Sovena Red update!

At Heroes Con, Leanne and I had our table next to the After School Agent team (Scott Weinstein, Chris Zaccone, and Gino Patti) and we had a blast. I wish we had been able to spend more time together outside of the show. Scott, Chris and Gino are a laugh-a-minute group of New Yorkers who we made quick friends with back at Heroes Con 2008. Scott and Chris are the creative force behind After School Agent, a comic book about a 12 year old secret agent with super powers.

Scott is the nicest guy we have ever met as well as the producer for Saturday Night Live’s “Weekend Update”, Chris is a superb artist and after only seeing him briefly at New York Comic Con in February, it was a long overdue to finally get to hang out with him at Heroes. Gino is an art teacher for high school students with a comic project of his own that he is currently developing. Gino got lucky and when the table on the other side of After School Agent ended up being empty throughout the show, so he was able to spread out and occupy it all by himself. It’s these guys that make the show for us so great and I can not wait to see them all again whether it is at Baltimore or New York.

After School Agent Team

Both Chris and Gino each generously offered their time and talent to a commission of Sovena Red. I was honored to have these two great guys tackling my character and making her tangible outside of my writings. I could not have been more blown away by either piece.

Gino drew me a beautiful airborne Sovena Red with just the right amount of mischief on her face to perfectly capture her spirit and personality.

Chris drew me a picture of Sovena Red looking admiringly up at Captain Wonder (her fellow super hero crime fighter from the 1960s and 1970s).

Check out Gino’s new site for artists. Chillustrators.

You can see them pictured below, including the silhouette mock up that Osmarco Valladao (the Sovena Red logo designer) threw together to accompany the logo design as a fake cover. Osmarco is a writer as well as a colorist, based in Brazil. He has an absolutely stunning comic / graphic novel titled “Sinchroncity” which he writes and colors, with Manoel Magalhães.

On the Sovena Red comic book front, the amazing John Amor continues to impress me with each new page. I have now uploaded the first three pages as a teaser. You can view them below.

Artist Luis Lasahido is working on a pinup that may end up being the front cover and as soon as I get the finished piece I will share it here.

The wheels of steel are turning and the traffic lights are burning as the Sovena Red machine heads into July. Now I just need to settle on the colorist…

Katusha!

Katusha by Wayne VansantAnother great little moment from Heroes Con 2009 was meeting Wayne Vansant, writer and illustrator of The Nam, Two-Fisted Tales, Red Badge of Courage GN, and countless war comics. Wayne is from Georgia, and I don’t know if it’s southern charm, or simply Wayne’s warm personality, but he was a pleasure to talk to and I thoroughly enjoyed our conversation as much as I enjoyed flipping through his comics and admiring his detailed pinups.

Our conversation began as I tried to peak at a pinup girl that Wayne had surreptitiously hidden underneath another illustration. Although Wayne did not have any other pinup girl work on display, I have an eye for beauty and couldn’t resist the temptation to look. Really pathetic, I know, but that’s just how this went down and I’m being honest. 😉 Wayne obliged me with a laugh explaining that I looked old enough to see, and soon we were sharing stories about World War II in which our not-so-distant ancestors fought so bravely.

Wayne is working on an epic graphic novel called Katusha about a Russian woman who joins the Russian army along with many other women during World War II. The eastern front saw the bloodiest battles history and the devastation of Russia’s resources and people. Katusha ultimately becomes a tank commander, something Wayne assured me could happen in the Soviet military machine of the 1940s. Wayne’s research and artwork are astounding. Anyone with any remote interest in this subject matter please check out his work and watch Katusha’s progress.

When I filled Wayne in on the Sovena Red comic project he was delighted as our interest in Russian history and culture came into play. I made quick and handy use of my new iPhone’s voice recorder to grab some snippets of Wayne’s wisdom concerning Russian superstitions that he had gleaned over the years. I can not wait to work them into the stories.

As more customers came up to Wayne’s table I offered to buy him a couple of adhesive cardboard stands to raise the eye-line of some of his great War pinup pieces rather than leave them flat on the table. I gave them to him and promised to return to talk more and buy more of his books. As the Sunday afternoon flew by so quickly I ran out of time and we did not cross paths again. It’s funny the people that you end up remembering the most fondly are sometimes those you least expect. :-)

Heroes Con and on and on…

The 2009 Heroes Con comic convention in Charlotte, North Carolina has been and gone. This was our second year after a wonderful and uplifting experience at the 2008 show. In our first year at Heroes Con we became friends with both the After School Agent and Perhapanauts gang. Between then and now we went to Baltimote Comic Con 2008 and New York Comic Con 2009. This year we spent time with friends both old and new.

