Let's Make A Comic Book!!! IT's HERE!
Transcription
(there will be errors in the following text)Edmund Kearsley (00:57):
Hello, welcome to Letās Make a Comic Book, season two starring Bitsy the Trading Cat. Todayās episode we have three great artists who are going to start the story off the epic tale of Bitsy the Trading Cat who lives in space. And so far thatās all we know.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:25):
Thatās all we know.
Edmund Kearsley (01:27):
To introduce the guests, we have Mel Briggs, Chris Pit card, and Laura Smith tonight. Thanks for coming on the show you guys. Thanks for having it. So we will take a look at what happened last week. So we had Alex Major and Peter Wilson and Nick May all did a part of the character and we ended up with Bitsy who was named by the Retro Bros and HAI daughter in the chat.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (02:01):
Oh, cool. You took more notes than me.
Edmund Kearsley (02:04):
Sure did. So what weāll do now, this will do the, weāll pick the order of operations. So weāll start with Mel, you get to pick a number. Weāll pick a 3, 3 3. Letās
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (02:28):
See what three
Edmund Kearsley (02:28):
Is, is number two.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (02:31):
You have gone second my man,
Edmund Kearsley (02:36):
And then weāll get Chris to pick one. Oh God four. Four is one. Oh no, you get to kick
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (02:48):
Us off. You can do it. You can do it Chris.
Edmund Kearsley (02:51):
And then Laura is going third. And now we can pick the panel. Weāve got the wheel of layouts and Iām going to the button and weāll see what one it lands on. And itās that one, the three long panel. Thatās the one I did. So Iām going to remove that and Iām going to get that into the private chat for you guys to download and put on your drawing devices. While Iām doing that, si you could show off the fan art that weāve got.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (03:38):
Yes, weāve got some fan art. This is something weāre doing different for season two. So the first piece of fan art was actually sent in while the character was being designed last week by Dave Dye. So not the best of, what do you call it?
Edmund Kearsley (03:57):
Resolutions
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (03:58):
Resolution. Yeah, I couldnāt even think of the word there. Yeah, so we had that and then Emmanuel, her, I hope Iām saying that right, her sent this in. So thatās pretty cool. I love the drill. And Danny Nolan with his strange sense of humour sent this one in
Edmund Kearsley (04:19):
Humour.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (04:22):
Danger Gene sent this one in.
Edmund Kearsley (04:28):
Thatās
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (04:28):
Cool. So thatās pretty cool. And Rob OāConnor got a bit of a crossover going. And then we have someone whoās on the show who also sent in fan enough, Chris.
Edmund Kearsley (04:52):
Oh, nice. Very sleek. I
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (04:56):
Very cool.
Edmund Kearsley (04:59):
All right. So do you guys have the template? Chris, you are starting us off. Oh God. So all we know so far is the characterās name, what the character looks like, and that they live in space, so you get to do anything basically.
Chris Pitcairn (05:25):
Well, gosh, I guess I mean like a tradie, right? So I
Edmund Kearsley (05:35):
Guess
Chris Pitcairn (05:36):
Maybe fix doing welding on a spaceship if theyāre in the catās in a glass container, it has their own air supply. Yeah, in doing some welding. Iām just going to fix up my,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (06:01):
Itās really up to you, dude.
Chris Pitcairn (06:03):
Yeah.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (06:04):
All you decide. Iām going to try to read out comments. Iāve noticed a few people have done hand signals. Thanks a lot guys. I canāt read that. Heavy metal. Okay. Without my glasses. I canāt see them. All I can see is little hands carrieās. Reading āem out to me. Excellent. Weāll start with Nick May going, oh bitsy, where will you get up to tonight? What will you get up to tonight? Where I say, where Iām lovely at reading things, so I love that this is the choice that Ed had. Shane read the comments. This has got too many symbols on it, so Iām going to put this one up. This is from Kerry with lots of cats and so forth, celebrations, and then weāve got the peace sign. People can see little Siz thatās from Lee Chaka and then Adam Gillespieās doing the rock and roll. Then weāve got horizontal panels. My Old Enemy. Yes, Nick May. Yes. And oh wow, this is so much fun. Che.
Edmund Kearsley (07:17):
Oh yeah, thatās Cheās. The named Bity came up with Bity. Oh,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (07:27):
A celebrity in the show. Cool. So well Laura and Mel sit there waiting for Chris
Chris Pitcairn (07:41):
To do something,
Laura Smith (07:42):
Right. Iām relearning how to draw while waiting.
Mal Briggs (07:45):
So am I
Laura Smith (07:47):
Need do a circle again. Is it like with the sharp angles?
Edmund Kearsley (07:51):
Yes.
Laura Smith (07:52):
Nice, nice.
Edmund Kearsley (07:55):
Well, letās have a chat to the other guests. Weāll start with Mel at the top. Mel, tell us about yourself and how are you going to comics and drawing and all sorts of stuff like that.
Mal Briggs (08:16):
Does anyone really remember how they started drawing anyone?
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (08:21):
No, I donāt actually.
Mal Briggs (08:22):
Right. It
Laura Smith (08:24):
Might show my age, but I still have my first sketchbook, so yes.
Mal Briggs (08:29):
Thatās amazing. I probably do somewhere, who knows?
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (08:32):
I do somewhere as well. I do somewhere. My mom gave it to me just a little while ago. I donāt think itās handy. I donāt think itās handy. Itād be very embarrassing images in it trapped in Australia and such.
Mal Briggs (08:49):
Nice. Yeah, Iāve always drawn, I always enjoyed drawing. I found comics were one of those things that itās hard to not like. I mean they were always there in the newspapers and everything. I just see comics as more complicated versions of picture books and we give every kid picture books. So itās almost like, itās not that people didnāt get into comics, itās that people just stopped reading pictures. Everybody starts reading pictures, but at some point people just stopped for some reason and I just never did. So yeah, itās a funny thing. But yeah, I mean my job now is selling everyone elseās drawings and stuff, so itās fun for me to pull out a pencil. Iāve got to try and relearn how it all works. But yeah, itās cool. But yeah, Iāve been running Impact comics for 20 years selling comics and stuff. So yeah, I just spend my whole life around comics and Iām constantly amazed at the people who understand how they work. Itās really easy in comics sometimes to just enjoy the ride and not think about the mechanics of how a panelās laid out and how the story flows from one panel to the next and all the pacing and everything. And Iām always
(10:44)
Awestruck when I hear someone whoās really see someone who really nails it or hears somebody who thinks about it intentionally and really understands that stuff. I think itās kind of amazing. Yeah.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (11:02):
Excellent.
Edmund Kearsley (11:05):
Alrighty. Should we have a look at what Chris has got so far?
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (11:11):
Oh, yep. Here we go. Oh yes, welding. I love it.
