Showing posts with label Steve Lavigne. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Steve Lavigne. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 12, 2016

Free Comic Book Day at Shellback Artworks, May 7, 2016!

I had a nice lunch with Eric Talbot today, and afterwards handed over to him two drawings I did recently, both of which he had agreed to apply his amazing inking talents to. One of them -- this group shot of the Turtles --




-- is intended to be used as the basis for an 11" by 17" color print (with Steve Lavigne colors!) which will be offered for sale at Steve's Shellback Artworks store in Wells, Maine on Free Comic Book Day, which is on May 7 this year (less than a month away!). Eric has also agreed to appear along with me and Steve at Shellback on that day. Yahoo!

If all goes well, and the ink flows readily, we might even have a second 11" by 17" color print available that day -- based on this drawing:




... featuring Leonardo in a life-and death struggle with a malevolent tree spirit! I don't know who will be doing the colors for this piece, but I think it will likely be Eric. I can't wait to see what he does with the inks on these two drawings! -- PL

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

Free Comic Book Day: May 2, 2015 signing at Shellback Artworks



I haven't actually counted, but I think I have done more signings at Steve Lavigne's "Shellback Artworks" comic and art supplies emporium than any other comic book store. 
This Saturday, May 2, along with Steve, I will be doing another one at Shellback, located at 1509 Post Road in Wells, Maine, for the annual "Free Comic Book Day" event. I believe there will be physical printed copies of issue #31 of TMNT Volume 4 for sale at Shellback (I've been told they exist, even though I have yet to actually see one!).

Should be fun! -- PL

[The photo above -- one of my favorites -- is from June of 2012, just before Steve opened Shellback Artworks... which means the store has been open almost three years. Way to go, Steve! Congratulations!]

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Free Comic Book Day weekend, May 3-4, 2014

      This past weekend was "Free Comic Book Day" across the country, and the putative "30th anniversary of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" (they were actually created in November of 1983, but it was May 5, 1984, when we premiered the first issue of the TMNT comic book at a small convention in Portsmouth, NH -- almost exactly thirty years ago), and I was scheduled to appear at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Rochester, NH for Ralph DiBernardo's Jetpack Comics store on Saturday (which is the actual, official"Free Comic Book Day"), and then the following day, Sunday, at my buddy Steve Lavigne's "Shellback Artworks" store in Wells, ME. Steve and my friend and fellow Mirage artist Jim Lawson were also appearing at both venues.

As the weekend approached, I was getting more and more anxious about it. Part of that had to do with what I had been hearing about the event -- that it was going to be huge, with big crowds of people on both days -- but part of it also had to do with the fact that for the first time in a very long time (possibly fifteen years or so, maybe more), I'd be appearing alongside my former partner in Mirage Studios and co-creator of the TMNT, Kevin Eastman.

I wasn't sure how that would go. There has been a lot of water under the bridge, as the saying goes, over the years since Kevin and I first became friends and shortly thereafter created the Ninja Turtles. It's safe to say that over the last couple of decades, we had grown estranged, and had little to do with each other.

Over the past couple of years, however, we have reestablished a relationship though cordial emails, which seemed the best medium given that we live on opposite sides of the country, and I've never been one for talking much on the telephone. We've even recently collaborated artistically again, when I inked a few drawings of Kevin's.

But I was still concerned -- what would it be like to spend time with Kevin, not only in the same room, but at the same table, literally side-by-side, after all these years? Well, I have to be honest…

… I had a great time!

In many ways, it was as if the intervening years just hadn't happened. I once again experienced that warm spirit and infectious, wacky sense of humor that I remembered about Kevin from the early days of our friendship. It was truly a pleasure to see him again.




(Who are those boys? Pete and Kevin in Rochester.)


I wish we'd been able to spend some more time together, outside of the FCBD events, so that we could just talk about life and catch up on what we'd been doing for the last decade or two, but the demands of the weekend and our relative schedules pretty much didn't allow for that, except for one thing which I will get to in a bit. I did also get to briefly meet his wife Courtney and son Shane, which was nice.

Outside of being with Kevin, how were the signings themselves? Two words come to my mind -- exhilarating and exhausting. I think I spent about four or five hours each day along with Kevin signing, shaking hands, and chatting with fans, most of whom had come from neighboring states, but some of whom had traveled huge distances to come to the events. 



(Mirage dudes pose with fans at Shellback Artworks)



(Pete signing in Rochester)

We heard many wonderful personal stories about how the Turtles had touched lives and had great influence in positive ways. One gentleman even brought custom-embroidered honorary black belts for me and Kevin from his Taekwondo school, something he had eventually begun some years after being inspired to take up martial arts as a kid because he loved the Turtles.

