Fort of São João Baptista

From the Exploration Unit

Here's a cool fort in Portugal I discovered online. How perfect is this??

This place was once a troubled monastery (pirates and bad weather) and was eventually abandoned. Then the king of Portugal was informed that it would be a great place to have a fortress, so he ordered construction on that and in 1678 they finally finished it.

I'm pretty sure this is the foundation of a thousand different environment concept designs for castles, fortresses, and evil lairs. Would love to visit this in person some day.

Here's more info about it: LINK

And here's a informative guide to visiting this island: LINK

-Jake

Becorn Photography

From the Office of Small Things

Bird is a former LEGO designer turned pro photographer of miniature fantasy scenes. He crafts these sturdy little acorn folk in inquisitive and adventurous poses then waits for birds and other animals to interact with them to snap the perfect shot. The result is a peek into a fantasy world that exists right under noses.

Bird calls these guys Becorns. This would pair well with a viewing of Epic by BlueSky Studios, though I like the peaceful world of these little Becorn characters better.

Website: LINK

Print shop: LINK

Instagram: LINK

-Jake

Missile Mouse and the Raven

From the Making Comics Division

Chipping away at the comic. Here's a page with Missile Mouse in his new suit. He also now has a cut in his ear from some scrape he got in a few years ago. So fun drawing this character again, and to have him be in a story. Can't wait to finish this thing and share it with you!

I should have Issue #1 one available in my shop this month, then I'm Kickstarting the full trade in April with Issues #2 and #3 coming out in May and July and the book shipping out after that.

It's time to join the Patreon: Patrons are getting frequent updates on this comic, including more behind the scenes stuff. They've also read the full comic in both roughs, pencils, and now inks as I finish them.

I'm also sharing other art and sketches and stuff related to other projects. It's a treasure trove of information and cool art. When I finish this comic I'll have an exclusive special edition Artist Edition PDF for patrons.

Join here: LINK

-Jake

On Maintaining Airspeed

From the Inspirational Thought Unit

I started this year with a vision, goals that supported that vision, strategy that supported the goals, a schedule to implement the strategy, and initiated the habits and practices that would help me make this vision a reality.

January went great. By February the screws started coming loose. I got casual with my schedule as other urgent and/or important things popped up. As I drifted from the habits and schedule I formed in January I noticed the work started suffering too.

Then I was reminded of this idea from on of my favorite self-mastery books: Art and Fear by David Bayles and Ted Orland.

"When things go haywire, your best opening strategy might be to return -very carefully and consciously- to the habits and practices in play the last time you felt good about the work."

From Art and Fear, page 57.

I didn't want to stall completely. I've been there before and to pull out of a stall is not easy. Sometimes it takes months or years! Realizing I was losing altitude (to continue with this metaphor) I needed to realign the rudder and blast the engines to get this project back to a proper airspeed.

The engines of your project aren't your goals or your vision or your strategy, they are your habits.

For me, that's doing creative work in the mornings when I'm sharp, instead of evenings when I'm easily distracted. It's priming my environment (both physical and digital) to make the next action easy. And it's having a bias towards action instead of endless preparing and hedging.

To get back on track this week I focused in on these habits, which got my airspeed up, and made significant progress on the comic in the last several days.

Return to your creative habits...something to consider if your project has stalled.

-Jake

The Fantastic Imagination of Lucas Roussel

From the Illustrators Division

This guy. It's rare that I find someone I think is making something truly unique. Rousel combines the bizarre with the familiar in such a way that I can't immediately like it, yet I can't stop looking at it. I want to say his style is as if Shaun Tan and Miyazaki's Nausicaa work had a baby.

Just go over to his Art Station profile and spend your afternoon there. Really wish he'd make a book or something.

Art Station: LINK

Website: LINK

-Jake

The Ancient and the Wise

From the Flora and Fauna Unit

Photographer Beth Moon has been documenting the lives of the sacred and ancient Baobab trees of Madagascar since 2006. When she heard that one ancient tree had died she had to return to see it for herself and preserve its death through her photography.

The tree was named Tsitakakoike, meaning “the tree where one cannot hear the cry from the other side." It was about 1400 years old and locals say it was the home of their ancestor's spirits.

She shares her experience in this simply captivating slideshow/video experience: LINK

-Jake

Cyberdecks

From the Industrial Design Desk

I kind of knew this was a thing, but I didn't know it's REALLY a thing. Cyberdecks are just custom built laptops...which sounds super lame on paper.

These things are anything but that. Cyberdecks are the custom built laptop you would have made in the year 2022 that Ridley Scott envisioned back in the 70's. Built with scraps of other computers, off the shelf components, and 3D printing giving them an intentionally edgy cyberpunk aesthetic.

You can find a bunch of them with instructions for how to build your own at the Cyberdeck Cafe: LINK

Also, do yourself a favor and just google image search cyberdeck. Check out these gems I found:

Red Shift Renegades

From the Making Comics Division

Massive Comic process update on the Patreon: LINK

I'm just about done with the first chapter. Should be able to knock out the last two pages today and tomorrow. If you want to see the entire comic so far, plus page-by-page commentary on both the inks and the pencils check out the Patreon.

