HEY! As you can tell, this blog has all but been abandoned. I've moved to tumblr, so should you be interested in what I'm up to and what I'm making these days, check me out over there at holtermonster.com.
15 August 2011
HEY!
HEY! As you can tell, this blog has all but been abandoned. I've moved to tumblr, so should you be interested in what I'm up to and what I'm making these days, check me out over there at holtermonster.com.
05 April 2011
Webcomic Review: Johnny Wander
Yuko's webcomic is fun. It's clean, simple, well drawn, funny, and pretty random with a mix of autobiographical slice-o-life anecdotes and a string of recurring characters. She describes it as:
Johnny Wander might be about life after college, being a kid, growing up and all the people you meet and all the things that happen in that brave new world.
Or it might be about something else entirely.

Johnny Wander might be about life after college, being a kid, growing up and all the people you meet and all the things that happen in that brave new world.
Or it might be about something else entirely.

30 March 2011
Webcomic Review: 69 Love Songs
69 Love Songs Illustrated is not necessarily a webcomic, but it caught my interest. It's the product of a group of about 30 or so London illustrators who, over Twitter, decided to bond together in mutual admiration of the Magnetic Fields and attempt to illustrate all 69 of the band's love songs. Each submission is different, ranging from short comics to collages.


Labels:
comics,
comics 4,
webcomic reviews,
webcomics
23 March 2011
Webcomic Review: Blue
Webcomic Review: Muktuk Wolfsbreath, Hard Boiled Shaman
09 March 2011
Webcomic Review: Gingerbread Girl
The Gingerbread Girl is on the Top Shelf Comix website as part of their TS2.0. It's updated in three page posts and follows a girl who believes her father removed the part of her brain that registers physical and emotional feelings, which she calls her gingerbread girl. All of the characters, including a pigeon, talk to the camera to help introduce backstory and move the story along.


Webcomics Review: Lackadaisy
Lackadaisy is a webcomic by Tracy J. Butler, who says "It's about a gang of tenacious (if not shady) characters running a St. Louis speakeasy in the era of Prohibition. I suppose it falls somewhere in the realm of historical fiction, parody, dark comedy, and abject nonsense." Oh, and they're cats, and it's really nicely done.

Also, Tracy put together this nice looking and informative tutorial on facial expressions that anyone drawing comics could benefit from.


Also, Tracy put together this nice looking and informative tutorial on facial expressions that anyone drawing comics could benefit from.

Webcomic Review: Scott McCloud
Scott McCloud, whose name should be very familiar to illustration students, wrote a serial webcomic about a mathematics major who discovers a link between personally compatible women and the similarity of their phone numbers. The full story is on his website in an interesting format--each panel displays alone, with the next one buried in the current panel's center. The reader clicks through as each panel expands to fullscreen. I like the idea of displaying a finished story arc in an interactive way like this. Also, like stacking panels to be scrolled down and read, it helps in timing and surprise, since you can't accidentally skip ahead visually and ruin something.


02 March 2011
Webcomic Review: Saturday Morning Breakfast Cereal
SMBC is one of those webcomics with recurring characters and themes, but usually different characters every time. Sometimes the comics involve characters from comic books or pop culture, but unlike a lot of webcomics that focus on the DC & Marvel universes, the references aren't usually over my head, like the one below.


24 February 2011
Webcomic Review: Amazing Super Powers
This is a webcomic my younger, nerdier brother turned me on to, and he's probably the best source I have for new nerdy internet media. It's actually pretty funny and usually only 3 panels. I'm picking up on around 4 or 5 recurring characters that rotate out, including a pair of balding Yankee detectives. I like cop humor.

I really like the easter egg idea, too. Every strip has an extra panel that you can view by clicking the hidden question mark to the top right of each strip. I didn't find that, the sibling did. Thanks bro!

I really like the easter egg idea, too. Every strip has an extra panel that you can view by clicking the hidden question mark to the top right of each strip. I didn't find that, the sibling did. Thanks bro!
10 December 2010
PROMOTIONAL PACKS!
My final project for Illustration 5 was to create 25 promotional packs and send them out to clients I want to work with. It almost seems frivolous to spend so much money and time creating physical representation when most content is dealt with digitally, but I think that tactility is important. There is some inherent awesomeness in seeing a piece in print as opposed to the screen. And being that most of my work never makes it past a screen, it's really exciting to see something specifically designed to be handled and interacted with intimately take its right shape. It feels like they are now finished pieces--no longer just .ai files that I can open and tweak at a moment's notice. With that comes a sense of permanence, too, which is both good and bad. For example, I now have 40 sets of cards with a missing embedded photo, a grammatical error, and one with a really hideous solution to fabricating bleeds from a pdf after absentmindedly deleting the original file. C'est la vie. Regardless of the mistakes, and the unfortunate design flaws in my packaging--which just can't be foreseen looking at a flattened image on a laptop--I'm really proud to have these made. I think even the most technologically savvy can agree there is a much larger inherent significance in the receipt of a handcut, handfolded, handglued, individually addressed and handstamped envelope over a fancy email with an attachment.

This is how it looks when it arrives in your mailbox.

This is how it looks when you open it.


This is the plan for the box & the response postcard I enclosed.
I've all but gone broke paying for this final product, but I have to keep reminding myself that in the long run, if I get even one job from any of these big name clients, it'll pay for itself.

This is how it looks when it arrives in your mailbox.

This is how it looks when you open it.


This is the plan for the box & the response postcard I enclosed.
I've all but gone broke paying for this final product, but I have to keep reminding myself that in the long run, if I get even one job from any of these big name clients, it'll pay for itself.
16 November 2010
MIDTOWN ARCHETYPES
So, I finished my Midtown Archtypes series. Well, not really finished it, but I've done enough to fulfill the assignment it was originally intended for. I'd like to leave it open to continue. I considered doing another 1 or 2 for the assignment, but I agreed on 8 as a final number with Joel last week, and honestly, I need to stop myself. I could sit around making these all month. You can click on over to my gallery to see them>> laurenrae.carbonmade.com


Labels:
illustration,
illustration 5,
midtown archetypes,
vector
15 November 2010
IN PROGRESS: MIDTOWN ARCHETYPES
Recently, I've been working on a series of illustrations chronicling the artsy-fartsy archetypes of midtown Memphis. They're all caricatured and vector--very different from the Beale Street postcards. Here's a sneak preview:


Labels:
illustration,
illustration 5,
vector
26 October 2010
BEALE STREET POSTCARDS
The postcards are finished--12 in all, featuring disgruntled bartenders and jaded street musicians. You can peruse them all in my gallery: Lauren Rae's Carbonmade: Beale Street


Labels:
beale street,
illustration,
illustration 5
22 October 2010
Illustrator Promo
Frank Floethmann's business card is a really big comic that folds up into business card!

Pierre Paul Pariseau wants you to call him.
Lou Lou's promo card looks like their illos AND spells her name. 
Slack Art's promo extends to the envelope it's mailed in with personalized return address.
Vicky Newman sends out pinback buttons of her illustrations-- cheaper & classier than t-shirt promo.
05 October 2010
24 September 2010
Beale Street Visual Essay Progress
16 September 2010
Odalisque
15 September 2010
MCA's December 2010 BFA Exhibition Card
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