On the reward

From the Inspirational Thought Unit

I listened to an interview this week with a Youtuber I like and the host said something profound that I think applies to all creative careers.

They were talking about how you have to go years sometimes where you don’t make any money from your work, and you just do it as a hobby. And how sometimes people give up because they're not making enough money from the endeavor. Which is fair, you've got to be responsible.

And then the host says something profound:

You essentially have to do it, “as if you have nothing to lose…” and then he added “and nothing to gain.” LINK

I keep thinking about that last part.

“Do it as if you have nothing to gain.”

Most of the successful creators on youtube, in music, comics, film, and writing, all have these long stretches of doing their thing without any reward. It's an important part of the process, because you discover the real reason you do the work: The work is its own reward.

Financial and critical success may never come from doing the work, and even if it does, it will fade over time. What stays, what you're always left with is doing is the work. Do it as if you've got nothing to lose and nothing to gain.

See the entire interview here: LINK

-Jake

Arcade Machine Papercraft

From the Office of Arts and Crafts

Okay, this looks like a fun project. This is a project designed by French illustrator Pierre-Marie Postel. Postel uses his illustrations to discover his own nostalgic universe of Japan.

From his about page: "His works reinterpret the codes of vintage and Japanese advertising from the 60s in a contemporary way, with occasional nods to pop culture such as manga or anime."

He's got a lot of great stuff on his website...too much to share here, but I thought these arcade things were a lot of fun.

I'd actually like to design my own papercraft arcade machines based on my characters and worlds....spitballing here...and give away the PDFs...maybe as an incentive to sign up for this newsletter? (I did something similar for Gallery Nucleus once, but it wasn't papercraft, and it wasn't for free)

What do you think?

Download the Postel's PDF print files here: LINK

More images of his arcades here: LINK

Postel's Website: LINK

-Jake

Kevin Hong's Dragon Couriers

From the Illustrators Division

New York based artist Kevin Hong is a Korean-American illustrator who seems to be dialed into drawing everything I love. I was thinking of just sharing a medley of his work here, but this Dragon Courier illustration series really caught my eye. Imagine Kiki's Delivery Service, but it's in a fantasy world and the girls ride dragons instead of brooms.

His style is a pretty straight forward western Japanese hybrid like you see in the European comics scene, but I think where he shines is his color and concepts.

There's another idea he has on his website that's essentially the dragon couriers but it's in the future and the fantasy is replace with technology and it just looks so well thought out and developed.

I'd love to see more of anything he makes. Hoping he does a comic or something someday!

Website: LINK

Twitter: LINK

Instagram: LINK

Tumblr: LINK

-Jake

The Flying Jeep

From the Military Vehicles Division

The V-1 Jeep was a concept created by McDonnell Aircraft Corporation in the late 50's. The idea was to have an open fuselage helicopter that you could easily switch out the cargo space with whatever you wanted. It was to be compact, and maneuverable. The design even had ramjet powered rotor which kept the engine compact and low maintenance.

This thing looks like a G.I.Joe toy from the 80's. I love it's utilitarian design. A concept artist I follow online, but forget who it was now, noted that sometimes no thought for aesthetics in engineering actually produces some of the most appealing designs.

More info here: LINK

and here: LINK

-Jake

My New Keyboard

From the Department of Tools and Equipment

It's called the CREATOR MICRO* and it's more than just cool looking, it actually is increasing my productivity. I'm always looking for ways to improve my workflow and one of the problems is having to glance at your keyboard all the time to make sure you're hitting the right hot key.

When I saw an ad for this on IG I knew right away this was the mini keyboard I was looking for. It's fully customizable, you can make the keys do whatever combination of key strokes you want. It's easy to tactilely navigate, and I'm already getting to the point where I don't have to look down at my hand to know what button I'm pushing.

It's perfect for anyone who works on a desktop in Photoshop/ClipStudio and it's already shaving off chunks of time in my workflow. You can learn more about this micro keyboard here: LINK

And order one for yourself here: LINK

Also...due to the opaque alchemy that is the instagram algorithm I posted a reel about this thing that has, at the time of this writing, over 600,000 views. I'm baffled. It only has 1.5k views over on Youtube.

*This is not sponsored, I just love this thing and wanted to share it with you.

-Jake

On Control

From the Inspirational Thought Unit

In 2009 I shared a table at a Mocca Arts Fest in NYC with 3 other people who were all just starting our careers in comics in the previous years.

A few nights ago I was reading a report on the best selling comics of 2022, and there was a list of authors in order of how many books they sold last year.

One of the people I shared the table with was 7th on the list selling 850,000 books!

Another was 22nd on the list selling 350,000 books!

While completely happy for them and their well deserved success, I was feeling bad and anxious about my much dimmer success in comics the next morning. I was just down on myself for not reaching those heights of achievement. Then I came across a quote by Epictetus in my morning studies:

“When I see an anxious person, I ask myself, what do they want? For if a person wasn’t wanting something outside of their own control, why would they be stricken by anxiety?”

I thought about that in relation to my current bout of anxiety. A book’s success is wildly out of the creators hands. All the creator has control over is making it as good as he or she can.

Just focus on making something the best you can make it.

That’s the part you can have anxiety over, because that’s the part you control.

-Jake

The Grungergetic comic art of Vlad Legostaev

From the Illustrators Division

I've coined a term for this style of art that I see in Legostaev and his contemporaries: Grungergetic.

It's grungy, full of energy, and I love it. I'm always afraid to get a little sloppy with my inks in favor of keeping things tight. But I'd love to loosen up a little like Vlad.

Vlad Legostaev is a Ukrainian based comic artist and one to keep an eye on. I love how he draws the Turtles: LINK

You can see more of his work here:

Instagram: LINK

Twitter: LINK (Content warning, lots of grizzly Ukrainian war coverage)

Website: LINK

-Jake