Showing posts sorted by relevance for query fun with scissors. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query fun with scissors. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday, July 26, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 101



















After a fairly long hiatus, my "Fun With Scissors" feature returns. For those unfamiliar with the previous entries, Fun With Scissors features a series of collaged portraits of various classic cartoon characters, and was originally posted on a daily basis for the first 100 entries (see the archives).

Fortunately, or unfortunately, I'm too busy with a number of projects to return to daily postings, but hope to be able to manage putting one up a week, probably on Wednesday since that's where I'm starting now. There will no doubt be gaps in the schedule, but I'll try to make up for those with the occassional extra post.

The majority of these pieces are available for purchase. Since this was begun as a quick exercise, and the average time it takes to complete one of these portraits is a little over an hour, they are also very affordable. If there are any characters you are interested, please inquire.

For the first entry in round two of "Fun With Scissors," I give you Secret Squirrel.

Friday, May 12, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 100




Choosing a worthy character for the 100th post was a tough choice. I didn't know who was going to do until the last second. I'd toyed with picking some lame arbitrary character, but am glad I didn't.

Here's Red Hot Riding Hood from the classic Tex Avery cartoon of the same name.

Before you pop that champagne cork, I feel a need to let you know that this will be the last Fun With Scissors post until mid-July. When it resumes, it most likely will not be on a daily basis. The reason for this long break is that I have numerous paying projects which require my attention, and trying to juggle them and a daily collage has been exhausting to the point where I ceased having fun about two weeks ago.

I'm taking this time to hopefully, finish these various projects, as well as take some time here and there to relax, something that I'd not been doing so that I could get these daily cartoon characters done.

In the meantime, I will still be adding posts to this site, including, hopefully, some more involved collage pieces, as well as a pretty cool announcement of an upcoming writing project, once the final pieces are in place.

I thank all of you who have visited, especially the regulars. Thank you for the comments, and please continue to visit. Now's a good time for anyone who came in late to go through the archives and see what you missed. I'll move some of these pieces over to the art section of the main website, which I'm also hoping to get refurbished by the end of the summer with poor Scottra doing most of the work. It's something we've talked about doing for a long time now. I figure why put it off any longer.

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Fun With Scissors - part 121


















A few years ago I began a series of quick collages of various cartoon characters under the banner of "Fun with Scissors." The last entry was posted at Christmas 2007. I'm not continuing the series right now, though I do plan to revisit it again in the future. I'm posting this portrait of Pebbles and Bamm-Bamm, which was created as a commission a couple of years ago, because I discovered by accident that some of my collages have been floating around the internet with the watermarks removed. I then revisited a couple of the original posts to discover that when I'd eliminated by Transmit account, the files I stored there were removed as well, and now the original posted images don't link to anything. Starting now, as time permits, I will begin to replace those thumbnails and the corresponding dead links with larger images which will all include the watermark.

I don't have a problem with people using these collages. One of the reasons I started doing them was that, for some of the secondary characters, there are no quality images available on the internet. Use them, but please let me know, and please give me credit when you do so. Removing the watermark is about as uncool as you can get.

Tuesday, May 09, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 97



Sorry about posting this so late in the day.

Not too long ago, I said that there were a couple of cartoons from the late 1970s/early 1980s that pretty much destroyed Saturday morning cartoons, until the mid-1990s. "Thundarr the Barbarian" was one of them. Set in a mutant populated post-apocalyptic earth 2000 years in the future, it had a cool concept, and a lot of nice design, and was an action show in "The Herculoids"vein. However, for an action show, there wasn't much action. This was the beginning of the no hitting era of cartoons.

How were fight scenes depicted, I hear you ask? In a typical scenario, three lizard men would rush Thundarr, armed with spears. Thundarr would activate his lightsaber and slice the points off the spears. The lizards would drop the now pointless spears and run away. Sometimes they'd get caught in a net. Lame. I think this may have been the last cartoon I actually watched until "Batman the Animated Series."

Along with the lightsabers, another obviously influenced by Star Wars element, was Thundarr's companion Ookla the Mok (depicted here astride his nameless "equort") standing in for Chewbacca the Wookiee.

Thundarr also marks the cut off point in determining which characters will get rendered here in Fun With Scissors. Nothing more recent than Thundarr shall be seen here, no matter how good it may be.

Monday, April 30, 2007

Fun With Scissors - part 119


















Unfortunately, due to a batch of very tight deadlines I will be facing for the next couple of months, I will be putting "Fun With Scissors" on a short hiatus. I hope to have it up and running sometime in early July with a mix of popular and obscure cartoon characters ranging from Foghorn Leghorn to the Grape Ape. I think that by this point I've posted around 126 characters, and am still amazed at how I've barely scratched the surface.