We signed lots and lots of stuff, including comics, prints, toys, t-shirts and books, as well as some unusual things -- a samurai sword, two small light-tables, the headrest of a wheelchair, and an iPhone case, to name a few.




I think my favorite moment was when a family came to the table, with the kids dressed like the four Turtles, the mother like April O'Neil in her yellow jumpsuit, and the father like Vernon from the first TMNT animated series. Too cute!




It's a very good thing that the number of things we signed, per person, was kept to three items per person per trip through the lines, as we might still be there signing if it had been more. (And given how much extra time it took to sign everyone's stuff even with that limit, and how many people actually had to be turned away, I think it might have been a good idea to limit it to two items, or perhaps even one.) 






(Two views of the line outside Shellback Artworks... the line also 
wound around the inside of the store and up to the second floor!)


      As it was, we stayed longer than scheduled, and I will confess that during the last hour of each signing day, especially the second one, as fatigue and backache began to creep over me, I was in danger of completely losing my sense of humor. If not for the inspiration of Kevin, who was determined to sign stuff for everybody who'd waited patiently in line, I very well may have left at my scheduled time and headed for the tranquility and quiet of the Maine coast.

One other thing that helped keep my flagging energy levels from dropping too low was the fact that my brother Bruce, who'd traveled to Maine with me for the signings, and my lovely daughter Emily stayed through the whole of each appearance, offering support.



(Kevin, Emily and Pete)

Near the end of the second day, I was taking a brief break and chatting with Isaac, Randall and Mark, the gents doing the TMNT documentary, who had made the long trip down from Canada once again to see if they could capture some interesting footage from the FCBD events. I told them I'd had this idea -- something I had mused about for some months, perhaps years -- that it might be cool if at some point Kevin and I had the opportunity to return to the site of the house in Dover, where we'd created the Turtles back in 1983, and just reminisce about the experience and the years since. The documentary dudes thought that was a neat idea -- in fact, I think Randall said he'd had a similar one -- and we almost got it together to do the thing that afternoon, but the extra time we put into the signing at Shellback Artworks and the lengthening shadows of late afternoon put paid to that idea.

However, Isaac told me that they would be willing to extend their stay a bit longer and, if the weather cooperated, and Kevin and I could fit it into our schedules, they could be available to do it the next day. So we made a plan to meet in Dover the following morning at 9:30, unless it was raining.

Well, the weather gods were on our side, as Monday morning was crisp and sunny. Bruce and I drove to Dover, pulling in after the documentary crew had arrived. Kevin and Courtney showed up a few minutes later, followed by Emily, who had wanted to be there for the filming. Kevin and I got miked up, discussed what we might do, and then just started talking as we wandered around the small empty lot which once held the equally small house in which the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles had come to life.




It was really nice to kind of free-associate with Kevin as we recalled various details about our time there, each of us remembering different things, which sparked other memories. Most of the details of our day-to-day lives from that time are long gone, but some were quite sharp and clear. Kevin recalled how my wife Jeannine (to whom I had gotten married in that tiny back yard in 1983) used to make great muffins (she still does), and I recalled Kevin's practice of rolling up socks and putting them on the arms of his stuffed chair under his lap board, to get just the right angle for drawing. And we both recalled the moment when, after a shared supper, while we were doing the dishes, Kevin stuck a cheese grater over his forearm. Waving it around, he opined that it would make for a cool villain, who could just grate you to death.

Thus was born Grateman… uh, the Shredder.



(from left to right: Randall, Kevin, Pete, Isaac, Mark.)

Soon we had to take off the mikes and say goodbye to our Canadian friends, wishing them good luck in getting the last pieces of the documentary together. I know I have said this before, but I really think their documentary is going to blow the minds of any real TMNT fans out there, given all of the time and talent and love they have lavished on it over the last five years or so, traveling all over to talk to people who had been involved with and/or been influenced by the TMNT. Keep an eye out for it!

     Bruce and I drove back to Maine to pack up our stuff and pick up my dog Parker, who'd come with us on this trip to the seacoast, then headed back to Massachusetts, stopping once more outside of Concord, NH for a giant dish of ice cream.

So ended my 2014 Free Comic Book Day weekend. -- PL


       (Photos by Bruce Laird. Thanks, dude! Thanks also to Ralph and his crew from Jetpack Comic, and Steve and Denise and their helpers at Shellback Artworks, and to all of the great fans who showed up for these events. And special thanks to the man himself, Kevin Eastman, without whom I would not be writing this today. -- PL)


Friday, January 24, 2014

Inking a Steve Lavigne cover drawing


      A few weeks ago, I got a call from my pal Steve Lavigne. He asked me if I would be interested in inking a cover he was penciling for IDW, for a reprint of some old Archie TMNT comics stories, I think. Having had fun last year inking a couple of his drawings, I said I would.