Chris Pitcairn (11:19):
Yeah, just kind of blocking it out at the moment.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (11:22):
Oh, that looks awesome.
Edmund Kearsley (11:26):
Thatās a really good use of the long panel.
Chris Pitcairn (11:29):
Yeah, itās funny hearing long panels. My old Nemes says, I really like doing long panels, like long narrow ones and getting, that was a weird gesture, but being able to layer a whole bunch of different, I guess sequences and depths on top of each other and having something comedic in the foreground, something comedic in the background and layers that you can just have going backwards and forwards in depth, but also stacking āem on top of each other. So yeah, and also welding, because I was like, oh, I can have a mini welders mask on bitsy.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (12:19):
Thatās awesome.
Edmund Kearsley (12:24):
Alright, so Mel, your second. So is that enough info for you to, well, Iām looking, Iām just wondering what heās going to put in the background so he
Chris Pitcairn (12:33):
Stars. Yeah, nothing terribly specific stars. Maybe a spaceship going past or a flying saucer. Okay, nice.
Edmund Kearsley (12:45):
BWS Blackwood stars.
Chris Pitcairn (12:51):
Yep.
Edmund Kearsley (12:51):
Cool.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (12:52):
Oh, sorry, I didnāt mean to press that. Well while weāre here, hereās some more fan art that just came in.
Edmund Kearsley (13:01):
Oh, thatās cool. I like that.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (13:06):
Just came in, I was trying to move it, but I clicked on it instead.
Edmund Kearsley (13:13):
So letās have a chat with Laura. This is your second time on the Letās make a comic book. Yeah,
Laura Smith (13:22):
Yeah, it is. Itās good to be back.
Edmund Kearsley (13:28):
So tell us about what have you been drawing lately? Whatās going on with
Laura Smith (13:34):
Your heart?
(13:36)
Yeah, Iāve actually not been doing much comic recently. Iām eternally working on the second volume of a comic that Iāve made Sophieās world. But in South Australia we have an annual art exhibition called Sala, the South Australian Living Artists. And as of last year, Iāve been part of a art collective here in the city and some of us are actually working towards an exhibition. So that will start in August. Itās for the entirety of August. So I have been working with traditional mediums, acrylic pain on canvas, trying to get two pieces done. I donāt think Iāll managed to get a third done, but trying to get two pieces done for what will be my first exhibition as a practising artist. So that will be very neat.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (14:33):
Yeah, very cool. Thatās cool.
Laura Smith (14:36):
Yeah, itās quite fun. Itās a little bit out of my wheelhouse. So the theme for our exhibition is flowers and I am a horror artist and a surrealist. So Iāve finished one piece that is flowers with my big creepy grins that I do. And the one I work in at the moment are little green daisies with eyeballs in the middle. Oh,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (14:59):
Cool. Yes, it could just be me because the screenās so small. But are you practising on the wall?
Laura Smith (15:06):
So this piece here is not actually by me, so that is one of my friends. Sheās also an artist, but that one there is me the big Oh
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (15:17):
Cool.
Laura Smith (15:18):
And then Iāve got some little pieces down on the ground and that black line that you can see if I can point at it, that black line now, nevermind. You can see it. It has a hand coming out of it. Oh, cool. So yes, Iām drawing directly on my wall. Itās the pros of owning a place, apparently you just get to draw whatever you want.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (15:41):
I was about to ask, youāre not into rental bonds, but yeah, you donāt have to.
Laura Smith (15:44):
Yeah, not losing any bonds anytime soon. Yeah, so look, Iāve been doing it for a long time. You can probably actually look back on the session I was in the last time and he was probably only slightly less complete than he is now. Yeah, itās good fun. Itās just with posca markers that I have absolutely destroyed because I didnāt prime the wall in any way, shape or form.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (16:13):
Thatās awesome. Yeah,
Laura Smith (16:15):
I enjoy it. Not quite drawing on a wall.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (16:18):
Yeah, well thatād be cool if I did that. Thereād be a lot of trouble. Oh, look at this. Nick May says he drew a Captain Australia comics as well. There you go. It wasnāt just me and Sean, she, sorry, Iāve never seen a name like that, so Iām going to get it wrong every time. Wow, thatās a great panel design. So I think that was to Chris because I donāt think weāve seen anyone elseās, so itād be funny if it was anyone elseās and feel free to make the cat fart. Thank you Alex. Thatās really nice of you.
Edmund Kearsley (17:01):
So if anyone whoās watching wants to be on the show, we do have a submission thing Maji that Sue made
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (17:16):
There. It is there.
Edmund Kearsley (17:18):
And thereās also, if you want to send in some fan art to get shown on the show, there is one for that too, which is the same one, but it says art instead of interest, I believe.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (17:30):
Iām glad you said that because I havenāt actually made one. Iāll make it right now.
Laura Smith (17:37):
You can tell the future.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (17:41):
Hang on, I canāt do that. We will get us shut down for having songs of other shows.
Laura Smith (17:47):
Thatās right. I think you were off that. They werenāt paying it.
Chris Pitcairn (17:53):
There
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (17:54):
We go. Thereās the one. So fan art, throw it in there. Itās a page where you can submit art, one art piece at a time. You can put your Instagram handle in there and all that sort of stuff. If you do that weāll share it on the Comex channels and tag you. So thatās the reason weāre asking for your handle there.
Edmund Kearsley (18:18):
Wolverine is the character for tomorrow for the drink and draw. So tomorrow,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (18:27):
Thatās tomorrow drink and draw Wolverine as a character. You can send that in there as well. On that same page, you can pick which show youāre sending the art in for. So if I get a Wolverine for this show, I will be a little confused, but then I will realise whatās happened. All right. If I get a night crawler for this show, then I will be confused. I donāt know any show that we are doing at the moment with a night crawler, but if you want to do that, go for it. Iāll show it anyway.
Laura Smith (18:57):
Sometimes you just have to draw night crawler. It is what it is.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (19:01):
Little blue dude with a dale got to love him
Edmund Kearsley (19:04):
Happens to the best of us. Should we put up Chrisās
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (19:12):
Drawings? Oh yeah.
Edmund Kearsley (19:14):
Cool. Itās like heās hitting the inks.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (19:20):
Well what am I pressing wrong? Oh, there it is. I see what I was pressing wrong. It was already on the screen there. Okay. All the buttons to bring it up were gone and Iām like, whatās going on? Itās just hiding in the background. I love the welding mask. That is awesome.
Laura Smith (19:45):
So cute. Itās got little whiskers.
Chris Pitcairn (19:48):
Yeah, little
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (19:49):
Kitty
Chris Pitcairn (19:51):
Kitty welding mask with whiskers to have whiskers on it.
Laura Smith (19:57):
Of course. How would we know
Chris Pitcairn (19:59):
Exactly? Oh, I meant to ask. I assume this is all in black and white like before?