In the meantime, I don't plan to leave this site stagnant. I still plan to put up the occassional post as long as it only involves my scanning something.

If there are any characters you are interested in seeing, feel free to post your requests here.

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Old Image Files Rescanned and Reposted + Cartoon Collages for Sale





About a year ago I discovered that the images from a whole bunch of posts were gone because I'd stopped using the account that stored them leading to the tedious process of rescanning and reposting those images. Most of these were of cut paper collage portraits I did of various animated cartoon characters which were under the heading of "Fun with Scissors."

Tonight I came across a bunch of these collage portraits which needed rescanning and reposting. They are listed below.

I've also decided that I need to clean house to make room for a large number of new collages that I'll be creating for three group art shows I'll be participating in in 2011. So, I'm putting most of the cartoon character portraits that I have left on sale. Most will be for between $30 --$50, with a few for even less, and a few for a bit more. Shipping will be a uniform $6.00 (in the U.S. only. Over seas will vary by location, but it won't be inflated beyond actual price) no matter how many you buy. The shipping price might seem high, but I find that if I use expedited shipping there tends to be less time for chances of damage to occur.

I'll be putting a price list up in a few days, but if there's anything you're interested in and want to make a claim, or inquiry as to availability and price, please let me know. Most of these collages are on 81/2 x11 inch backgrounds, which in most cases can be matted as 8 x 10. If you check "Fun With Scissors" entries from 2006 in my archives you can see the entire series.




Ookla


Ant and Aardvark


Droopy

Captain Caveman

Inch High, Private Eye

The Phantom Shadow

Blip

Dino Boy and Bronty

Cindy Bear

Tornado Man

Yankee Doodle Pigeon

Bugs Bunny

Sunday, December 06, 2009

More Fun With Scissors reposts




















The slow, tedious, and sporadic reposting of images of cut paper collage portraits of cartoon characters that I created on a daily basis for my "Fun With Scissors" series continues with just a handful more for today. The following images have all been reposted.


Squiddly Diddly

Mr. Magoo

Choo Choo

Spook

Bullwinkle

Crazylegs

Muttley

Penelope Pitstop

Thursday, October 05, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 108




After a longer hiatus than I'd planned, fun with scissors has returned, and to tie in with the 31 Days of Halloween series running this mont, the characters will be of the spooky variety.

The first is the Phantom Shadow from the "A Night of Fright is No Delight" episode of "Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?"

Monday, May 08, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 96


















I was originally going to render Olive Oyl in black and white, but decided to go with color at the last moment.

Only 4 more posts until Fun With Scissors #100, and I still have no idea which character will fill the honored spot.

Monday, March 27, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 59


   
 


I've wanted to collage the Gruesome Twosome for some time now, preferably in their great car, the Creepy Coupe, but Fun with Scissors was meant to be an exercise in brevity, with each character taking about an hour's time to create, or less.

The Creepy Coupe is just too involved for that sort of time limit. I may tackle it anyway in the future, is my schedule ever allows for it. In the meantime, here's Big Gruesome and Little Gruesome sans their car.

Sunday, December 23, 2007

Fun With Scissors - part 120



I'm not about to embark on bringing back the "Fun With Scissors" feature to this blog, at least not for a little while yet. This piece was actually done last year, but at the time I was without a scanner and could not post it at the seasonally appropriate time. Instead, I'm doing so now, which ended up being more appropriate since the book that introduced this character is 50 years old this year.

Here's the title character of one of my favorite Christmas specials of all time, the Grinch from the terrific Dr. Seuss/Chuck Jones/ Boris Karloff collaboration "How the Grinch Stole Christmas."

Merry Christmas!

Thursday, November 12, 2009

Fun With Scissors updates 1



















The slow, tedious, and sporadic process of replacing all of the image files in my "Fun With Scissors" posts has begun. As of today, the following cartoon characters have all had their images replaced and are ready for viewing:





Hardy Har-Har

Baby Huey

Olive Oyl

Revs

Gossamer

Alan Chan

Fancy Fancy

Sherman

Miss Prissy

Bucky

Pixie and Dixie

George of the Jungle

Chilly Willy

Brak

Sunday, December 13, 2009

More Fun With Scissors Uploads


















Here's another batch of "Fun With Scissors" posts that have had their images replaced. The following cartoon character cut paper collage portraits can now be viewed by clicking on them.

Riff Raff

Conjunction Junction

Droop-a-long Coyote

Rope Man

Mr. Limpet

Egghead Jr.