Steve sent me this JPEG of the penciled drawing, which he had drawn in photo-blue pencil…




… which I printed out on a piece of 11 by 17 inch card stock, and got to inking. I was planning to do it all with brush and ink, but realized pretty quickly that my somewhat rusty inking skills were not quite up to handling the level of fine detail in the drawing in that fashion, so after doing a little bit -- mostly the foreground figures -- with brush, I switched over to a variety of brush markers. That was a lot more in my "comfort zone".

I scanned the inks…





… and then set about clearing up any remnants of the blue pencils, in Photoshop, eventually ending up with this clean version…




… that I could send to Steve so he could do his computer coloring. And a few days later, he sent me this…




… which I think looks very cool! -- PL

Saturday, September 7, 2013

Inking by the ocean



I don't draw much these days, so I sometimes forget how much fun it can be to open a bottle of ink, sit down with a fine tip brush and do some inking… especially when someone else has already done the heavy lifting, i.e. the penciling.

This past week, when Jeannine and I were spending some time at the new place in Maine, I drove up to Wells to visit my pal Steve Lavigne (something I will be doing again this coming Saturday, the 14th, when I join Jim Lawson at Steve's "Shellback Artworks" store from noon until 4PM to do a signing). Steve showed me a cool drawing he'd done of Casey Jones, and I asked him if I could ink it. Steve not only agreed, but gave me a bottle of ink and a brush right off one of his store shelves.

I decided to work on it in a space I'd set up in the new house specifically so Jeannine could sit at a window with a great view of the ocean while she writes or reads. I figured it would probably be a good place to draw as well, and I was right. I had a blast inking the drawing, and occasionally looking up and seeing the waves. 

Here's a vertical panorama I made from some photos I took about halfway through the inking process. -- PL


Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Shellback Artworks group signing August 11, 2012



I had fun with the Mirage Studios crew -- Dan Berger, Mike Dooney, Jim Lawson, Eric Talbot, and Steve Lavigne -- this past weekend. We all travelled up from Massachusetts to do a signing at Steve's store "Shellback Artworks" in Wells, ME.

Here's a sampling of photographs from the event. (Of course, I followed my usual bad habit of not getting the names of most of the people I took photos of. Sorry!)

There was one gentleman who drove a LONG way to come to the signing -- I can't remember which midwest state he was from, but I think he easily took the prize for "most miles driven to get to Shellback Artworks". He brought with him a nifty vintage VW van toy, which we all took turns signing. Mike even did some "Turtleizing" of it, adding some shell texture to certain areas.










I think this next person's name is David, and after talking with us for a while and getting some things signed, we posed for a photo with him. Then he went to the local Wal-Mart and got it printed in a large format, brought it back, and we all signed it. 




Cool idea! I had no clue that you could get prints done like that at Wal-Mart.

Here's Eric signing the photo.




Chris Parlon and his girlfriend Katie, who were also at the grand opening signing, showed up for this one as well.




We signed this dude's yellow shoulder bag…




… and the back of this pizza box (which had previously held some of our lunch).




I have to draw particular attention to the thing Jim Lawson sketched on this box -- something that, in all the years of the TMNT, with all the references to pizza and surfing, has NEVER been done before (as far as I know): a Turtle surfing on a piece of pizza.

Genius! Jim, you're too much.

Here's Jim in the act of creation -- I was fortunate enough to be sitting next to him at the signing, and thus caught this moment for posterity.



Mike took it upon himself to, um, enhance the image of infant April on the cover of this fan's copy of TMNT Volume 4 #22.





Here's Steve posing with one of his store t-shirts which we all signed. I don't know where the shirt ended up.



It was great to have Eric with us -- I hadn't seen him in months. He brought with him some blank stickers with the die-cut shape of a skull and crossbones (the result of a printing error) and invited us all to draw something on them. Here's a photo of Eric working on one…



… and here are five COMPLETELY different approaches to using that space. Can you guess who did which?




All in all, a fun time! -- PL

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Shellback Artworks' grand opening!


Well, I'm back home and recovering from a busy weekend  helping my buddy Steve Lavigne celebrate the grand opening of his new store, "Shellback Artworks", in Wells, ME yesterday. Jeannine and I went up for the private pre-opening party on Friday night, which was fun, but the real work (for me, anyway) started on Saturday at noon, when I got to the store and found about a dozen or more people waiting with stuff to be signed. 

Here's the banner which greeted us when we arrived.




I sat down at the table provided for me and for the next couple of hours didn't stop signing things ranging from comics to backing boards from blister-packed toys to t-shirts to plush TMNT dolls and a few things more. I only got a break around 2PM, and managed to snag a few pieces of the free pizza Steve and his wife Denise had provided for the people attending the opening.

