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johncomic: (Uncle Old Guy)
feeling the freedom sinking in
johncomic: (Default)
a chance to clear the air and find a bit of connection and peace
johncomic: (Moss)
fresh waves of inspiration
johncomic: (Charlatans)
Charlatans drummer Jon Brookes, who left us on this date five years ago -- he is one of my faves
johncomic: (Default)
people's interest and appreciation
johncomic: (roundhead cartoon self-portrait)
optimism about my new project
johncomic: (Moss)
finding a swell round red 12-hour analog clock to replace our old swell round red 12-hour analog clock

swell round red 12-hour analog clock
johncomic: (Moss)
DC: The New Frontier: The Deluxe Edition by Darwyn Cooke



Darwyn Cooke cover
johncomic: (Uncle Old Guy)
a good, solid [but not threateningly heavy] rain -- the plants have been needing it for well over a week
johncomic: (roundhead cartoon self-portrait)
an unusually clear and close bunny sighting -- no time to grab a camera, alas...
johncomic: (Uncle Old Guy)
deep conversations with friends - keeps the mind sharp and the connections strong
johncomic: (roundhead cartoon self-portrait)
making new little discoveries during my drawing practice
johncomic: (Moss)
lots of time and things to read
johncomic: (Uncle Old Guy)
successfully completing a wack o' errands
johncomic: (Face of Boe)
quiet times doing things I love
johncomic: (Uncle Old Guy)
good financial news - it's a load off my mind!
johncomic: (Uncle Old Guy)
fresh peas from our garden
johncomic: (Steve the Pirate ani)
the house cooling down enough that I needed to sleep under the duvet last night and it's too cool for shorts this mornin
johncomic: (Uncle Old Guy)
takin' care o' business
johncomic: (Moss)
I've recently acquired a complete run of Randy Reynaldo's Rob Hanes comics, and have started reading from the beginning. In my reading today, I was struck in particular by the skill and craftsmanship of a panel which I will share and discuss here:

masterful 1994 comic panel by Randy Reynaldo

This is panel 5 of page 5 of The Princess, the story which appears in Adventure Strip Digest Starring Rob Hanes #1 (1994). I think this is a terrific panel, and here's why:

Everything in this drawing is kept clear, simple, strong, and bold, to communicate instantly and easily. Forms are declared simply with strong black shadows -- not a lot of fussy over-rendering to clutter and distract. There are a few lines used to indicate textures (mostly on the ground), and even these are done cleverly and with command -- note how the texture lines in the bright light are themselves lighter than the textures in the darker background. The use of gray tone is clean and restrained, primarily to indicate the background plane and separate it from the white of the foreground -- creating a sense of depth that is (once again) simple, clear, and immediate.

Best of all, note the caption in the bottom right. The text in that box suddenly gives form to what was an abstract black shape at the far right. What was a meaningless blackness up until now, we can suddenly "see" and recognize -- and it now carries an air of menace and foreboding, the lifeblood of adventure comics! (Also, note the further attention to differentiating the planes of depth thru tone: background is gray, foreground is white, and now extreme foreground is black...)

What's more, the placement of the caption made sure that this recognition did not come until the last possible second. That right there, the interaction of text and image to create new meaning -- even how that interaction is affected by where the text appears -- is the sort of thing that only the comics medium can do! Even better, this little reveal happens right at the end of the page [cuz this is the last panel], which creates exactly that sense of "now what" that makes a reader want to turn to the next page and find out, so the placement and timing of this panel is perfect.

And all this process of creating forms and depth, of guiding the eye through the scene and creating anticipation, all this stuff which is the very essence of conveying a story in comics, is done in a very casual, Fred Astaire "make it look easy" way. This panel is not a powerhouse display of surface rendering; rather, it shows a deep awareness of the structural fundamentals of the form, and in its own deceptively quiet way it's a masterpiece. Bravo, Randy!

January 2026

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