Jonny Quest

Rudy

Alfy Gator

Barney Rubble

Huckleberry Hound

Ranger Smith

Secret Squirrel

Breezly and Sneezly

Sunday, February 11, 2007

Fun With Scissors - part 109



















The last time I posted an entry in the "Fun With Scissors" category was back in October. Then my scanner kicked the bucket, I got busy, etc., and that was the end of it...until now.

For anyone coming here for the first time, this category was originally created as a quick collaging exercise meant as a brief diversion from an involved project I was involved in about a year ago. For this exercise I chose to depict various classic cartoon characters in collage form. I chose them in part for my fondness of them, but also because I could render one in about an hour. I initially was doing this at the rate of one a day, but the schedule was too diifficult to maintain, so I took a break then scaled back my schedule to once per week, until scanner trouble ensued.

I actually managed to do a few others I'd intended to post during my month long Halloween posts, but have decided to save them for next October. In the meantime here's the annoying shark, Jabberjaw.

I'm going to do my best to maintain a weekly schedule from here on in, but expect there will be periodic gaps.

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 86



















Kwicky Koala may be the 86th post in this series, but he's the 92nd character I've collaged for "Fun With Scissors." I can't believe how many I've done, and how many I've yet to do.

I'm thinking I should do some special character for the 100th post, but haven't decided on who it's going to be yet. Feel free to make suggestions.

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 85




















After creating my entry for Saxton Moore's Fat Albert contest last month, I was a bit burned out on the junkyard gang, but way too much time has passed since one of the Cosby kids found their way into "Fun With Scissors" and enough time has passed so that I felt ready to tackle collaging one of them again. This time, it's Bucky.

Monday, March 20, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 53




This portrait of Sam the Sheepdog was designed to go withthe previously posted Ralph Wolf piece from Fun With Scissors - part 37.

I think this one turned out pretty well.

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

This Blog Turns Six Today


Six years is hardly a milestone, but it's the first year I happened to notice when the anniversary of this blog took place. Initially begun with the intention of solely promoting new work of mine as it became available, this blog quickly morphed into something not quite so commercial and a bit more personal.

While many of the posts were announcements that the latest issue of a comic book series I was working on was now available for purchase, or that a television episode I wrote was airing, more and more of the posts ended up connecting to things that have influenced me and my work over the years, particularly the stuff that shaped me as a child, so suddenly there were posts on children's books that had an impact on me as well as posts celebrating the birthdays of figures whose work had their own influences on me, and the dark reverse side of that coin, posts marking the deaths of those who meant something to me whether I knew them in person or only through their work.

I also began to give a look back stage into the processes that I go through in producing my own work, which led to a companion blog aimed at kids which introduces them to as much material as I can come up with connected to visual storytelling. With that spirit of sharing in the process behind why and how I do things to create my work, for this anniversary I've decided to direct you to some of the material that I've posted here from the past six years that I think is most significant to the evolution of this blog.

1. Fun with Scissors - While 2005 had no posts worth revisiting (or even initially visiting), in January 2006 I began a series of posts that would slowly peter out to a halt at 121 in November 2009. Most of these posts happened in 2006. This was a daily collage of various tv cartoon characters that I created in real time each day until I got too busy with other things and had to let it fall by the wayside. This proved to be a popular series, and if you search for any random cartoon character, you are likely to find one of my collages as an example (sometimes the only example) which made it something of a useful resource. It brought in a regular stream of visitors, some of whom still stop by on a regular basis and led to some sales and some commissions. Many of these collages are still available for purchase at very affordable prices here.

2. The Children's Book Display - I created for the now, sadly, defunct Shaman Drum Bookshop in Ann Arbor,  Michigan. This was the first time I'd ever constructed anything like this and I pretty much made up how to do it as I went along. I also took the time to record and share the process here from start to completion. This was the first time I shared the process of how I did anything. I did many more installations and illustrations for Shaman Drum which can be found here.

3. Countdown to Halloween - In 2006, myself and a handful of like-minded individuals independently posted our own 31 daily posts counting down the days to Halloween (my favorite holiday). Some of us were already in contact with each other, others found us (or vice versa) as the month progressed. The following year a formal list of links of participants was put together, followed by an official blog of its own. It is now an annual online event attracting over 250 participants last year and countless visitors. I'm proud to be one of the founding fathers of this event and to see it grow in popularity year after year.

4. Star Wars 30th Anniversary - In 2007, Star Wars (or as it's now known Star Wars - Episode IV: A New Hope) turned 30 years old. When that movie was first released I was at exactly the right age for it and it had a huge impact on me mostly because it was the first movie I'd seen set in a non-existent place that presented it that location as completely convincingly real. Unlike the usual gleaming, new, sterile white locations of most science fiction, in Star Wars everything looked, and sounded, like it really worked and had been used, and repaired a lot. This was a universe that real characters lived in. Every editor I've worked with, and many of my fans, have praised my world building abilities in my work. Thank this movie for it. For the entire month I put up a daily post on some aspect of Star Wars. In 2010 I did the same for the 30th Anniversary of The Empire Strikes Back no doubt I'll carry on in 2013 when Return of the Jedi turns 30.