I hadn't done a signing in quite a while, but it was a lot of fun, and I wish Steve the best of luck with this new venture. RIght now, the shelves are not completely full, but Steve has a lot more stuff on the way, and I don't doubt that in short order the place will be chock full of cool stuff -- art supplies, comics, and toys. Steve and Denise's lovely daughter Gracie has a display case in the store with some of her cool handmade jewelry, and I bought two matching necklaces for Jeannine and Emily.

It was pretty neat to see the way Steve arranged the big Turtle sculptures in the store -- now he just has to make sure people don't tug on them (they look solid, but they're actually pretty fragile).

I took some photos during the moments when I had a chance to get up and walk around. Unfortunately, I don't remember the names of some (well, most) of the folks in them -- sorry!

I think Denise took this photo of me with a young woman named Robin who was in the area working on a "Fight Cancer" event. I signed her poster as well as the sleeve of her t-shirt.




This cute couple -- Chris Parlon and his girlfriend Katie -- posed for a photo op with Michelangelo and Donatello.




That's a happy Steve in the center right of this photo chatting with customers as Denise rings up their purchases.




Here Steve appears to be sketching a Turtle head for a couple of fans…




… one of whom also displayed some TMNT body art.




During a lull around 2PM, I tried to get some photos that I could put together into a panoramic view from where I was sitting during the signing, but I screwed it up, so the result is a little crude. 




But it does give a fairly good view of the lower level of Shellback Artworks. Behind that yellow/orange wall in the background are the stairs going up to the second floor, where Steve currently has the gallery space and the first exhibit, which is a group of pieces from my collection of work I've done by myself or in collaboration with other artists.

And if you go around to the right side of that yellow/orange wall, there is a set of stairs leading down to the basement, where Steve will be holding his various art classes.

So if you're in the area, check it out! -- PL


Thursday, July 30, 2009

Blast from the Past 213: "The Good Ol' Days" in Sharon, CT

While looking for those old San Diego photos I posted last week, I also found these goodies from our days in Sharon, CT. These were taken at a time when we had not yet grasped the idea that, if we supplied a list of addresses and how many copies were supposed to go to which addresses, our printer could ship all of the books. Instead, we had the printer -- which at the time was in Lakeville, CT, one town over -- ship all the books to my rented house (or maybe we picked them up from the printer in my car, I can't remember). Here's a photo of Kevin taking a break on a stack of TMNT #2 in the living room of our house.



My wife didn't really care to have these boxes cluttering up the house, so we'd haul them down to the basement, where we'd begin the laborious job of counting out each order, then reboxing them to be shipped out to the various distributors. One of the reasons we did this instead of just depending on the count the printer put on the outside of each box was that we had discovered when looking through one of those early printings of TMNT #2 that it suffered from random bad trimming -- at some point in the binding and trimming process, something went wrong and some of the copies ended up trimmed at weird angles, rendering those copies unsaleable (and unreadable, in some cases). So, just to be sure none of our customers got any of these bad copies, we hand inspected each one before they went out. It was a giant pain in the butt.

Steve Lavigne moved down to Sharon around this time, becoming the first Mirage Studios employee. We put him to work helping us go through the boxes of comics, inspecting and counting and reboxing. Here he and Kevin are hard at work in the basement, packing copies of TMNT #3.



And here's Kevin doing the same thing with issue #2, in the living room.



But this grunt work wasn't the only thing occupying our time -- we also had to continue working on the drawing of the book itself. Here's Kevin working on issue #3 during the short time he lived with us in our rented house by Silver Lake.



Occasionally, the need would arise for goofy hijinks and silliness -- witness "Conehead Kevin".



Kevin would often do stuff like this, usually to make me laugh... and usually succeeding. -- PL

Thursday, May 7, 2009

More images from Free Comic Book Day 2009

Here are a few more photos from Free Comic Book Day last Saturday in Rochester, NH. This first one is of a young lady named Meagan Windham, who asked for -- and got -- her shirt signed by all of the Mirage dudes.



A photo of Jim Lawson signing her shirt was featured in an article in "Foster's Daily Democrat", a local paper -- here's the link for the online version: http://www.fosters.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20090503/GJNEWS_01/705039837

This little dude below is, I think, one of those "second generation" TMNT fans we've started to encounter at shows.



These two gentlemen came in their cool homemade costumes -- that's Brandon Berry as Casey Jones, and T.K. Travis as the Shredder.



There were some folks selling these cool horns at the show -- they're held on by elastics, and really fit quite well. I like how the positioning of the camera's lens in this one of Mike Dooney about to take a photo makes him look kind of like some weird Cyclops.



And here we all are, modeling the latest in demonic cranial excrescences.



Unfortunately, I lost the business card of the people who make these fine add-ons. I thought they were very nifty. -- PL