Leanne bit off a bit too much in the way of commission work and didn’t get as much time to walk around and meet people as I did, but we’ve learned from the experience and will do better at Baltimore Comic Con in October. Jimmy Aquino and Joe Gonzalez of Comic News Insider interviewed Leanne about her current work and we plugged Blue Milk Special and our friend Kevin Conn’s Lava-Roid comic project. We became good friends with Bryan J.L. Glass and his wife Judy, we got to know Comfort Love and Adam Withers a bit better, AND I met and spoke briefly to the legend Don Rosa… It was a great weekend and far too short.

Rod and Leanne Hannah at Heroes Con 2009The last few weeks (well, the last few months!) have been hectic as Leanne and I rushed around in preparation for Heroes Con. She had her After School Agent 8 page webcomic to complete so that printed copies could be available in time for the Heroes Con. Her backup story with Scott Weinstein also came out today in Perhapanauts #6 (Todd and Craig had advance copies at their table over the weekend). She also had a sketchbook to prepare, and we both had a tonne of Blue Milk Special material to take care of as well. At the same time I’ve been hard at work getting my first ever comic book project underway which unfortunately would not even be ready for preview form in time for the Heroes Con… however, I have to say it is looking good so far thanks to John Amor’s amazing work.

As far as Heroes Con is concerned we were cutting things pretty close. We had two 7 foot tall scroll banners with display stands being made and shipped directly to the Westin Charlotte hotel to guarantee we would get them in time due to our having to put the majority of a day aside just to drive down there from Maryland. The banners were there waiting for us on Thursday so we tried them out in the hotel room. Leanne almost cried. They DID look amazing. Heroes once again proved to be a great show for her.

For me, Comic Conventions have always been ‘Leanne shows’. There’s no jealousy there, but there is a sense of feeling a little perfunctory to what’s going on. I have worked on my writing over the years, initially dabbling with animation scripting and journalism, but it has been children’s novelization that has really pulled the strongest. However, comics provide another avenue for me to share my imagination with others so being married to an artist seemed like the perfect team just waiting to happen.

The catch was that Leanne has been tied up with a 9-5 ‘office job from hell’ for the past few years. The only time she has to work on her art is an hour or so each evening, and then a few hours (if she’s lucky) on the weekend. Trying to complete a large or even a small comic book project with such little time to spare can quickly fill her schedule for an entire year. Then there’s the self doubt that affects us both when it comes to our arguable talent. Okay, I’m being modest and self depreciating, but that’s better than being an arrogant delusional prick.

Mainstream comics for me have always felt stifling and a creative dead end. I can see it being a lot of fun to write a famous comic hero but just how satisfying can it be when the character is bogged down into a statis quo by the weight of its history? Leanne has taken more interest in independent comics of late (DC’s canceling Robin did not help) and started a slow shift away from the mainstream as a reader. Now the only thing keeping our creative pairing apart is time.

We have a bit of a dilemma… Working full time at home would allow Leanne to commit to projects with tighter deadlines, to complete more projects in a year, and hopefully work together as husband and wife like our heroes Adam Whiters and Comfort Love. As it stands, I will always step back in favor of Leanne getting greater exposure through working with an established creator. Already, Leanne has drips and drabs of work and promised work that has her booked for the rest of this year and all of this keeps us from being able to work together. Which is why we agreed that I would fund my own project and hire an artist.

After several scripts for different comic book ideas, I had to put each aside because Leanne loved all of them and wanted to be the artist. Hell, I want her to be the artist for all of them! But if we keep postponing things then it could be another two or three years before the stars align. Finally we settled on Sovena Red as the project that she would graciously pass on and allow me to hire another artist. You can read more about Sovena Red here on the site.

That’s when I ran into all that fluff with Davy Screwball (see previous blog entries), as well as the scam artist Josh Hoopes who was using the new alias Ron Runstrom at the time. ‘Ron’ was using Robbi Rodriguez’s superb sequential pages to get a 50-75% upfront fee from aspiring wide-eyed writers and then drop out of contact, keeping the money and never to be heard from again. I came close to being one of his victims.