5. Semi-Regular Features - Throughout the years, I've tried to settle into a schedule of regular posts of a particular type with mixed results. The first attempt, Random Objects in my Office never came close to having any regularity.  The second of my regular planned features, From the Archives grew out of my occasional postings of odd, or interesting items associated with some past project of mine. I later decided I was going to run this feature every Thursday, but didn't stick to that either. Right now I'm hoping to get it at least on a monthly schedule, and hopefully, bi-weekly. The most successful in both terms of regularly keeping to a set schedule, and usage, is my ongoing Ask Me Anything series, where visitors can literally ask me anything and I will answer. This post goes up on the first Monday of every month except October. My answers follow any time during the course of the month the questions are asked.

6. My second most popular post far above any other in terms of visits, except for this one which brought in more traffic over two days than this blog usually sees in months. Thousands of people stopped in to take a look at that collage thanks to Pee-Wee Herman himself, who kindly shared that collage on his social media sites including his facebook and twitter accounts.


So now, for the years to come, and in an ongoing effort to improve this blog, I ask you what you'd like to see that I haven't done yet, what you'd like to see more of that I have done, and what you'd like to see less of. Brutal honesty is best here.

Thursday, February 09, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 18




Okay, so Freddie's a little tan.

I received an email asking me a question I've been asked numerous times in the past, and ask myself often, and in fact, did so in one of yesterday's posts. "How can you keep coming up with new stories for "Scooby-Doo"?"

On the plus side, the formula makes certain aspects of writing "Scooby-Doo" pretty easy. I always know how the stories will end. I know that there's a high likelihood that Shaggy will say "Zoinks!" at some point, and Velma will say "Jinkies!" and so on.

The trick, of course is coming up with schemes for the villains, and when you realize that murder is not an acceptable crime for the young readership, you soon understand why there were so many real estate scams going on in Scooby-Doo.

I often approach the stories in roundabout ways, either by thinking of a title first, or a monster I want to use, then retrofitting a plot onto those. Being a writer who has always been more character oriented, than plot oriented, I've often chosen stories based on bringing out aspects of one, or more of the Mystery Inc. members. To do this, it became necessary to actually develop characters for them. They are pretty one dimensional on the TV show.

When I started "The Dragon's Eye" (an 8-part story which ran from issue #60-#66), each chapter was designed to focus on one of the main characters. The first character was Freddie Jones, and of all the characters he's the most superfluous. He's not physically strong. Velma's just as smart, if not smarter. All he has going for him is ownership of a broken down van, and the label "leader" because of it.

So I decided to give Freddie an obsession with winning. Every mystery was solvable. They always have been, and always will, and Freddie won't let a mystery go, until he does so. It's not some dark demon, which plagues him, but a compulsion to face and beat the challenge which drives him to drop whatever he's doing in order to solve anything he perceives as being a mystery. I'd hinted at this in prior stories, and used it since, but it was Freddie's finding a case that he couldn't conquer that fueled much of "The Dragon's Eye."

to be continued with the next Scooby-Doo character...

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

Fun With Scissors - part 8



Suffering Succotash, it's Snagglepuss.

A few years ago, DC Comics was running a comic book called "Cartoon Network Presents" with a rotating roster of characters. Among them was Space Ghost in a comic book look at the behind the scenes activities at "Space Ghost Coast to Coast" and "Cartoon Planet."

I did a few of these stories. In an attempt to create some dimension to the characters, I tried to imply that alien insect raconteur, Lokar had a life, and was in a relationship. To do this, I added some framed vacation photos to his office of himself and Snaggelpus; skiing, in the Bahamas, etc.

I was told that they could not be included, and not for the reason you would think. The issue was not implying that the characters were gay, but there was some weird convoluted reason to not use other Hanna-Barbera characters with each other (Don't get me started on the weirdness that's kept me from using Batman and Robin in Scooby-Doo).

I was surprised since it wasn't so long ago that I had the Scooby-Doo gang visit the Cartoon Network studios where you can see the actors who played Ranger Smith, Jan, of Space Ghost, and Zandor and Igoo of the Herculoids.









In a separate story, one of the characters had a past life as a diver on the show "Jabbershark." This story came nearly a year after the previous one (Scooby-Doo issues #18 and 29, respectively), and the decision to change the name of the show, even though it's clearly Jabberjaw, suggests that this policy was already in motion.

Oh well, it was fun while it lasted.