Join here: LINK

Also, did an IG livestream with my wife you can watch here: LINK

-Jake

The Star Catcher

From the Art Department in cooperation with the Online Sales Unit

NEW PRINT!

I haven't updated my shop with a new print in well over a year. This is the Star Catcher, a reminder that you can't wait for your dreams to come shooting down to you on the ground. No, you need a lot of rope and the grit to go catch a them yourself.

Each print makes use of archival inks and quality paper stock to stand the test of time.

Two sizes:

- 16 x 20

- 11 x 14

Signed. Ships in an indestructible fat tube, packaged with love.

ORDER HERE: LINK

-Jake

On the Random

From the Inspirational Thought Unit

I've been thinking and working on this idea of "re-wilding" your imagination for the last six months. I think it's important to have your finger on the pulse of popular culture, but that can also be a crutch for creativity. How do avoid making derivative work when you are drinking from the same well as everyone else?

How do you make something new?

This question is always sitting at the back of my mind, so when I read this quote from Gregory Bateson, it resonated with me instantly.

First, Gregory Bateson was, according to his wikipedia entry, "an English anthropologist, social scientist, linguist, visual anthropologist, semiotician, and cyberneticist whose work intersected that of many other fields." When you're into that many varied things, and not just into them, but an expert in those fields you tend to have an understanding of the world that your average instrgram surfer doesn't get.

Here's what he said:

No system (neither computer no organism) can produce anything new unless the system contains some source of the random.

Great. So how do you introduce more random into your life? Well, for one thing you can avoid anything that uses an algorithm to populate a feed. In fact, probably avoid anything that has a "feed" as a feature. The social media algorithm is designed to A) show you what you are familiar with and known to like and B) keep your eyes glued on that screen and tapping as long as it can. I can think of 5 other things you can do, but I'll save those for another letter.

Assignment for the week, seek out situations and platforms that get you acquainted with more randomness.

-Jake

Hot Dog Hot Rod

From the Department of Wheels

Alexis Poncelet is a French designer for Volkswagen living in Berlin. When he's not designing cars, he designs more cars for fun. Most of them are pretty restrained forward looking designs, and I love them, but this one...this one caught my eye for how well he balances absurdity with edginess. At first glance this is such a silly idea, but looking at the details, engineering, and overall style, this car slaps. This thing drives right up my alley.

You can see more photos here: LINK

and check out his Instagram here: LINK

-Jake

The Rotary Un-Smartphone

From the Machines Division

Justine Haupt's day job is developing astronomy instrumentation for the Brookhaven National Laboratory. Which means she's extra smart. In her free time she designed and built a rotary smartphone. The prototype can be seen here: LINK

I'm a little bit in love with this. The combination of buttons, bells, and dials with current cellphone tech is like chocolate and peanut butter to my eyes. On the back it has a display screen that will let you know what calls you missed. It feels Star Warsian in its function: future technology trapped in an outdated casing.

I'd love to combine this with the Star Wars aesthetic. Like, mix it up with something like Galen Erso's Water Testing Kit and it would be golden.

For $390 you can order all the parts for one of these and build your own. Here's all the information on it: LINK

-Jake

Deep Sea Aquatic Aliens

From the Flora and Fauna Unit

The MBARI (Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute) recently posted this 10 minute video of creatures they found swimming around Monterey Bay. I know it gets said a lot that we don't have to go to space to find aliens, they're right here in our oceans, but boy howdy it is so true. These things defy the expected and tread into truly bizarre, majestic, and downright frightening territory.

File this away next time you need to come up with an interesting creature for your sci-fi comic.

Video here: LINK

-Jake

Chasing Skull Chaser

From the Making Comics Division

Getting close to having the first chapter penciled and inked. Really pumped to have this spread finished.

I hired a colorist to work on this project with me. His name is Anderson Carmen and he reached out to me last year with samples. He actually colored my entire Skull Chaser comic from Drawings 5 as a pitch for his services! It was a no brainer to hire him for this book.

These are his flats for this spread and they are actually muted by me to play up the inks. The final will be much more saturated.

By the way I've got a name for this comic!

RED SHIFT RENEGADES: Rumble on Spartha.

The Red Shift Territories are the out reaches of the galaxy, and my characters are all outcasts, outlaws, and renegades from the Red Shift...hence the name.

Can't wait to have this first chapter wrapped up!

Join the Patreon: Patrons are getting frequent updates on this comic, including more behind the scenes stuff. They've also read the full comic in both roughs and now pencils as I finish them. This week I've been posting inked pages for patrons. As well as the book title reveal. When I finish the comic I'll have an exclusive special edition PDF for patrons.

Join here: LINK

-Jake

How to do Cuneiforming

From the Department of Possibly Useful Information

Here's a short video showing how ancient Sumerians wrote their to-do lists and kept track of stuff. LINK

If you're wanting to know more about the first system of writing, and arguably the greatest invention ever check out this informative page: LINK

-Jake