Edmund Kearsley (20:11):
Yeah,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (20:12):
Black and white. I
Chris Pitcairn (20:13):
Donāt like that one.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (20:15):
No, no. Ms Paint all black on white. Sorry. We had someone on, oh God, Oz comic show and he admitted that he coloured his entire Comic Inn with Ms Paint bucket
Chris Pitcairn (20:36):
Two. Whoa.
Edmund Kearsley (20:38):
I think that was Adam Gillespie, wasnāt it?
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (20:40):
Yeah, it was Adam Gillespie and he also won a ledger for it
Edmund Kearsley (20:44):
And drew this
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (20:46):
And drew this.
Laura Smith (20:49):
My mom makes, we call it boomer huma. And by that I mean my brother and I call it boomer huma, but my mom makes comics that she puts on a website that she has and for the thirst couple of years, probably couple, she not only drew it in Emmaās paint, but she drew it with a computer mouse
Edmund Kearsley (21:12):
With
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (21:12):
A mouse
Laura Smith (21:14):
Cuts and cheese.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (21:15):
Wow, thatās impressive.
Laura Smith (21:17):
Yeah, it was crazy. She eventually migrated over to Photoshop and to a drawing tablet. But yeah, for ages it was a computer mouse and Microsoft paint.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (21:30):
Thatās impressive.
Edmund Kearsley (21:32):
Sweet. So Mal, howās your panel coming?
Mal Briggs (21:41):
Iāve just sent SA JPEG screen shot. Iām really
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (21:47):
Paying attention. I
Edmund Kearsley (21:49):
Itās alright. Classic
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (21:51):
Classics.
Mal Briggs (21:53):
I just started looking at it going, I wonder if itās actually dark enough to see, because Iām being super timid here. Iām feeling intimidated by people who actually draw.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (22:04):
Iām looking at it and I donāt know if it is.
Mal Briggs (22:07):
Alright, thatās alright. Weāll put it
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (22:09):
On the screen anyway, letās give
Mal Briggs (22:10):
It a go. Iāll make it a little bit darker and Iāll give you a better one. Hang on a sec. Okay.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (22:16):
Yeah. But then again this screen has issues with contrast.
Laura Smith (22:23):
Oh, weāre back to the tech issues. Are we?
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (22:25):
Yeah, Iāve got the tech issues. Iāve got āem all. Baby, what was I going to bring up? Yes, weāve been given a pronunciation guide and Iām sure Iāll still stuff it up. Sean Ake Sean Ake. Okay. Iāll forget within five seconds, but thank you. And itās Doka, is that how you pronounce it? Doka.
Laura Smith (22:48):
Aka.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (22:50):
Aka
Laura Smith (22:51):
Say it differently each time and one of them is bound to be correct.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (22:54):
Yes. Iāll, Iāll get it right once tonight. Thatās my mission. And we also have the WY mass reminds me of the Wuhan cat during lockdown that went viral on WeChat. I have no idea what that is.
Edmund Kearsley (23:12):
Many
Laura Smith (23:14):
Quite, you lost on
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (23:17):
So, yep. Iām glad that happened, Alex. Sounds great. Thatās all Iāve got to say. I have no idea what youāre talking about, Alex. Terrible.
Edmund Kearsley (23:29):
Did we get Melās picture?
Mal Briggs (23:31):
Here we go. Iām going to send you through something a bit darker now.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (23:34):
Yep. Cool. Iāve got it open. Ready to check it out. Messengerās been messenger. Jackie says, Hey, sausage scissor and game and save the downloads. Letās see if my computerās playing up a lot. Iām saving things to downloads and thereās three download folders now and my computer for some reason and Iām having a lot of fun figuring out which one is the one that saves it to, because every programme decides to save it to a different one.
Laura Smith (24:13):
Oh, with the one, the virtual, virtual desktop, whatever it is. Yeah.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (24:20):
Yeah.
Mal Briggs (24:21):
Microsoft really want you on OneDrive donāt they?
Laura Smith (24:24):
OneDrive. Thatās one Microsoft does my head in. Itās such a virus.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (24:32):
Oh, weāve got a creature.
Edmund Kearsley (24:35):
Got a smile. Space Octopus.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (24:39):
Space
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (24:40):
Octopus Aus. Itās not space without an octopus.
Laura Smith (24:44):
Iāve often said that.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (24:46):
I love it.
Edmund Kearsley (24:48):
Is that enough for you to go on with Laura?
Laura Smith (24:51):
Yeah, I think so.
Edmund Kearsley (24:53):
Sweet.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (25:00):
Oh, I got to write the first time and now Iāve got to look back at the pronunciation so I can say thank you. Thank you Sean Aki, there you go. How Iām not remember. Oh yeah, it looks different than that. Emphasis on the first syllable. Ah, I dunno if thatās the last name or the first name. And Rob OāConnor is a big fan of the Space Octopus.
Edmund Kearsley (25:28):
Space Octopus. Itās cool.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (25:32):
So straight into fighting. Well, maybe not. Might be a love octopus. Canāt really assume these things.
Laura Smith (25:38):
You canāt call her lover Octopus. Not on the internet.
Chris Pitcairn (25:42):
Oh God no,
Laura Smith (25:45):
Thatās what I said.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (25:49):
Thatād be my mistake.
Edmund Kearsley (25:53):
So itās probably lucky we had Alex on last week then.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (25:56):
Yeah, not this week.
Edmund Kearsley (26:05):
So Chris, have you got any comic books coming out or that youāre working on or anything you can tell?
Chris Pitcairn (26:14):
So, pardon me. So Iām currently working on Foxen Hound six,
(26:26)
So thatās the last book in the current Foxen hound series. There will be a second one. As far as Iām aware, Nickās already hard at work, drum up a story for, so thatās my current project, but I think one of the comics that I worked on with her, not last year but the year before, your Highness, your Highness has now gotten printed and sheās now selling that one. So at least I think at Premiere to ComicCon. So thatās really cool. We worked so hard on that one and had so many issues with, because it was with a publisher and then there were complications and yeah, it was a whole thing.
(27:28)
But itās great to sort of see it finally getting printed and coming out. Thatās awesome. And I think she was talking about doing some special cover variance down the track, which would be cool. What else? There was also Lucky Country, which I think weāve pushed back a little to kind of focus on other stuff, but Lucky Country was the, itās like setting a dystopian future version of Sydney where future, yeah, warehousing. Yeah, where itās the future and yeah, itās like housing is decided by lottery and itās like this socioeconomic political, not quite satire, just like a commentary, which was really different to work on. Quite unusual for both of us. God, Iām doing this terribly. But yeah, thatās kind of it at the moment is just promoting those two and then focusing, good Lord Iām not doing this well and then promoting the next Fox and Hound, which is, oh boy, itās a doozy. But itās exciting and itās fun to finally be working on it and canāt wait for people to be able to read it and yeah,
Edmund Kearsley (29:30):
I can people get the Fox and Hound and the,
Chris Pitcairn (29:36):
So theyāre all available at, I think itās ns kane comics.com. So let me just double check so that I get the, itās not coming up, thatās mine.
