Here's the
Making Of my
Penny Dreadful Cover.
So I had one weekend to complete a Herald comic, a Rudd cartoon, and a Penny interior and cover, plus that whole homework thing.
Let's go.
The cover's first step is a concept sketch of our hero running from a steam explosion while the villain's giant, hologrammy head rages.
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Here's kind of an anchoring outline for what I want to do.
This keeps the final draft on track and organized.
In all honesty, after the concept sketch I immediately began dreading the final because I wasn't feeling happy with how Cindy
was coming out.
But I hoped for the best while awkwardly modeling for that running pose.
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The penciled final.
The metal, grated floor didn't make the final because of time restraints, unfortunately. Same goes for the side coils' detail.
I had finished everything else but the homework on the To Do list and knew that the grates and coils would take forever and wouldn't even be missed if omitted.
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And now of course the final, inked draft.
I wasn't thrilled by it, but I couldn't stop staring at that printed version; I picked up a copy of the magazine to discover that they'd photoshopped my lines to look like I used a flowing ink pen, just like the greats! Awesome.
Gosh, the Penny Dreadful was so cool.
Reuxben