Here’s the color version of my #Inktober #6 Cartoon Kitty!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Oct.07, 2020, under Cartooning
Here’s the color version of my #Inktober #6.
Watercolor on heavy sketch paper.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
#CatArt #Cat #Kitty #Art #Cartoon #CartoonCat #watercolor #Watercolorpainting #artlife #artlifestyle #Illustration #catlovers
My watercolored #Inktober #1 – A Butterfly Visitation.
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Oct.02, 2020, under Cartooning
My watercolored Inktober #1.
Drawn improv, off the top of my head.
No pencils. No plan. My favorite way to work!
This one is sold.
Materials –
Pen: Zebra Onamae Mackee Double-Sided Name Marker – Fine / Extra Fine Twin Tip – Black Ink
https://www.jetpens.com/Zebra-Onamae-Mackee-Double-…/…/10841
Paper: Canson (100510941) XL Series Watercolor Pad
https://amzn.to/33idn6G
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
#Cartoon #cartoonist #LiveArt #LiveArtist #Illustration #Ink
#Cat #Watercolor #WatercolorPainting #Painting #catPainting
#CartoonCat #Butterfly #CarArt
My inked Inktober #1 – A Butterfly Visitation.
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Oct.02, 2020, under Cartooning
My inked Inktober #1 – A Butterfly Visitation.
Drawn improv, off the top of my head.
No pencils. No plan. My favorite way to work!
Live watercolor of this piece at 7pm on my personal page.
Video of ink and watercolor later.
Watercolor piece will be available: $10.
+ $5 postage.
If not sold here,later on Etsy $20 + postage.
1st to private message here or e-mail: swampy@swampysFlorida.com
Materials –
Pen: Zebra Onamae Mackee Double-Sided Name Marker – Fine / Extra Fine Twin Tip – Black Ink
https://www.jetpens.com/Zebra-Onamae-Mackee-Double-…/…/10841
Paper: Canson (100510941) XL Series Watercolor Pad
https://amzn.to/33idn6G
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
#Cartoon #cartoonist #LiveArt #LiveArtist #Illustration #Ink
#Cat
#CartoonCat #Butterfly
Last minute caricature illustration by me for a client celebrating a promotion!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.30, 2020, under Caricatures
Here’s the drawing I did Saturday at the 3pm Ha-Ba-Da-Bee- Critter Music!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.30, 2020, under Cartooning, Illusration
These will involve this page, my Cartoons by Rob Smith, Jr. page and my Swampy’s Florida page and an Etsy site.
Book Review; ‘The Man Who Shot Lewis Vance’ by Stuart M. Kaminsky
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.29, 2020, under Books
The Man Who Shot Lewis Vance by Stuart M. Kaminsky
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Kaminsky starts this book as all do: continuing from the book before. In this case the one before ends with a call involving John Wayne. This one starts inconsistently with a different beginning not connecting with the end of the last book, though both involve Wayne.
The entire tale Kaminsky has assembled is conflated and ridiculous. The various bad guys involved really couldn’t have pulled off what is written. These are very different bad guys. Making it worse are layer of bad guys that really don’t work. Especially considering the ending. John Wayne appears shoved in to it all and then Charlie Chaplin is looped in. Both are a stretch of Kaminsky’s effort to include celebrities. He does do an excellent job of writing their dialogue. I could hear both in the writings.
Though the plot is over blown,the over all writing is very good. There are some very good and funny scenes,making this still worth reading.
Bottom line: i recommend this book. 5 out of ten points.
Book Review: ‘Down for the Count’ by Stuart M. Kaminsky
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.28, 2020, under Books
Down for the Count by Stuart M. Kaminsky
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
Despite the underlying sadness of most of the characters, Kaminsky molds this series into a very humorous lot. This one is better than others. Knowing the characters from previous books helped liking this book more. Coming into this cold and not knowing certain relationships, a new reader might find this a tougher go.
The plot is very well thought out. Others in the series feels as if Kaminsky is taking a celebrity and forming a story around. This was a stronger story that seemed a celebrity was found to drop in. Again, there is the oddity that another celebrity becomes a friend of the main character and then is dropped off.
I really liked how the plot connected to a few earlier parts of the series and continued the character’s stories…or ended it. The bad guys are a bit similar to earlier Kaminsky bad guys, just with different names for two.