It was at Heroes Con last weekend that I found Robbi Rodriguez (coincidentally, he was at a table not far from out own) and we talked about what had been going on with our friend Ron. We had both seen Rich Johnston’s excellent article exposing Josh’s latest alias “Ron Runstrom” the previous week and quickly bonded over the matter. And this is one of the coolest things about the show for me. Although Robbi’s work was being used fraudulently by Josh Hoopes, and although I nearly lost $700 bucks, it let both myself and Robbi get to know a bit about each other’s character and subsequently become fast friends. The irony is that I heaped praise upon the ears of ‘Ron Runstrom’ when I spoke to him over the phone, telling this slime ball about how wonderful his artwork was and how his liberating style reminded me of Michael Golden and Don Bluth, only to later learn that I had been worshiping an impostor. Robbi, I hope I made up for this at the show. :-)

Robbi generously, and quite without prompting, offered to draw me a cover for Sovena Red after hearing my other crappy story about Davy Screwball. Robbi is now my new hero! Oh, and Leanne and I realized later at the reception for the Auction that Robbi started out with Hero Camp –a title we picked up at a Chicago Con back in 2005! It’s a smaller world than we realized. So, there may have been some positives to come out of what was otherwise a shitty experience for me as a newcomer / wannabe creator in comics.

This time last year, Leanne and I were driving back up to Maryland from Heroes Con and we were talking about how we would have the first issue of our own comic book project ready in a years time for the next show in 2009. However, thanks to Scott Weinstein, Leanne had the opportunity to illustrate a back up story for Perhapanauts, and shortly afterwards Scott paid her to illustrate his After School Agent webcomic. There’s no sarcasm here, as I really owe Scott so much. Both Leanne and myself do. Scott has helped encourage Leanne and given her projects that have helped her refine her sequential storytelling and character work, all of which has seen publication. Working on these projects chewed up most of the year, and in the rest of that time she managed a few pinups and sketches but there certainly was no time for our own project which would have been in the husband and wife vein of Comfort Love’s and Adam Wither’s comic project the Uniques.

After New York Comic Con in February 2009, I decided that I wanted to do whatever I could to try and break out into full time writing. So to bring this all back around to where I was heading with this little write up, I’m now looking at these upcoming cons as ways to meet other writers and artists as one of them myself. So now, rather than flatter myself as Leanne’s arm dressing (I’m usually more her bus boy), I’m now at the cons with a purpose too.

Well, my recollections of the Heroes Con 2009 seem a bit disjointed and whimsical upon re-reading, but there’s one last thing I’d like to mention in closing. A big thank you to Jon Kallis, without whom, Leanne and myself would have had only half the fun and peace of mind. Jon kept Leanne company at the table, helped keep the table stocked, and generally kept our backs covered whenever we needed it during a very busy three days. Thanks Jon!

Con-Artists

‘Con-Artist’ seems an appropriate title for today’s impromptu blog post. You’d think it would be about my terrible experience with the ‘screwy artist’ who we’ll call Davy Screwball from this day forth. However, I have another story to share about the perils of working with freelance artists. I just learned that in April of this year I came close to losing $660 dollars with one of the first artists that I seriously considered for my first comic book project. — edit: my gripe is not with true professional artists, it’s with those that offer themselves as such but do not conduct their business that way —

Tek Jansen - Stephen ColbertLast Friday, Rich Johnston posted news on his site that he had exposed the previously infamous Josh Hoopes, a comic book con-artist who was running a scam where he tried to pass off other people’s sequential and pinup work as his own in order to get hired. Once he received his 50% he would run off, never to be heard from again. Rich’s article is vital reading for any aspiring comic book creator and any fan surfing the net looking for artists to draw them commissions… because this could happen to you!

Josh Hoopes Scam Artist Returns, This Time Using Stephen Colbert

Josh Hoopes recently resurfaced with the new pseudonym, Ron Runstrom. He was responding to writers posting their advertisements in the ‘help wanted’ section of Digital Webbing. He provided the potential client with a photobucket website which hosted a small collection of pinups and sequential pages. In case you have already guessed, I was one of those potential clients.

When I saw Rich Johnston’s article about Josh Hoopes / Ron Runstrom last Friday, my jaw dropped.

Although I didn’t go ahead and use Ron Runstrom as my sequential artist back in April, I came close and even spoke to him on the phone three times over the course of a week. I had no idea that the work he was passing off as his own was, in fact, the work of other vastly superior artists. I wouldn’t just have been ripped off… my money would have been stolen!

Here’s how I avoided falling into his trap.

