese mythology. I needed a standalone story that those unfamiliar with Usagi could enjoy, but that would satisfy the longtime readers as well.

Continue reading at Dark Horse’s Usagi Zone . . .

 

PS: I promise not to use The Wright Opinion to shill for Dark Horse, but will continue to draw attention to interviews I myself conduct if they’re interesting on the merits, should I do any more.

The Back of the Art

November 19, 2009

I don’t really write much about working at Dark Horse, but now and again details jump out at me as something that pre-Dark Horse me would have found interesting, things that I’d never have even thought about before. Here’s one:

Today the artwork for the latest issue of Usagi Yojimbo came in from Stan Sakai, a nine or so times a year occurrence that always makes for the best days of my job. As the assistant editor on the series, my responsibility when Stan sends in artwork is to first make sure he’s erased all the pencils and erase myself whatever he’s missed, file away the FedEx slip so the shipment is properly billed, fill in Stan’s voucher for Usagi editor Diana Schutz’s signature, and make photocopies of the art for myself, Diana and a few others. Then, before I send the artwork upstairs to be scanned, I read the issue from Stan’s original art boards.

The days Stan’s art comes in is so exciting for several reasons. For one, not everyone sends in physical artwork. Home scanners and the ability to tweak art digitally have made receiving pages by e-mail or FTP increasingly common. Rarer still is getting art that’s lettered by hand and can be read directly from the boards. It doesn’t hurt, either, that I have been a big fan of Usagi Yojimbo for over ten years, beginning long before I worked on the series or in comics at all. Lastly, when I go through the artwork, I get to see something almost no one else sees: the back of the art.

I’ve never been a collector of original art, since I don’t have the money, so Dark Horse is the first place that I’ve had regular contact with original pages. What appeared in the margins or on the back literally never crossed my mind, so it was surprising to start dealing with pages and learn that there are in fact all kinds of things on the side of the paper that isn’t seen by readers. While artists are working, the nearest writing surface is the Bristol board they’re drawing on, so it’s not unusual to find to-do lists, phone numbers, shopping lists, even recipes on the flip side of the art, presumably scribbled when artists answer the phone at the drawing table or take a break to look something up.

The reverse side of Stan’s art boards also boast the occasional character design, thumbnail or, on some of the older art we have in-house for reprints, drawings by his kids. He also draws things to amuse or greet the Dark Horse editorial and production staffs, like the Thanksgiving wishes above. An office favorite was born out of a conversation between Stan and Usagi designer Cary Grazzini, who mentioned to Stan that he’d thought a recipe on the back of one of the pages was good. The next issue featured a back page in which Usagi accosted the “moron” Dark Horse guys who wasted time looking at the back of the pages when Stan had worked for a month on the art on the front. The following page featured a bashful Usagi apologizing, saying Stan was working him very hard in his latest adventures and that people at Dark Horse could look at the back of any page they wanted, even the blank ones.

In an art form usually experienced through mechanical reproductions, it’s always exciting to hold original artwork that is the product of human hands, and it’s especially rewarding to discover these additional signs of the artists behind them. Since starting at Dark Horse and handling the artwork of Stan and others, I’ve become curious about the things that appear in the marginalia and on the back of the art of other artists. Any collectors, editors or others care to chime in?

PS: There are a few reason I don’t write about Dark Horse, the main one being that it’s my job. I love working there, but I’m not really interested in getting home from work and then writing about work (the frequency of my posting should make it clear that even coming home and writing generally about comics takes motivation on my part). Writing about one’s workplace is also a bit fraught, what with office politics, NDAs, and the things people may read into reports that are too negative or too positive.

However, someone who has written well about working in comics is my friend and excellent coworker Rachel Edidin. Her column “InsideOut” is mainly about women’s issues and queer issues in comics, but she has also written smartly about the assistant editor game on a couple of occasions, including her “Day in the Life” of an assistant editor at Dark Horse. I recommend reading her for both subjects.


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