Edmund Kearsley (30:00):
No
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (30:03):
Internet should be doing this. Okay, so itās not.com. Letās try.com au.
Chris Pitcairn (30:11):
Oh, itās nsk comics.wix.com.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (30:17):
Oh, itās a WIC site. Okay. Yeah,
Chris Pitcairn (30:24):
If you go to NSK and comics on Instagram, she has the links there that you can buy the comics from. Excellent. So yeah, all the comics that are out are available there. I do also have, for people who are interested in stuff, if thatās a bit lighter. I was the colorist on the first issue of SKS Transhuman and I also did, I was the illustrator for Wolf Cubs with him. The first issue is out and I think the second issue is currently in pre Kickstarter thingy, so you can also get those from him. Theyāre quite different from my usual style. Theyāre very kid friendly, so theyāre much more cartoony because yeah, Nick stuff is not kid friendly, definitely friendly.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (31:41):
Speaking of not kid friendly. Iām just pointing the link up there so people can see it. I just found it, so itās a nice complicated one. Thank you. Thereās stuff which weāll also have Chrisās stuff in there. Not kid friendly. Donāt go there. If you are a kid just saying kid, stop it. Okay. Yeah,
Laura Smith (32:06):
I got kid. Stop. Stop following the link.
Edmund Kearsley (32:15):
Have a look at Lauraās.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (32:17):
Yep. Letās have a look. See,
Edmund Kearsley (32:23):
Yeah, weāve got stuff happening.
Laura Smith (32:26):
Yeah, trying to remember what backs look like at the moment. Who even knows
Edmund Kearsley (32:35):
Youāll be the first person to draw bitās back.
Laura Smith (32:38):
I know I was looking at the concept of bitsy, Iām like, what is that at the back? Iām like an exhaust pipe. Iām going to assume itās an exhaust pipe.
Edmund Kearsley (32:53):
I thought it was as well, but I think it might be a scarf, but it doesnāt. I donāt
Laura Smith (32:57):
Know, but I thought exhaust pipe as well, but I mean to do it, itāll go off here anyway, so there you go. Thatās weāll leave mouse panel. I know a little bit, although I going off a little bit up there, but thatās okay.
Edmund Kearsley (33:20):
Yeah, thatās fine. So while we have a look at Lauraās drawing, letās chat to Mel about impact comics. Give us info
Mal Briggs (33:35):
And
Edmund Kearsley (33:35):
How you got into it and where it is. And
Mal Briggs (33:38):
So weāre in Canberra and how I got into it is I was selling vacuum cleaners and I decided I would not be wanting to do that for the rest of my life. And so I
Laura Smith (33:59):
Decision did it suck?
Mal Briggs (34:03):
I tried to work out how I could sell comic books and a lot of other links in the chain. But yeah, thatās sort of what really started me on the path to where we are now. I was selling vacuum cleaners and spending my money on comic books though. I was like, yeah, I think I need to do the other way around or something. Yeah, no, I donāt want to spend my money back in S either. No, donāt do that. Yeah, so weāve been doing it. Yeah, coming up in September will be 20 years impact comics, so
Laura Smith (34:55):
Thatās awesome.
Mal Briggs (34:56):
Yeah, 20 years ago we were having some very, very late nights ordering pizza and stuff while we were working out how to set up the accounts and literally drawing plans for the shop on napkins and that sort of thing. Yeah. And now weāre coming up 20 years. Itās not the easiest time right now to be in any small business or retail or anything, but I always say that some of my worst days are better than a lot of peopleās regular days. I mean, yeah, I think I said that right. I think so. Yeah. Iām having a lot of trouble drawing and talking at the same time. Iām really trying to be polite about it. So yeah, weāve sort of become a really, no, not really mainstreaming. I mean we do stop the mainstream stuff, but we definitely, we go out of our way to find things that you are unlikely to find in a lot of other places. But at the same time, we donāt have as much small indie, especially local stuff as we used to. And I think part of that is things like Kickstarter and stuff are filling that role that comic shops
(36:50)
Used to do and the odd places that youād find zines, independent record stores and stuff that arenāt around so much anymore and all of those sort of things that used to be the places youād find indie zines. I think in a lot of ways Kickstarter almost is like a constant artist, Sally. People can be discovering new stuff all the time online and it makes the whole economics of it different. The trade off is the quality of the finished product that people are able to produce now is so much more professional than it was when you expected an indie comic to be photocopied and stapled and that sort of stuff. But it does mean that the economics of that doesnāt leave a lot of room for a shop to basically pay for the space it takes to display an indie comics. And that unfortunately is a big reality of things is rent. Rent is one of our biggest bills every month weāre importing pallet loads of stuff thatās getting air freighted from America every single week, but our rent is one of our biggest overheads and so itās really hard for us to getting things that
(38:28)
We like unless theyāre paying for the spot and thatās the gut-wrenching part of being in a business where youāre actually excited about the product and you want to do these things is itās really, really easy to make bad financial decisions because youāre just passionate about the product. And so weāre constantly checking ourselves and trying to make sure that weāre staying on top of those things, which is, man, you guys donāt want to hear that all. Iāve just ranted on for ages about why I canāt sell indie comics. Sorry about that.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (39:11):
Itās
Mal Briggs (39:11):
Okay. My mouth needs to be supervised. Yeah, my brainās too busy supervising my drawing hand.
Laura Smith (39:18):
I feel like itās so accurate for so many people though. So it really reigns true for I think nearly everyone in the industry at the moment. Not everyone has a storefront brick and mortar that result in overhead costs like that, but that doesnāt mean that we canāt see where it comes from and the expenses to create batches of comics without the support of the various sections that come together you did use to get from comic shops that are being pushed out by things like Kickstarter thatās not as accessible to everyone. Kickstarter is great, but not for everyone. And the change in how people can go about doing things is enormous and ever changing. Everything is a fad in so many ways at the moment. Youāre always learning something new because the thing that you learned six months ago is no longer valid.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (40:20):
Very true. Okay. Just to throw it in a totally different direction, Alex says, the octopus reminds me of from a romance cartoons from Japan. Thanks Alex.
Laura Smith (40:34):
I told you that you canāt say octopus on the Instagram,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (40:38):
So Yeah, I think he thinks everythingās a romance.