Ron’s “Stephen Colbert / Tek Jansen” comic sequential pages were stunning. The fact they were really the work of artist Robbi Rodriguez was something I had no idea about. I never did the research to learn this truth myself because I had no reason to doubt him at the time, so instead I took him at his word. The style in the Tek Jansen pages was perfect for the tone of my comic project (specifically with the characters) yet theses pages did not have enough in the way of backgrounds for me to be fully confident. My script needed an artist who could tackle the much more visually demanding contemporary urban locales. I asked Ron if he had more sequentials with backgrounds.

Ron could obviously tell I was getting itchy feet and we talked over the phone. I wanted to get a feel for him as a person because I wanted to gauge my potential artist’s interest in my project, and also know that we would be able to communicate clearly which would benefit his interpretation of script. I called Ron and we introduced ourselves. I explained my accent with the story of how I met Leanne and immigrated to America to marry her. Ron told me he too had undergone a long distance relationship that resulted in his Peruvian (or was it Chilean) wife immigrating by way of marriage. Perhaps this was true? We had a shared experience to bond over. He told me how badly he and his family needed the money that this project would give them. He told me he had six kids…

At this point you are probably laughing at me thinking it was obvious he was making it up and playing to my humanity (yes I have humanity tucked away somewhere)… And yes, at the time, I knew he was playing for sympathy, but I took it more as a struggling artist desperate for a dime.

I felt that I liked the guy, but told him he just did not have enough samples on his site to give me the confidence that he could handle the more complicated background scenes. He claimed he had a broken scanner but would get it fixed tomorrow and get me some more samples. This unsettled me a bit. An artist with a broken scanner? He was starting to sound flaky and unreliable.

I was torn… Ron’s page rate was around $60 dollars per page for both pencils and inks. This is an extremely competitive rate. Being a kind-hearted idiot, I felt I could offer to pay him more as the quality of his work truly deserved it. I figured it would help this ‘struggling artist’ out, and hopefully it would inspire him to do some really good work for me. My problem is that when I meet deserving people, I really want to see them make it.

A couple of days passed before I received more sequential samples. They were more Tek Jansen pages and very sporadically chosen. However, it did remind me of how much I liked the art and how I seemed to have found a superb artist who was just looking for another break. I told him over the phone that if he could blow me away with some rough character sketches from my script in his Tek Jansen style then I might be willing to take that chance on him despite his lack of backgrounds. He made several excuses, but I was honest with him that I had several other people in mind who were decent on characters and very strong on urban environments. He agreed to sketch me some samples.

A day or two later he sent me three sketches. All three sketches were in a completely different art style from one another, and none were anywhere remotely similar to the style from Tek Jansen. It was like looking at two different artists…

I emailed him back asking what was going on? He called me that evening and he explained that just over a year ago he was on the sharp end of some really harsh portfolio reviews based on his Tek Jansen style . As a result he took a break and almost gave up as a comics illustrator. However, now that he was getting back into it, he was just a bit rusty. If I didn’t hire him then he told me he might have to give up forever.

I can be quite business like when it comes to my hard earned money, so I told him in all honesty that his current style was not something I wanted for the book. He was unhappy, but gracious. I actually felt a little bad, but c’est la vie. I work hard to earn my money, and I don’t make a living from writing either. Anyway, that was the last I heard about Ron Runstrom until last Friday, June 12th.

Between Josh Hoopes and ‘Davy Screwball’ (see my previous entry) I’ve been given a major wake up call.

Lack of a real contract with Davy Screwball was one of the key reasons things became as bad as they did in the space of a couple of emails. However, thus far, I usually send a formal contract which both myself and the artist sign. This is what I have done with John Amor (Sovena Red’s sequential artist), Luis Lasahido (Sovena Red #1 original cover illustrator) and Osmarco Valladao (Sovena Red logo designer). All received and signed contracts, and all have been very professional to work with.

In the case of Davy Screwball I waived a formal contract because he insinuated it was more than was necessary and an email agreement was binding enough. In addition to this, he was somewhat known, and had worked with people I knew, so I felt that perhaps I was being too anal about contracts and should lighten up a bit. However, had I actually spoken to my peers about their experiences with him I would have learned that it was far from desirable.

In the case of Josh Hoopes / Ron Runstrom a formal contract would have done what? The contract would have done nothing to get my money back once he received it and dropped off the face of the Earth. So what can an honest guy with very little money do to protect himself?

