February is the cruelest month

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Another digital strip. I’m tending to draw the simpler strips digitally, and leaving anything that might have complicated or difficult elements to it to pen and paper.

Bloip!

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I’m typing these blog entries on my iPad, and, wonderful as it is, is does have a habit of correcting my spelling when I don’t want it to. For example, I have to go back and correct the spelling of color to colour every time I use the word. Even the heading of this entry was ‘corrected’ to ‘Bloop’! Also, if you occasionally find a word in mid sentence that shouldn’t actually wardrobe there, that’ll be the spellcheck at work as well.

Entirely digital

smith-pilcher-916-160215This is the first entirely digital Smith cartoon, drawn using ‘ProCreate’ on an iPad Pro with an Apple Pencil. As you can see, the lines are a bit looser and more painterly, as I haven’t quite got the pressure curves on the pencil quite right yet, and the glass surface I’m drawing on doesn’t have the same amount of resistance as a sheet of paper, so the pen tends to skitter around more than I’m used to, but all in all, I think it’s not bad at all. The black and white artwork, once finished, was save as a .psd file, ported over to my iMac using Dropbox and then coloured using PhotoShop as normal.

I don’t think I’m quite ready to go completely digital yet – it’s taken me two months to get to the stage where I could consider attempting to draw this one but you’ll see digitally produced strips turning up every now and again. And when it gets to the point when you can’t tell the difference between an iPad drawing and a pen and paper one, then, we’ll be ready for the switchover to a completely digital workflow.

One neat thing about ProCreate is that it records your drawing while you’re doing it, and lets you export a video of the drawing process. Here you’ll see my first fumblings with the program – importing the grid structure in the background, drawing one set of frames at the wrong size, erasing them and starting again, pencilling, lettering and, finally, inking. Enjoy!

 

Card

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I couldn’t resist the Sienfeld reference in this one. Not that there’s anything wrong with that.

What the fox hat

smith-pilcher-909-160129My wife Linda has an extensive selection of wooly hats with ears on them. There’s a bear one, which is the one most people have, but she also has a badger hat and a fox hat. Suffice to say, a little bit of idea inversion produced today’s strip.

David

smith-pilcher-907-160125David. As in the guy who slew Goliath in the Bible. Probably never known as ‘Slingshot Ears’.

Pukak

smith-pilcher-906-160122Pukak is the Icelandic word for snow with an icy crust. You’re welcome.

Snow bunny

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Silence

smith-pilcher-904-160118A Comics Sherpa Editors Pick, probably because of the blank speech balloons in the first two panels.

Sideways

smith-pilcher-902-160113Sometime I colour up a strip and think it’s turned out just right. This one, especially the last panel, is one of those strips.