Mal Briggs (40:42):
My poor octopus is studied blush.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (40:50):
Oh, Iāve got to keep going back. Shay. Sorry. S Shay said giving ideas. So I waited over on a drawn so that these ideas donāt filter into the art of the actual artist. But Shawan Key said maybe sheās just fixing the space octopus tank at the Space Aquarium.
Laura Smith (41:18):
Oh my God, thatās precious.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (41:19):
Well the space octopus is the captain of the ship and sheās repairing cause maintaining pressure of the water environment in space is hard. Okay. Yep. And Robbieās saying octopus, I guess thatās a reference to oh seven. That was last week wasnāt it? What are we talking about oh seven for now? I donāt
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (41:43):
Know.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (41:47):
Thatās what Iām going with. Thatās what Iām going with. Iām not going to go anywhere else with that word.
Laura Smith (41:52):
Thatās fair.
Edmund Kearsley (41:55):
Okay, so weāve got the idea of what everyoneās drawing. Is anyone going to have any dialogue or narration or anything on their panel?
Laura Smith (42:11):
Not me. Iām a silent comic artist.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (42:15):
Ah. Cannot hear them scream in space. Isnāt that it? Although I think we had a discussion about this last week about how you can, and I wasnāt listening, it was Alex telling the story. So, oh, sorry. Did I say that out loud?
Laura Smith (42:37):
So you did that. That was great.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (42:38):
I love you Alex. You know that, so the story is about the octopus seducing bitsy. No, I donāt think thatās it.
Chris Pitcairn (42:48):
Thatās one of the romances.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (42:51):
Yeah. Heās always after romances old Alex,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (43:00):
Should we
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (43:01):
Have a look at Chris?
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (43:04):
Yep. Ooh.
Chris Pitcairn (43:13):
Yeah, just putting down my flats so I can start.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (43:18):
Is there someone in the window?
Chris Pitcairn (43:20):
Yeah, Iām sure of no particular consequence, but I just drew someone in the window looking very surprised or
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (43:33):
Nice.
Mal Briggs (43:36):
Oh man, I didnāt even spot the window. I think I mightāve aced the window.
Chris Pitcairn (43:43):
The windowās on a different side of the ship.
Laura Smith (43:50):
The window is a social construct.
Chris Pitcairn (43:52):
Yeah,
Chris Pitcairn (43:55):
A social construct.
Mal Briggs (43:56):
The window
Mal Briggs (43:56):
Is the friends we made along the way.
Chris Pitcairn (44:01):
Itās Schrodingerās window. Itās both there and not there at the same time.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (44:06):
Nice.
Laura Smith (44:09):
Iāve often said that about Windows,
Chris Pitcairn (44:16):
Occasionally experienced it walking into them.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (44:24):
I am doing it again. Ed, Iām forgetting. Iām on a show and Iām watching the art.
Edmund Kearsley (44:34):
Are we going to comment
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (44:35):
Much? You guys draw
Edmund Kearsley (44:37):
From Peter?
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (44:40):
Oh, I just saw Peter. Yep. Peter said evening or earlier. I missed that I to have a few silent panels to begin with. There you go.
Mal Briggs (44:53):
Iām toying with putting in a sound effect, but like you said, itās space and Iām robbing my head.
Chris Pitcairn (45:00):
I was thinking of putting in a sound effect,
Laura Smith (45:02):
Just put in a really small sound bubble, but I
Chris Pitcairn (45:07):
A really
Mal Briggs (45:08):
Big one with nothing in it.
Chris Pitcairn (45:10):
Yeah.
Laura Smith (45:12):
Yes.
Chris Pitcairn (45:12):
Thatās actually a lot funnier is isnāt.
Mal Briggs (45:16):
Itās happening.
Laura Smith (45:18):
Your entire panel is just the sound like a speech bubble.
Chris Pitcairn (45:27):
Oh no.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (45:30):
Youāre going to kill Chris. Oh
Chris Pitcairn (45:32):
No. Do that. Iām not finished yet.
Edmund Kearsley (45:34):
He has to finish his panel
Chris Pitcairn (45:35):
First. Yeah.
Laura Smith (45:37):
Deep breath. You can die later.
Chris Pitcairn (45:39):
Yeah.
Laura Smith (45:43):
Things I never thought Iād say to Chris today.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (45:47):
Itās all good. Finish it in the afterlife. Itās all good.
Chris Pitcairn (45:49):
Yeah, Iāll just die at the end of the stream. Youāll get big ratings.
Laura Smith (45:56):
Itāll be all over the news.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (45:59):
Drawing kills man comics to blame. That was
Chris Pitcairn (46:07):
Bad. That was also bad
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (46:10):
To take charges.
Laura Smith (46:12):
Mothers across the nation, revolt against comics.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (46:21):
Yeah. Even Peterās saying here, Peter, donāt die. Live on the stream, mate. I donāt know if thatās his way of saying wait till we finish to die or just not to die at all. Iām not sure what heās saying.
Laura Smith (46:36):
Yeah, donāt give us paperwork to do and youāll be fine.
Chris Pitcairn (46:39):
Yeah, thatās it. Itās that. Itās the paperwork.
Laura Smith (46:43):
Itās the paperwork.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (46:44):
Oh, itās always the paperwork.
Laura Smith (46:46):
No one wants to do paperwork and if they do, theyāre lying
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (46:53):
Or theyāre paid a lot for it,
Laura Smith (46:55):
Even then they donāt want to do it.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (46:57):
Well thatās true. Oh, Iāve been checking for new art. New. No God, no more fan art. Yeah, thatās because weāre all too busy watching you guys.
Edmund Kearsley (47:13):
I put one into the to the thing, sis.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (47:17):
Oh shit, I didnāt see
Edmund Kearsley (47:19):
Language.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (47:22):
Ooh,
Laura Smith (47:24):
That was English. I think
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (47:25):
Another red. Oh yeah, thatās one that is, oh, hang on. Oh, thatās the one I gave everyone as reference. That is wicked. Yeah. On what? More to say.
Edmund Kearsley (47:46):
Oh yeah. Peter Wilson
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (47:48):
Did the logo too. Oh yeah, good point. Thank you Peter Wilson. Much appreciated
Laura Smith (47:55):
On you, Peter.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (47:57):
Thank you Mel.
Laura Smith (48:08):
Oh, I am glad youāre not watching my screen for this bit. I
Laura Smith (48:11):
Dunno how to draw
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (48:12):
Mine. Oh, heās out of the window.
Edmund Kearsley (48:15):
That looks awesome.
Laura Smith (48:16):
Hey,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (48:21):
And you were worried, Mel. Iām still worried. Donāt be worried. Thatās awesome. Oh, I donāt know if you said at the beginning, you donāt have to fully finish these pictures during the show as well, so donāt stress. We just need enough that we can put the picture. Ed can put the picture together and give everyone a feel for what the page is going to look like.
