Tag Archives: Blog

Dog Days Update

I hope I’m not tempting the weather gods when I say I’ve known hotter Augusts. Someone told me today that another heat wave is on the way, but otherwise it’s been pretty nice here in Brooklyn, and I’ve had a few good nights in the backyard this year, which goes a long way to counter balance the hours and hours at the drawing table.

I just recently finished penciling 164 pages of CURSES! FOILED AGAIN, the follow-up to the FOILED graphic novel with writer Jane Yolen. Now it’s on to lettering and inking which should take a few months. Here’s a page of pencil roughs:

I’ve also been working on a side project with writer J.M. DeMatteis, my one-time collaborator on The Life And Times of Savior 28. This one’s very different from that, though, and here’s a crazy double-page spread to prove it:

Lastly, Psychic Volt records will be releasing some songs I recorded with a band 15 years ago and never did anything with. It will be an L.P. Show of hands, who still knows what that is? Here’s the front cover for the album artwork:

Now, back to work!

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Lest we forget …

I just came across these photos that I never downloaded from my camera. I believe this is the day after Christmas, 2011, when we woke to a couple feet of snow.
I’m really glad I bought that shovel the day before.

First, here’s the drift up against our entrance way:

After about an hour of shoveling, it’s safe for Lisa to have coffee outdoors:

As I reach the top of the brownstone’s steps, some nice views of the street before plowing and more shoveling have disturbed the snow too much:

See you in a few months, Winter.

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William Dunn on Batman: The Brave & The Bold

For a lot of the past year I had the opportunity to work on the Batman: The Brave & The Bold animated series as a background painter. The chance came via my long-time friend William Dunn, the Background Color Supervisor on the show, whom I’ve known since our days as students at the Joe Kubert School.
Bill’s been out in L.A. for a number of years and has not only had an impressive career in the animation industry, but is an even more accomplished painter on the side.

I was already a fan of the show, so when the schedule got tight and Bill needed help, I was more than happy to pitch in.

Getting to work on a smoothly run production like this one, and on such a well-done homage to one of my favorite characters, was a rare and much appreciated opportunity. I also learned a lot from Bill, who knew exactly the results he wanted and how to get them.

World’s Finest Online recently posted this interesting and insightful interview with Bill.

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Building it.

I’m slowly working on an illustration. Here it is in its preliminary stages.
I started with this rough sketch:

There’s a central figure, surrounded by a ring of vignettes, a title at the top, and a credit at the bottom. Kind of a movie poster approach. I made a series of subsequent drawings to clarify these ideas. First:

A little easier to make out the faces and figures, but almost a setback in other ways. Maintaining the circular composition is important, but the central figure is getting overpowered by the other elements. An easy fix. Just a matter of paying more attention to the size and placement of all the elements.
Another draft:

Now it’s starting to fit together. As I add and delete different elements, I’ve moved them around and grouped them differently. Characters and things that go together thematically are now next to each other, so the entire image is developing a sort of narrative, even if the meaning isn’t noticeable to anyone else yet. I can see, though, that the large head towards the top is going to make it hard to place a title without throwing the whole thing out of whack. The head needs to come down into the illustration more.
Another draft.

That large head at the top is comfortably out of the way and working better with the rest of the design. This is about all I need to move forward from these thumbnail drawings to a stab at finished pencils. I’m letting it sit for a few days, though, so I can look at it with a fresh eye later on.

Either more of these layouts or finished pencils soon…

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The New Newsblog

It’s been almost a year since I posted to my old Livejournal blog, so I’ll take that as a sign to try something new. I’ve relocated to Blogger, but I don’t think I’ll try to import all my old posts as this seems time consuming and difficult.

It’s a clean break.

I’ve just spent the last year coloring backgrounds on Cartoon Network’s “Batman: The Brave & The Bold” animated series. Fun because I was already a fan of the show when the opportunity arose, and I got to work with some great and talented people from whom I learned a great deal in the process.

Editors Scott Peterson and Michael McCalister at DC gave me the wonderful opportunity to work on their “Cartoon Network Action Pack” comic book series, beginning sometime last summer. Since then, I’ve done maybe 5 or so covers and a few interior stories. I’m working on a new one now. Mostly, these are “Ben 10” or “Generator Rex” stories. Very happy to be given this chance.

I recently started penciling “Curses, Foiled Again!”, the sequel to last year’s “Foiled” graphic novel from First Second Books, written by the incomparable Jane Yolen. I’m 20 pages into penciling at this point. About 140 pages to go, then lettering, then inking…

A couple other things in the works, some my own, some are exciting collaborations, but that’s the general idea.

I’ve just posted some new things to the gallery pages at my website: mikecavallaro.com

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