People are people… and unless you live with a smiling purple dinosaur and sing happy songs all day about sharing and kindness, you’ll know that most people are self interested, and some far more so than others. In my experience there are few genuine Saints and Samaritans. The comics industry might even have a larger share of them given the number of starving artists out there desperate to make a buck with their careers going nowhere. Taking lazy shortcuts, and being overly sensitive and egotistical are traits that might not be uncommon among ‘professional‘ artists willing to exploit clients over their perceived naivety.

My advice from this experience is to simply TALK to everyone you can about the potential artist you are considering… not just to their fans, but to people who have actually worked with them before. This may be hard to do, but do whatever you can to be confident they aren’t a fly-by-night con artist, or an egotistical bully out to get your money without breaking the sweat that your hard earned cash deserves.

If you are a writer funding your own project then you need someone who is going to be reliable. You need someone who will work with you when elements of the art need revision, as well as having at least some modicum of talent. It’s now clearer and clearer to me why the overall quality of art in the majority of books on www.IndyPlanet.com is so low. It’s a rare thing indeed to find an artist who can draw well and is also prepared to work at giving you what you want for your budget and deadline. So even if the art may be a bit unrefined, if the artist can at least deliver a finished product then that is one small miracle in itself!

Fool’s rush in where Angel’s fear to tread is one of those proverbs that we’ve all heard a billion times. So if you don’t know if you should fear to tread the waters of hiring a lesser known freelance artist for your project, DON’T RUSH IN!

Comic Book Professionalism

Comics is a field filled with flaky writers and artists. It probably goes without saying that people who draw super heroes, hot babes, fantasy worlds, space ships, aliens, zombies, ninjas, robots, you name it, spend a fair amount of their time in a fantasy world. There’s nothing wrong with being laid back and loving to create artwork and stories. But there’s a business end too. And it doesn’t seem that there is a wealth of artists in the comics industry who have both talent and professionalism in any balanced measure.

I recently contacted an artist about the cover for Sovena Red. I wanted a back up in case my first choice fell through. Well, the guy seemed great, but went nuts this morning after I had apparently asked him to make too many changes and he was unprepared to put more time into the cover roughs to satisfy me. My requests were (repeated three times) for him to change Sovena’s hair from wavy to straight (as it made her look a lot older than 11 years old) and try her face a little rounder. Zooming out a bit on the picture I was prepared to compromise on, but I just wasn’t happy with the look of Sovena from the two rough layout options he gave me.

Well, I soon learned that he was only prepared to give me two options with minor tweaks for the sum I was paying him. I complained this was not explained from the beginning. I have never (until now) had the experience of working with an artist who wanted to charge me more money (outside the agreed upon fee) to try additional layouts… $50 bucks a pop. No way! That’s not what we agreed to. But then he simply flipped and went nuts. After several back and forth emails with me trying to be as professional as possible, he is not prepared to let me withhold full payment. I paid him 50% upfront, fairly standard for a lot of artists. But as I’m unhappy with the services thus far, I do not want to proceed any further. Therefore, it’s over. My right as a unsatisfied client.

He doesn’t want to let it go. Stupid, right? In such a small industry, being a jerk over small money like this just damages your reputation as a professional. He is going to walk away with a stack of my dollars without delivering anything to me, and yet he feels he has legal grounds to get it all. Wrong! Unfortunately he seems to be a bit green when it comes to informal email contracts. While they can stand up in a court of law, they hold much less weight than a true legal document which has been signed by both parties. In addition, the ‘contract’ is so vague that the terms are not presented in one single email. For example, deadline, fee, 50% upfront, terms of delivery, method of delivery… none are stated in a single email. For it to really be binding, it needs to be contained in a single email, with my acknowledgment down the bottom.

Again, an email contract lacks the weight of a signature. So, I sit here, as I type, going through the back and forth with an artist who is making wild accusations and assumptions, like a crazed animal who can’t be content with just one bite out of me. This is the height of unprofessionalism. From what I hear from friends in the industry with whom I have spoken, this sort of unprofessionalism is not quite as isolated as it should be. This experience has really put a damper on my mood and my spirit. And yet, a tiny little light inside me tells me that I’m fortunate that this happened to me so early in my writing career. It means that I’ve just learned the very hard way that I HAVE to watch my dealings with fellow creators very carefully, and keep business as formal as possible. Never trust in an artist’s credibility just because he is popular. Do your research and always write up a clear contract that defines your expectations of each other which you both agree to and sign.

Here’s looking forward to Heroes Con and getting my mind off such crappy affairs.