Edmund Kearsley (48:52):
That is true.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (48:55):
And I just realised Iām meant to do all this other stuff for you guys that I havenāt done. So Iām just going to, oh, thereās a whole bunch of comments coming in now. Thatād be Brian. Thatās fantastic. Future cover and looks fantastic. And police report. Hang on. Whatās that for? Hang on. What? For
Laura Smith (49:15):
The death of Chris?
Chris Pitcairn (49:17):
Yeah,
Laura Smith (49:18):
Paperwork. The paperwork. I donāt want to do.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (49:21):
Yes. I wasnāt there.
Laura Smith (49:24):
No saw nothing heard nothing saw
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (49:26):
Nothing heard, nothing.
Laura Smith (49:27):
Donāt even know why youāre bringing it up. Really
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (49:32):
Good point.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (49:35):
Okay,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (49:36):
Letās see.
Laura Smith (49:38):
Why did I give myself so many long lines? Who decide on the layout of this panel? Iām an artist, I swear. Oh,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (49:54):
Hang on. Yep. Found it cool. I can rely on Google after all. Okay, thatās one. Now letās get the next one and I must stalk you Mr. Because I know your Instagram tag off by heart. Iām the one giving all the love hearts to the pitches. Thatās me. Oh, I pressed the wrong one. I donāt know who that dude is. I Youāve got a dot. He doesnāt. Oh
Chris Pitcairn (50:51):
Yeah,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (50:52):
We can still show this on the show maybe.
Chris Pitcairn (50:55):
Oh, thatās dangerous.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (50:59):
I havenāt scrolled yet, so. Oh no, itās fine.
Chris Pitcairn (51:04):
Iāve been trying to put little warnings before I post anything. Ready?
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (51:09):
Yeah. Youāve got nothing here. Thatās bad. Nothing here. Thatās bad. I saw the two pictures and went, does it get more intimate as I go down?
Chris Pitcairn (51:18):
Absolutely. Oh, am
Laura Smith (51:18):
I
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (51:23):
Not? Cool and Iām guessing, Iām curious about this one actually. Iām guessing you donāt have an Instagram with all your art on it, mal?
Mal Briggs (51:37):
No.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (51:40):
You should
Edmund Kearsley (51:42):
Website for Impact Comics or something.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (51:45):
Yeah, thatās what Iām doing. Nice. But I was just going to hassle him that he didnāt have No
Laura Smith (52:07):
So many little suckers
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (52:09):
Canberra. Cool. Right one. There was quite a few impact comments came up then
Mal Briggs (52:16):
I shall have to hunt them down. There can be only one not on stream. Weāve been through this.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (52:35):
Okay,
Edmund Kearsley (52:35):
So let everyone know once again that we are taking submissions for fan art and if you want to be on the show as well. Yes. If you want to draw a panel or be on recent reads as well,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (52:51):
There is a page, the interest page has little tick boxes next to every show We do tick the ones youāre interested in. It can be multiple. It can be one. It just canāt be zero. Thatād be silly. Why are you sending me these emails? Seriously. But yeah, so say what show you want to be on. Iāve already contacted a few people whoāve done this and put them on shows, so yeah. Oh yes. So if you want to be on any of the shows, if you want to submit your art, thatās the link there. You can submit it for this show as fan art. You can submit it to drink and draw and I think there was another show I put it up for. I canāt remember what it was though. Oh, you can submit art for amateur hour if you want me to show off how much better you are at drawing than me, Iāll put that picture up. Cry a little, take it down, continue drawing.
Edmund Kearsley (53:54):
Sounds good.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (53:55):
So itāll be fun. Itāll be fun. Makes his cry. Maybe we should change the name of the show. Makes his Cry.
Laura Smith (54:04):
Gives a goal for everyone, like a Target for the night.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (54:08):
Make it so awesome that Siz will cry.
Laura Smith (54:12):
So awesome. That
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (54:12):
Brought
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (54:13):
Tears
Laura Smith (54:13):
On
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (54:14):
Are very much, oh sorry. I was just going to say people, amateurs, as you know the nice way of saying that you like me, you are welcome to send in your art. All levels of art are appreciated. We had a guy who was using, it was like a programme, I canāt think of what the programme is, but theyāll blocks putting āem together and making drawings that way. So that is all acceptable.
Laura Smith (54:45):
Love me. A cheeky bit of Pixar. You said that in Minecraft all the time.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (54:51):
Yeah, it wasnāt Minecraft, but it was similar.
Chris Pitcairn (54:54):
Roblox.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (54:57):
I wouldnāt know. I saw the finished product. Sorry. But yeah, it was cool. They were sending stuff in the drink and draw for about three or four months and then just stopped a bit Sad.
Laura Smith (55:14):
Did they get a block?
Chris Pitcairn (55:17):
Oh God,
Laura Smith (55:21):
Iām not even, sorry. Iām not even sorry.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (55:34):
Chin yes. Yes, Sean Noke. Iām going to forget your name every fricking time I go to say it. Yes. You can put your name down for Chinwag as well and weāll pass that over to Lee and weāll say, Hey Lee, hereās somebody who wants to go on your show. And heāll go, yeah, weāll go. Oh, maybe later. I dunno. I donāt know what Lee will do. Actually. I know him that well. Heās stranger to me
Laura Smith (56:01):
Once more with the puns. Weāll leave it to him.
Laura Smith (56:06):
God.
Laura Smith (56:07):
God has nothing to do with this
Edmund Kearsley (56:13):
On that one. Iāll throw it to you. Iād say itās about that time for you guys to send in what youāve done so far on the panels and then Iāll stitch āem together and make up a little mockup of what the page is going to look like and then weāll be able to finish the show.
Mal Briggs (56:37):
Oh Lord.
Edmund Kearsley (56:41):
Just send them to sis in messenger.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (56:45):
Yeah, just send em Messenger is the easiest way if you know me. If you donāt know me, then stuff you, Iām not putting you on the show anymore. You can just share it down the street or something in the letterbox. I know what Iām saying. Iām talking garbage now.
Edmund Kearsley (57:03):
Now
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (57:04):
Just looking for a button and it doesnāt seem, oh, there it is. This is what happens at once
Edmund Kearsley (57:13):
While you do that. I shall,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (57:19):
That sounded like, what the hell are you talking about? Ss? Shut the hell up and let me, you
Edmund Kearsley (57:23):
Got one Save the show. Where is my thing?
Edmund Kearsley (57:30):
Get there.
Edmund Kearsley (57:31):
Oh yeah, I already done that. Where is it my, there we go. So this is the Comex shop comic shop.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (57:50):
Oh, you found the new one, COMEX net au slash shop.
