Erika Moen's Tumblr
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Special Delivery from Oni Press

Charlie Chu stopped by the studio earlier today to bring us a box of cupcakes courtesy of Oni Press! For no good goddamn reason! Just because they thought we should be stuffing our faces with miniature cupcakes. Which is exactly what we did (Natalie demonstrating in this picture)
Oni Press is swell like that.

Special Delivery from Oni Press

Charlie Chu stopped by the studio earlier today to bring us a box of cupcakes courtesy of Oni Press! For no good goddamn reason! Just because they thought we should be stuffing our faces with miniature cupcakes. Which is exactly what we did (Natalie demonstrating in this picture)

Oni Press is swell like that.

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periscopestudio:

Here are a few of Ben Dewey’s watercolor paintings from another great life drawing session at Periscope Studio.

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stevelieber:

More life drawing. Periscope had its monthly live session, and I made room in my schedule so I could attend. For me, the goal of life drawing isn’t to produce nice looking art. It’s to to keep my eye for light, form, and anatomy sharp and sensitive. If the actual drawings come out okay, that’s a just a nice bonus.

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tally-art:

Some Christmas cards I made for friends!  Click the image for 2 more.

Heehee, I snapped a quick shot of Tally making these!

tally-art:

Some Christmas cards I made for friends!  Click the image for 2 more.

Heehee, I snapped a quick shot of Tally making these!

Natalie Being Crafy

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ALL THE BOOTS.

Me, Cat Farris, and Natalie Nourigat all wore knee high socks and boots to Periscope Studio today, completely coincidentally.
There is booze in my tea mug. I’m not even kidding. What? It’s 2pm, I’m allowed.
This is the life of a cartoonist, yo. Boots, booze, and lady-friends.

ALL THE BOOTS.

Me, Cat Farris, and Natalie Nourigat all wore knee high socks and boots to Periscope Studio today, completely coincidentally.

There is booze in my tea mug. I’m not even kidding. What? It’s 2pm, I’m allowed.

This is the life of a cartoonist, yo. Boots, booze, and lady-friends.

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periscopestudio:

Ron Chan, trying to kick himself in the head while inking. on Flickr.

This is what Periscope is like, you guys.

Remember yesterday when I linked to OPB’s documentary on Periscope Studio and said it was really accurate?

That was a lie.

THIS video. THIS one here, this is the True Periscope.

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Oregon Art Beat mini-documentary on Periscope Studio.

I still love this video on Periscope, they really, truly captured the feeling of our studio.

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periscopestudio:

Betty Draper of Mad Men sees red! BB gun sales skyrocket! Jonathan Case gets back to real work!

I love everything Jonathan does.

periscopestudio:

Betty Draper of Mad Men sees red! BB gun sales skyrocket! Jonathan Case gets back to real work!

I love everything Jonathan does.

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periscopestudio:

Ben Dewey’s got a Miyazaki mashup for this entry in the Periscope sketch challenge. Can you tell what he’s done with Totoro? Click through to Ben’s blog for the answer!
Ben’s original painting for this piece is available at the Perisiscope Studio Etsy store.
More Miyazaki art from us.

Oh my god, I adore watching Ben paint. He is a fucking wizard.

periscopestudio:

Ben Dewey’s got a Miyazaki mashup for this entry in the Periscope sketch challenge. Can you tell what he’s done with Totoro? Click through to Ben’s blog for the answer!

Ben’s original painting for this piece is available at the Perisiscope Studio Etsy store.

More Miyazaki art from us.

Oh my god, I adore watching Ben paint. He is a fucking wizard.

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urlesque:

More great thoughts on the psychology of 4chan from Comics Alliance:
Depending on who you talk to, 4chan is either The-Site-Which-Must-Not-Be-Named or just another image board  frequented by passionate, tech-savvy users. For all its fun  contributions to memedom, however, the site’s definitely earned its  reputation as a force to be reckoned with. Just this week a fringe group  of 4chan users called “Anonymous” managed to shut down Gene Simmons’ website with a traffic-flooding DDoS attack in response to his outspoken (i.e. douchey) comments on copyright law.  That’s why the outcome of Whiteout artist Steve Lieber’s recent  interaction with 4chan is downright heartwarming. After being alerted to  a 4chan thread that posted the bulk of he and writer Jeff Parker’s “Under Ground”  limited series from Image Comics to read for free, Lieber stepped into  the site with a level head that generally won over a number of users  before posting the same material for free at the Underground website.Rather  than berating the thread for more or less pirating he and Parker’s  creator-owned work in a public forum, Lieber instead answered questions  about his career and pointed out that those who liked what they read  could buy the book in print. The response was almost resoundingly  positive with a lot of readers expressing interest in paying for the  comic or simply being excited to have access to a creator willing to  share insights about the industry. A few comments, as expected, were a little nasty, but Lieber’s grace  kept the thread rolling with a positive vibe. We asked Lieber if his  handling of the matter was made easier by his experience on other  prominent comics message boards, but he seemed to feel the same rules of  engagement apply everywhere on the Web. “I’ve been hanging out with other fans on comics message boards since Usenet in the early ’90s. I didn’t do anything different here. The only  ‘secret’ is to talk to people like they’re human beings, and don’t get  bent out of shape if someone says something mean. It’s the internet.  Someone’s always gonna says something mean,” said Lieber. As for 4chan’s rep as one of the potentially nastiest sites online?  Lieber’s genuinely more interested in engaging its users with poise than  being paranoid. After all, criticism is the name of the game in any  creative field.
More: ‘Underground’ Artist Steve Lieber Wins Over 4chan - ComicsAlliance

urlesque:

More great thoughts on the psychology of 4chan from Comics Alliance:

Depending on who you talk to, 4chan is either The-Site-Which-Must-Not-Be-Named or just another image board frequented by passionate, tech-savvy users. For all its fun contributions to memedom, however, the site’s definitely earned its reputation as a force to be reckoned with. Just this week a fringe group of 4chan users called “Anonymous” managed to shut down Gene Simmons’ website with a traffic-flooding DDoS attack in response to his outspoken (i.e. douchey) comments on copyright law.

That’s why the outcome of Whiteout artist Steve Lieber’s recent interaction with 4chan is downright heartwarming. After being alerted to a 4chan thread that posted the bulk of he and writer Jeff Parker’s “Under Ground” limited series from Image Comics to read for free, Lieber stepped into the site with a level head that generally won over a number of users before posting the same material for free at the Underground website.


Rather than berating the thread for more or less pirating he and Parker’s creator-owned work in a public forum, Lieber instead answered questions about his career and pointed out that those who liked what they read could buy the book in print. The response was almost resoundingly positive with a lot of readers expressing interest in paying for the comic or simply being excited to have access to a creator willing to share insights about the industry.

A few comments, as expected, were a little nasty, but Lieber’s grace kept the thread rolling with a positive vibe. We asked Lieber if his handling of the matter was made easier by his experience on other prominent comics message boards, but he seemed to feel the same rules of engagement apply everywhere on the Web.

“I’ve been hanging out with other fans on comics message boards since Usenet in the early ’90s. I didn’t do anything different here. The only ‘secret’ is to talk to people like they’re human beings, and don’t get bent out of shape if someone says something mean. It’s the internet. Someone’s always gonna says something mean,” said Lieber.

As for 4chan’s rep as one of the potentially nastiest sites online? Lieber’s genuinely more interested in engaging its users with poise than being paranoid. After all, criticism is the name of the game in any creative field.

More: ‘Underground’ Artist Steve Lieber Wins Over 4chan - ComicsAlliance