The writing is sharp and funny. All leading to a surprise ending.
Drawback is more focus on side characters and poetry and other’s writings that gets a bit long. Though, shorter than in other entries.
Bottom line: I recommend this book. 8 out of ten points.
A last Minute Caricature Request!
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.28, 2020, under Caricatures, Cartooning
Book Review: ‘Running Scared’ by Tome
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.27, 2020, under Books
Running Scared by Tome
My rating: 5 of 5 stars
This series of ‘Spirou and Fantasio’ spans decades. I’ve read only a handful. The few have been brilliant in plot, story and illustration. The closest anything has gotten close to this is the work of Will Eisner with his ‘Spirit’ series and his ‘Contract with God’, though the latter lacks the depth of just this volume of the two adventurers.. That’s an odd thing to write in that Eisner’s entire reason for producing his first of a series of graphic novels was a depth of faith and life.
The tale starts one way and then unfolds with more and more involved. The involvement has the characters further defined. The supporting characters are as good or better. Human and non-human. Each has a role,though all could just be on for the ride. Nothing is involved that doesn’t hook into the overall story. Just brilliant in writing and detail.
Part of the brilliance is in the details drawn. For instance, at one point the guide spirits a gun from some bad guys. This isn’t known until after the encounter illustrated pages before. Going back to look for the theft, the actual theft is not shown, but the panels of bad guy with gun, a spurious hug by the guide and then the tiniest detail of the bad guy with an open open holster flap two panels later. The details are illustrated with he simplest care. Sometimes not being shown at all. While traveling to seek their goal, the group traverses mountainous area. the beauty is in the simplicity that tells what otherwise would have been pages of description. The area the good guy’s vehicle is in, the expanse beyond in layers of mere line indicating mountain peaks at various distances, some village of few lines. Quite a task to pull off in one panel.
This is technique is repeated later involving an exchange with still another group of guys, the rebels, as the good guys are herded off revealing distance of where the bad guys are, the good guys had been, a distance of travel and where the group could look backwards to the distance. Seeing the illustrated version tells all. Brilliant work.
The largest draw back is that this is a two part tale. Though, considering this result, I have no doubt the entire tale gets even better.
Bottom line: i recommend this book: 10 out of 10 points.
Book Review: ‘He Done Her Wrong’ by Stuart M. Kaminsky
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.27, 2020, under Books
He Done Her Wrong by Stuart M. Kaminsky
My rating: 3 of 5 stars
Another fun excursion with Toby Peters with a pretty good, but obvious for me, mystery.
The writing is what makes this worth reading. THat and the sly references throughout. Though, the misspelling of Ish Kabibble’s name bugged me.
The general situations are the same of settings, angry brother, office problems, just about every big star becoming a fleeting friend, mystery of somebody attached and resolution being about the same.
This one was more tedious as Kaminsky went much longer involving tedious side stories. Funny to read, but that many pages could’ve been another book.
The plot, writing, characters, settings are nearly all the same and Kaminsky covers the worn territory well.
Bottom Line: i recommend this book: 6 out of ten points.
Book Review: ‘Killer’s Payoff’ by Ed McBain
by Rob Smith, Jr. on Sep.25, 2020, under Books
Killer’s Payoff by Ed McBain
My rating: 4 of 5 stars
It’s been a while since I visited the 87th Precinct. About 20 years. That visit I didn’t like. This one I do.
Being a strict procedural, this book is never boring. The structure of the plot is perfect to scatter elements of the story for the police officers to track and assemble theories and answers. McBain uses many literary tricks sprinkled throughout to draw the reader in and through the tale.
Establishing the characters is done mostly through actions and less narrative. Writers ability to do this takes a great deal of focus and organization to do this in various parts of a book that can add up to a completing profile by the reader. This is a crackerjack job.
The settings are also extremely well written as both urban and rural and wooded areas are all part of the story. McBain is weakest describing the outdoor areas. I love how McBain can write of various structures in the city he created and each have a separate distinction. So very impressive.
Sadly, there was an obvious and required move to be made by the police that wasn’t written in. That told me what had happened early in the book and I knew eventually where the story would end up.
Bottom line: i recommend this book. 8 out of ten points.