Edmund Kearsley (57:56):
Yes. I typed in comics shop and it went here.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (58:00):
Yeah, it went there. Yeah. If you look at the top, if you scroll to the top, see where it says store, itāll take you to a better looking shop top. Right,
Edmund Kearsley (58:12):
I see.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (58:15):
Because thatās the default with WooCommerce site that you were seeing just before.
Edmund Kearsley (58:23):
So these are all Australian comic people. A lot of them have been on this shoe and it helps to support the other shows as well and the comics network and getting comics published by all these awesome creators. Thatās my one.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (58:52):
My mouse isnāt working. Hang on. Oh, there we go.
Edmund Kearsley (59:00):
I have two pals. Iāve got three
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (59:04):
You three now. My mouse wasnāt working. I was clicking and clicking and clicking and I did not want to go to Chrisās page.
Laura Smith (59:13):
You did clicked once more.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (59:16):
I did and thatās when it finally worked.
Edmund Kearsley (59:20):
Iāll put this while you do the other things is
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (59:25):
Yep. Iāll do the other thing, which hopefully is, well, we got some fan art. Someone must have felt guilty about me giving crap to everyone that someone is. Nick May.
Edmund Kearsley (59:38):
Oh, thatās cool. So Nick may designed the leg.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (59:42):
Yeah, he designed the legs so he should know the legs well. Okay, so now I need to boost this up. I used to have this fifth set up before we started,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (59:59):
Started.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:00:00):
Iām so organised. Watch me go. There you are. Yes. Thatās what we want. Sorry, Nick going to have to take you down. I sorry.
Laura Smith (01:00:22):
Emotionally
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:00:22):
Aside, last time we did the show, itās working. I like the way the Letās make a comic book is across the top and my screenās not taking it over.
Laura Smith (01:00:31):
Hey, itās me.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:00:33):
It is.
Laura Smith (01:00:34):
You can see my eyes.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:00:36):
Itās all the flowers with the eyeball.
Laura Smith (01:00:39):
So the eyeballs are the one Iām currently working on. And then the pink, yellow, and blue one with the face. You can kind of see. Yeah, that one is the one thatās finished. Thatās a part of it.
Mal Briggs (01:00:56):
That cool.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:00:57):
Iām liking this one.
Laura Smith (01:00:59):
Yeah, Iāve had to pause it so that I can do the S ones. I need to finish some of the black background. But that one and the one next to it with the hands holding the world are going to be a pair.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:01:19):
Very cool. Indeed. Well,
Laura Smith (01:01:24):
Oh yeah. I started making little minis. You can see the little figures on the right hand side.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:01:33):
Oh
Laura Smith (01:01:33):
Yeah, those. Yeah. So I play Magic the Gathering a lot. And I also play d and d, but I decided I want little treasure bags for treasure because
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:01:43):
Cool.
Laura Smith (01:01:43):
Yeah. So Iāve made a bunch of little minis that Iāve been selling. Theyāre just little poly mac clay ones like oven baked clay that I paint. Theyāre little haunted treasure bags.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:01:57):
Now I donāt know how quick I need to go. How are you going, ed?
Edmund Kearsley (01:02:01):
Iām still going.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:02:03):
Okay. We can always circle back. Weāll look at Chrisās now. We got some mermaids. Mer mermaid, what do you call āem? mfo? Yes. I like it much better. Thereās afo trying to drown someone thatās not very nice going into the horror theme there, Chris.
Chris Pitcairn (01:02:35):
Always
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:02:37):
Lucky. I remember seeing this picture.
Chris Pitcairn (01:02:40):
Yeah, A little bit of Elden ring, a little bit of Shadow Hearts fan art for anyone who played Shadow Hearts. Best game ever. No oneās heard of. Itās a mashup between Final Fantasy and Lovecraft and itās set in the first World War.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:03:08):
Oh, well
Laura Smith (01:03:09):
Now I have to play it.
Chris Pitcairn (01:03:11):
Yeah. Yeah. Itās so cool. In the second game, one of the characters you play as is Princess Anastasia and she attacks people with a faberg egg.
Laura Smith (01:03:26):
Thatās so fabulous.
Chris Pitcairn (01:03:28):
Yeah. Yeah. Shadow Hearts. The first one actually came out around the same time as Final Fantasy 10. But yeah, itās just like Lovecraft meets Gothic fantasy and itās just set in the middle of World War I.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:03:49):
Wow.
Chris Pitcairn (01:03:50):
Itās very cool.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:03:54):
If I played games, Iād be totally into it. Weāll flash over to Impact Comics in case Edās going faster than I think he is. If not, weāll go back and look again.
Mal Briggs (01:04:06):
Hey, whatās going on? Weāre
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:04:08):
Looking at your Impact comic. I hope this is yours. Says Canberra.
Mal Briggs (01:04:16):
Nice. Yep, thatās ours. Yep. Itās got the post up about the DC marble thing. Yep.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:04:22):
Oh yeah. Oh, theyāre doing another one of those. Oh, Iām a bus. Yep. Let me boss. So thereās some cool things from your shop from the Impact Comics in Canberra. If youāre anywhere else in Australia, go to Canberra if you want your comics. There you go. Howās that?
Mal Briggs (01:04:39):
Yeah. Oh look, circling back to what I was saying before about not stocking stuff, something I should have mentioned was as a solution to that we came up with a few years ago this idea of essentially having our own little convention. Weāve got a terrific pedestrian area in front of the shop and so a little bit like Comic Street in Brisbane and a little bit, oh cool. Like a few different zine fairs and stuff. We started doing this thing out in front of our shop and we were thinking we should be doing something again for our 20th anniversary because I think it was our 10th anniversary where we started doing it.
(01:05:19)
But the thing is now in Canberra weāve got a Comic-Con Gamma Con Geek Markets, something else. When we started there was nothing. So I still canāt let go of the idea that weāre going to do something again. So yes, keep your ear to the ground. If I find the motivation to organise something, itās going to have to happen real fast so that I don get distracted and do something else. So yeah, if youāre the sort of person who likes to show up to Art Sallyās and stuff, do keep your ear to the ground. We might do something again if we find a gap in the calendar and I get myself sorted for that sort of thing. So yeah, because like I say, I love being around all the comics I can and the more people I can get around the shop discovering new things the more I want.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:06:35):
Awesome. Excellent. Iām going to go through all these comments that I missed while I was doing all that. Weāve got Shauna. Yes. Iāve been told thatās what Iām allowed to call saying Call me Shauna. There you go. So thanks. Thanks, thanks for letting me skip a few bad pronunciations. Hey and guys from Nathan. Then he also said you can submit a comic for the store. Yes, you can do that as well for the, unless youāre talking to Mal Iām
Mal Briggs (01:07:10):
Assuming. Oh, feel free to hit me up. If youāve got something that I think Iāll sell, Iāll check it out. But yeah, me as well get it up on Comex first.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:07:19):
Tell me as well. Nick May is the only one who noticed. I never drew the towel for the cat. You didnāt? Oh that was Alex saying that, by the way. Well God tell now youāre out of the story. Sorry Alex. Youāre no longer part of it.
