I like the sentiment here, I like the idea of a cartoon caption being kind of retroactively mean to the person in the cartoon. Good things happening there. Yes.
Bit of a love poem told in signage. Probably just invented a new genre that deserves a name like “sonnet” or “villanelle”. But neither of those, because they’re already taken. Suggestions?
Series of three comics drawn in something of a hurry based on three poems from a series I wrote recently in which each poem started “The other woman” and went from there.
Bit of a one liner about the drama and romance of opera singers and just how much passion bursts forth in a high C, and how hard it might then to be impress an opera singin’ lady.
Naturally, we’d need the corollary to the classic “two men enter” concept. I like that fact that, without my input into the situation, the two men who leave, leave together, and, I like to believe, in love. I’m just happy to be a part of it, folks.
I’ve been wanting to use this photo for something for ages because it looked like a comic already. And then the other night I wrote a seriously large number of poems about “the other woman”. Hey, presto – a forced juxtaposition!
Sometimes a man has to treat himself to an evening of virtual cross stitch. I did. This is based on a cross stitch slogan and design Rilla and I came up with and plan to actually make one of these days.
A quick one based on a quick poem based on a glimpse of the laundry rack out of the corner of my eye. Yes, I am aware that the drawing of the laundry rack, and particularly its legs, is kind of horrible. Screw it.
Another comic based on a poem. Tried to make the first panel moody and potentially exciting, and the second comfortable, while having them be the same scene, but with a break in it matching the poem’s stanzas. Deep!
Dragonfly mating, unlike dog sex, manages to look a bit sweet as they fly through the air coupled together. It seemed to naturally pair with this song in my head as I walked down the street one day.