Path

“American Werewolf in London,” said Graeme.

“Oh, shut up,” replied Adam.

“They did say don’t leave the path,” snorted Graeme.

“Look,” said Adam, “we both saw the lights, there’s something up here.”

They walked through the forest until they came to a clearing. Thirteen lights rose from the outside of the clearing, before leading Graeme and Adam to darkness.

~

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Train

“Hello Train,” said Sprite.

“Are they all still talking about health?” asked Train.

“Yeah,” sighed Sprite.

“I thought I was a dart once,” moaned Train.

“Yeah, I remember,” said Sprite. “I could see your point.”

~

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Ward 122

“I had a lonely time in the hospital,” said Spider. “Ward 122, on the 12th floor.”

“Why so?” asked Fuen.

“Because my sister used to believe she was an express elevator,” sighed Spider.

“So?” asked Fuen.

“She couldn’t stop on my level,” sighed Spider.

~

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Capricorn

Malcolm woke up, he could feel sand beneath his fingers. He coughed, violently expelling water from his lungs.

He took a moment to catch his breath. The smell hit him like a train. Rotten fish mixed with the smell of human decay.

A claw reached down and lifted his head. Red eyes staring into his soul.

“You’ll do.”

~

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Creative Process – Doodling the Fears (Part 1)

Continuing the Creative Process blog posts. I am splitting the doodling the Little Fears into two parts. Part one is about the tiles you see posted here daily. Part two deals with assets I digitise, print and sell.

I touched on illustrating the tiles in the last post. I get the photos from Unsplash.com, a website that gives away Copyright Zero images. Meaning you can use most of them wherever you want, even for commercial purposes. I crop them to squares and create collages through the Pixlr App on Android by Autodesk, then print them off 6 to a page.

I always print them on basic 80gsm paper as I like the texture and as you all know, I love textures! I nearly always use Posca Paint Pens. They are pens, the ink is quite literally an acrylic paint.

I have on occasion mixed in Papermate Flairs, fine tipped felt pens. They lack texture and of course there’s no white, but they still look good and offer a different colour selection. See the black, teal and purple below.

And good grief, do I have a deep love of using Tipp-Ex for white! Would you look at the texture on this? Tell me that isn’t sexy!

The end result is a sheet of six images, which I then scan at 600dpi, crop into individual squares to post here.

It’s worth noting that when I finished the first book (Little Fears Presents – January), I realised I needed to draw the images so I could crop them into 1700 px by 1200 px images. Squares in a book look awful except for square books. I had a dilemma on the first book to crop the images or charge about £20 instead of £12 for the books. Yeowch. Life’s about compromise I guess.

I mentioned the chicken and egg scenario in the last post. Do I doodle first or write the accompanying tale first?

Well, when I started I wrote and doodle about the same time. Six per day, every day, matching the characters in doodles to the stories. I do a set of 120’ish doodles and tales per month, but I discard quite a few so I have sets of about 90. Each set works as its own book and later on, story arcs.

When I got the 4th set of 90 doodles, I sat down with all the photos I had printed not used and filled them all in, then wrote the stories around them. That didn’t work for me at all. I was able to write all 90 tales for the characters, but I just felt they all looked to samey. They lost their personality.

When I got onto the next 90 that would form Reala, I wrote the tales first and doodled after. That left me with a stronger visual theme throughout the images. It was such a stark contrast; I ended up going back and redrawing half of the previous 90 panels for Hydra.

Going forward, I now write the tales first and doodle after. Usually in batches of 6 or 12. The illustrations later this year are more specific to the story. Did you notice that about the horror stories and, for those that read it, Little Fears Presents – Capricorn? The stories and doodles tie together a little better than some of the humorous Fears. The horror tales and Capricorn were about the 5th or 6th book I originally wrote. It just came out better than I initially believed it would and slotted in quite nicely onto the website. So I put that before the second Little Fears humor book.

With that, I have a few course suggestions for the artistically minded readers of the Little Fears. As always, there’s a no obligations $0.99 fo a 3 month trial to Skillshare giving access to thousands of courses.

You can draw anything, including a bird, in 3 simple steps by Yasmina Creates.


Sketchbook Magic: Start and Feed a Daily Art Practice by Ria Sharon.

Chair

“Good morning, sunshine,” she said.

He felt the thick rug beneath him and he heard the crackle of the open fire. He also heard his girlfriend crying in another room.

“Now we make sure every woman knows who you belong to,” said his ex-wife, as she began carving her name into his cheek.

~

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