I think the reader reactions are the most entertaining thing about LOLBat
What are you talking about? He's just trying to give his comic a little zip(-a-tone). Make sure the readers know that PvP still has something of (Mary) worth to put up on the old website. Set his little strip apart(ment 3G) from the rest of the pack. He's probably got lots of great feedback on it, his fans stick with him through all the Hi and Lois.Anyone else think his syndicated newspaper fetish is showing a little blatantly this time?
Do we still have a pet peeve thread?so I could give a fuck.
Agreed, it looks great.I'll say it too, it's not funny and LOLbat still blows, but fuck does that look slick as hell.
And this.Yeah it looks great, but it's LOLbat, so I could give a fuck.
Do we still have a pet peeve thread?
PVP isn't really a webcomic anymore -- it's performance art.A comic in German. Why? Why the fuck would you do that? I know he provided a translation... but WTF?
I understand why that frustrates you, but everything you hate about LOLBat are the things I love the most.For me personally the problem with LOLBat is that while Kurtz enjoys drawing them, his storylines - if any - are usually trite as hell. The latest Kringus arc felt like it was aborted out of boredom, with the introduction of the Kringle Force just left hanging in the air instead of given some space to flesh them out. Most of the LOLBat comics seem like filler material that Kurtz has just stuck in when he's not feeling like doing anything (such as the whole colouring book idea).
And of course there's the whole issue with Butler. I frickin' loved Butler. He was cool, savvy, knowledgeable, calmly satirical, a true educated Jeeves to Robbie's hedonistic, flabby Wooster. Aaaaand then he gets slapped on with being frickin' LOLBat. A one-shot idea with a single joke repeated ad nauseam, and the whole thing how the hell he is LOLBat is just lazy writing (a secret society mentioned in one frickin' panel, that's it). For me, that sealed the deal. I could handle LOLBat as he had been before; a kind of filler material living in a separate universe from the PvPverse. But to tie him into the 'verse, through a character that didn't need such uncharacteristic 'background' through a slipshod 'story'... I'm sorry but I just can't get over that.
I miss the old PvP, to be honest... you know, back when the jokes used to be funny?
I liked Shecky before it was cool and ironic to like Shecky.
So... is he just tracing this stuff or just using references? I get having reference stuff but if he's just copying things line for line... thats... way less cool.Credit Where Credit is Due
— May 3rd, 2011
I’ve been getting a lot of emails and twitter compliments on the artwork over the last couple of days. Thank you to everyone who has taken the time to pass on a kind word or compliment. It fuels me, honestly. But before you guys start complimenting me TOO much, I wanted to make sure everyone knows that I’m borrowing heavily for this story arc. I am surrounded by books of pulp adventure comics from the 40’s and 50’s. I’m propped up by a lot of artistic crutches here.
I’m fascinated by the artwork of the great adventure strips from the 40s. And I’m jealous of the modern masters who are able to truly understand this style and emulate it today. Chris Samnee, Steve Lieber and others really know their stuff. I don’t. I want to draw this way, but I’m still learning. And that’s what this week’s strips is really all about for me. Learning. We get so busy that we kind of learn publicly these days. I experiment live with each day’s strip. I don’t sit and sketch for hours every day. The strip is what I get to draw. So I learn as I go. And you guys get to watch. Probably not the best process, but that’s what’s working right now. So let’s not rock the boat too much.
I am really proud of the last panel of Tuesday’s strip though. That LOLbat was all me (and you can tell because my spot blacks are off on his body). But I was really proud of that when I finished it. And it felt good because maybe some of this is actually sinking in.
I am really proud of the last panel of Tuesday’s strip though. That LOLbat was all me (and you can tell because my spot blacks are off on his body). But I was really proud of that when I finished it. And it felt good because maybe some of this is actually sinking in.
Oh, I don't have a problem with learning that way. It's how I learned to draw comics.That to me says copying, no tracing - or - heavy reference, trying to ape the style while building his own figures. It's one way to learn.
I'm not against that. Complaining that you don't have time to work on your skills though when this is WHAT YOU DO so instead you copy/trace/whatever you want to call it? Meh. Make time to get better. You owe it not just to your advertisers and your fans but to yourself.He loads an image into photoshop, sets opacity, throws a layer on top of it and essentially traces. Not every image but anything that would require a lot of time to create or something that is out of his realm of artistic ability. If you watch his live webcast you'll see what he does. In fact he uses many of the images he's drawn in the past of his characters and either copies the image and make a slight alteration (like a head tilt or a smile instead of a frown) and go with it. I applaud the fact that he doesn't try and be sneaky with it. He shows the world what he's doing and makes no apologies. It's more about streamlining his work over his lack of ability. He has proven he can draw but many times he's working with a tight deadline and doesn't have the time to spend several hours drawing the strip.
Or you wind up like Rob Granito.I'm not against that. Complaining that you don't have time to work on your skills though when this is WHAT YOU DO so instead you copy/trace/whatever you want to call it? Meh. Make time to get better. You owe it not just to your advertisers and your fans but to yourself.
Fixed that quote there."I am quitting PvP and doing 1940's LOLbat from now on. It's just too much fun. I could trace this strip forever."
- Scott Kurtz
Lol, and he still thinks he's newspaper caliber? Bill Waterson drew a brand-spankin new comic everyday.He loads an image into photoshop, sets opacity, throws a layer on top of it and essentially traces. Not every image but anything that would require a lot of time to create or something that is out of his realm of artistic ability. If you watch his live webcast you'll see what he does. In fact he uses many of the images he's drawn in the past of his characters and either copies the image and make a slight alteration (like a head tilt or a smile instead of a frown) and go with it. I applaud the fact that he doesn't try and be sneaky with it. He shows the world what he's doing and makes no apologies. It's more about streamlining his work over his lack of ability. He has proven he can draw but many times he's working with a tight deadline and doesn't have the time to spend several hours drawing the strip.
Waterson had a syndicate to take care of all the marketing, publishing, product distribution and what-not. I don't know just how busy Kurtz is running his business, but I'm going to guess it does eat into drawing time at least a little to have to deal with all the non-art stuff that's involved in being a webcomic artist.Lol, and he still thinks he's newspaper caliber? Bill Waterson drew a brand-spankin new comic everyday.
I love Bill Watterson and C&H as true American cultural icons, but I don't think he would have ever made it as a webcomic artist, because he notoriously hated the promotional, even the self-promotional, side of the business, and that's an unavoidable necessity in being an independent anything online.Waterson had a syndicate to take care of all the marketing, publishing, product distribution and what-not. I don't know just how busy Kurtz is running his business, but I'm going to guess it does eat into drawing time at least a little to have to deal with all the non-art stuff that's involved in being a webcomic artist.