Facial hair of the day: The Batstache
Oliver Queen looked at this picture and said, “I have a brilliant new idea to protect my secret identity.”
My niece just had her first birthday, and I decided it was about time she had her very own batmobile. It doubles as a convertible!
I saw a few of these floating around the net a couple years ago and knew someday I would have to make one. So I bought a Cozy Coupe from a local consignment shop, and decided to go all out instead of just putting the logo on the side. It was a fun little project!
cool neighbor alert
Oh.
My.
God.
(via peppers-pray)
My friend dimethyloctopus. She is just fantastically talented, and does some incredible pieces. She draws a lot of Cass and Jason, especially.
Really, look at her stuff:
Click on all of these pics to go see the original post with them. She’s really talented, and also pretty funny. We also may or may not be planning a secret project together right now.
So yeah. She’s really awesome, you guys.
EDIT: Uh, so the whole hyperlinking thing isn’t working because Tumblr sucks and is made of bees and duct tape. Just click on her name up top and you can find these original images under the art tag.
Superheroes Meet Native Design in Jeffrey Veregge’s Work
Graphic designer Jeffrey Veregge (Port Gamble S’Klallam) created his first ‘Native Superhero’ design just a few years ago, at a point when the Seattle-based graphic designer was searching for a new, personal and bold direction in his work.
Ooh!
(Full article here, if you’re having trouble with the link maze: indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/05/16/superheroes-meet-native-design-jeffrey-veregges-work-149387 )
I recently posted a link on Facebook to this petition regarding the redesign of Merida from “Brave” that Disney is reportedly doing to include her in the Disney Princess line and I got this response.
> “I don’t get the hoopla over this. Apart from wearing a different outfit and being drawn by a different artist, I don’t really see a difference. Is it that a woman without a weapon is weak?”
Character design matters.
If there’s one thing the character design class I took in college stressed more than anything else it’s that a good character design informs the viewer who the character is, what they are like. What they wear, how they stand, how they do their hair, the shape of their face, their standard expressions, what they carry with them, these are all vital decisions in a good design.
Few have embraced this philosophy more wholeheartedly than Disney. Take a look at some of these designs and think about how well the designer conveys the basic concepts of the character through the design alone.
Disney knows how to do this and their choices are deliberate. A misstep in the design of a character can make the difference between one that is marketable and one that is not. That’s extremely important to Disney, and a task that they do not treat cavalierly. If you have to sum up the character in just one image, like you often have to do with marketing materials or toys, qualities like the ones listed above are the only tools you have.
Artistic Interpretations
The argument that a character always looks somewhat different when a different artist draws them doesn’t apply when your’e talking about Disney. If you think I’m wrong, think of how many drawings you’ve seen Disney publish of Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Aladdin, or Woody that look exactly like they did in the movies. While things like comics have some leeway to veer off model a bit, marketing materials need to match as closely as possible to key images and are scrutinized by Disney for inaccuracies. I’ve had friends who have drawn licensed properties professionally and, in general, if you aren’t able to keep your drawing “on model” you aren’t going to keep working on the project.
An Experiment
Think about the choices that were made in designing the original Merida and the ones that were made in the redesign.
If you were asked to design a character that was a beautiful, rough and tumble, scottish adventurer who was technically a princess but rebelled against the frill, pomp, and sexisim that came with her post, what are some good choices you could make?
- You could dress her in a plain green wool dress that fits with her earthy surroundings.
- You could give her a wide, plain face, and the expressions of a normal attractive girl; likely avoiding the full red lips, thick eyelashes, or pointed jaw that you might find on a princesses such as, say, Cinderella.
- You could make her standard postures and facial expressions defiant, strong, and powerful.
- You could give her a weapon and you could make it one of her defining characteristics. If you really wanted to drive the point home, you could make her weapon a defining element of the plot and marketing of the film.
Now, let’s say you were given the task of taking the established Merida design from the film and re-imagining her to more closely resemble the typical damsel in distress that the Disney princess line seems to champion. What choices could you make given that she still needs to be recognizable as the character from the movie?
- Perhaps you could take her plain wool dress and make it a beautiful gown. You could take the earthy green color and change it to a shimmering turquoise, cover it with sparkles, and drop the neckline over the shoulders.
- You could add intricate gold embellishment wherever possible including an elaborate foot wide band around the hem of her dress.
- You could drastically thin her waist and face and thicken her eyelashes.
- You would have to remove her bow and pouch full of arrows, replacing the strap that held the arrows in place with a wide belt and giant gold belt buckle.
- Attached to the buckle you could put a shimmering turquoise scarf.
- You could change her standard postures and facial expressions from aggressive, assertive, and defiant to sassy, cute, and submissive.
Do the above descriptions sound like something the character from the film would be excited about?
Who would win in a fight, Bruce Wayne or Disney Princess Merida?
Now, you could point out that the redesign isn’t that much of a stretch. Merida does wear a more glamorous gown in the movie that does, with the help of an excruciatingly painful corset, make her appear much thinner. She is sometimes sassy. Both points are true and a good choice for the filmmakers to have made. Allowing a character to have multiple different qualities, sometimes contradictory, can make a story better, but we’re not talking about a story in this circumstance. We’re talking about marketing.
When you market a character you have to boil them down to their essential elements. Take Batman for example. Bruce Wayne can sometimes be dressed to the nines; handsome and glamorous, but when you choose the images you’re going to use to market Batman those qualities don’t come up so much. You want Batman to be strong, heroic, aggressive, adventurous, and sometimes menacing. That’s why the children’s section at Walmart has a lot of things that look like this:
and less that look like this:
Merida was originally marketed similarly. She was depicted in trailers and posters as strong, determined, adventurous, beautiful, and heroic.
This redesign de-emphasizes those qualities and pushes for a Merida that is more glamorous, sassy, and passive.
I drew a brief sketch of a corresponding version of Batman:
This is FANTASTIC, especially that comparison with Batman at the end. Brilliant.
I hereby volunteer my services as a physics consultant for any and all comic book writers.
Seriously, like… just… even google it… take two seconds to call up someone who passed high school physics…
I mean, really
“A cold fusion bomb”
No
No
NO.
Batman - Li’l Gotham is the best thing to happen to the Batfamily in who knows how long.
Such a cute series that everyone should be reading.
Oh, my god. There is too much cuteness for one panel. TOO MUCH CUTENESS.
omg Jason hanging with Bruce, Helena & Zatanna :D
OMFG is the new one out already?
*runs over to Comixology before reading anything else on her dash*
And they were really, really goddamn good.
The two characters who especially stood out were Red Hood - the good counterpart of the Joker- and the Joker himself, who were both spectacularly written.
The writer for these two episodes?
Joseph Kuhr.
I shit you not.
If you are drawing a Bat cowl
And the ears are longer than half of the head size
Then unless you are drawing Terry!Bats, the ears are too long.
They are bats, not freaking rabbits.
Like, come on.
This type of stuff is just ridiculous.

That’s not dark and intimidating, that’s a hazard to ceiling fans everywhere.
This is the type of shit Loki would look at and go “Wow, that’s a bit much, isn’t it?”