Laura Smith (01:07:38):
Itās aās tale. Itās sad sometimes. Itās not
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:07:43):
Probably a no-brainer. Whoās going to acon? Whatās acon
Laura Smith (01:07:49):
Adelaide Festival this weekend.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:07:52):
Oh, okay.
Laura Smith (01:07:54):
Itās really good. I am not going on account of, I donāt have the money for that, but No, it is really fun. People should definitely go if they have the chance.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:08:07):
And then the question was thrown out for me, Shane, are you appearing at the comics market? At Comics Plus on Sunday? Yes I am. Comex will be there with all comic studio books going to Smash instead Alex, I guess thatās another event or whatever. Good luck to the people next week carrying the story on Stu. Oh, thatās funny. That Stewās one of them. Yeah. So at least I think he is is now. If he wasnāt before
Laura Smith (01:08:44):
Surprise
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:08:46):
Surprise on the show, had to make a fourth panel. Damn it. And Ed has put up the comic. Heās just waiting for me to shut up.
Edmund Kearsley (01:08:57):
So here we go. Have a look.
Laura Smith (01:09:00):
Oh, thatās going to look so cool.
Edmund Kearsley (01:09:02):
Itās the page in full
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:09:04):
That looks so awesome.
Edmund Kearsley (01:09:06):
Looks amazing. A up look. Those stars look great.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:09:18):
Some people the opposite of what mine will look like
Edmund Kearsley (01:09:23):
And thereās there
Laura Smith (01:09:29):
The shock is actually from the outskirt shop that that lady has through the window.
Chris Pitcairn (01:09:36):
I didnāt even think about that. Oh my god.
Edmund Kearsley (01:09:41):
Thatās a good detail here of bitsy taking off the world as helmet to have a look.
Chris Pitcairn (01:09:49):
Thatās really cool.
Edmund Kearsley (01:09:50):
This thing coming in.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:09:52):
Wow. Thatās so cool.
Edmund Kearsley (01:09:55):
And then weāve got the big tentacles.
Chris Pitcairn (01:09:57):
Thatās so cool.
Edmund Kearsley (01:10:01):
That is an amazing looking page.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:10:03):
That is, thatās an awesome first page. And weāre still going for the no words in the word bubble.
Chris Pitcairn (01:10:13):
Bubble. Yeah. Yep. Iām just leaving it. I love it.
Laura Smith (01:10:22):
The temptation to do a tiny little bubble between the tentacles as if itās talking back. But
Chris Pitcairn (01:10:29):
Do it. Do it.
Laura Smith (01:10:31):
I might have to. I might have to. I
Chris Pitcairn (01:10:33):
Think you have to.
Laura Smith (01:10:35):
You said it now.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:10:36):
You put it out there.
Laura Smith (01:10:37):
I donāt make the roll. I just put the weird word bubbles.
Chris Pitcairn (01:10:41):
I was going to do a sound effects for the welding, but I think I might just leave it. Just have it no sound.
Edmund Kearsley (01:10:58):
Yeah, it works really good. It
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:10:59):
Works and
Chris Pitcairn (01:11:03):
Done.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:11:05):
Yeah. Itās just Sunday. Yeah. Sorry. Darker half. Why arenāt I drawing casin? Well thatās because I will be eventually. Ed has made it a rule. Siz has to do one panel
Chris Pitcairn (01:11:21):
Somewhere
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:11:21):
Along the lines. I will ruin the book. Thatās what happened. And donāt forget, comic Street is the following weekend. Thatās true. Itās true. And Shauna, Iām allowed to say that. That is amazing. So I think that was towards the whole page. The comics looking great so far, even though you gave yourself so much work with the tail. Thanks Alex and great stuff from Nick. May I agree? That was bloody awesome. First page.
Edmund Kearsley (01:12:00):
So whatās next? We will be back
Chris Pitcairn (01:12:04):
Next week
Edmund Kearsley (01:12:05):
With three new artists doing another page of randomly selected layout to follow on the adventure of Bitsy the tradey cat.
Chris Pitcairn (01:12:21):
And awesome. I
Laura Smith (01:12:24):
Just realised, I dunno how Photoshop works.
Chris Pitcairn (01:12:30):
Does anyone
Laura Smith (01:12:32):
Go to my screen for a second? I didnāt know it does this. I donāt normally do speech bubbles, right? So Iām just like, oh yeah, do the thing and do the custom tool to do a little tail. So Iām drawing the tail and I get a cat.
Chris Pitcairn (01:12:53):
Thatās cool. I mean honestly, cat shaped speech bubble.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:13:00):
Thatās awesome.
Laura Smith (01:13:05):
So yeah, sometimes you Itās got
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:13:07):
A tail.
Laura Smith (01:13:08):
Itās got a tail. See itās got a
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:13:10):
Tail. There you go.
Laura Smith (01:13:11):
You said there was no tail look. Tail just
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:13:13):
White out the bits you donāt want.
Laura Smith (01:13:18):
Wow. See look, my lack of skill strikes again.
Chris Pitcairn (01:13:24):
No, I think thatās pretty amazing.
Laura Smith (01:13:27):
Howās that for a speech bubble? Just background. Anyway, that was my contribution to the day. Just thanks. Thanks for coming. Donāt mind, weāve got a lot
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:13:41):
Of comments coming in about Awesome, brilliant. All those sort of words. I wonāt read each one, but theyāre pretty much saying fricking awesome page. Theyāre saying it nicer than I just said it, thatās all. And Alex is going on about something, but Iām not going to read that. Itās only Alex and yeah, so I think weāre ready to say goodbye and goodnight. Is that right?
Chris Pitcairn (01:14:10):
Thereās,
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:14:11):
Iāve missed
Edmund Kearsley (01:14:13):
Thank all Chris and Mel and Laura for coming in tonight and doing some awesome drawing and everyone in the chat whoās commented and everyone whoās watching and donāt forget to like and comment and subscribe and what else? Thanks to CS pressing the buttons.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:14:36):
Yep. Bit better than usual. Not great, but bit better. Well, hey, weāre proud of you. Well yeah, it was still a bit better. Come on. Come on Ed. Come on. Still going to
Edmund Kearsley (01:14:47):
Have a meeting
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:14:47):
After. Totally useless. I was just mostly useless. Itās the small things in life. Thank you everyone. Goodnight. See you next week. Anything else, ed?
Edmund Kearsley (01:15:04):
No. Play the video and weāll see you next week.
Shane āSizzleā Syddall (01:15:08):
Yep. See you next week and see you at Drink and draw tomorrow as well. Drink and draw.