Saturday, 8 October 2016

RIP-ROARING RE-POST: LOVELY LETTERING FOR YOU TO LOOK AT...


I don't like the balloon placement in panel 2, but I merely lettered
within the existing speech balloons on the page so don't blame me

During my 15 years as a professional comics contributor, I lettered a
couple of regular strips for LOADED magazine, which was published by
IPC, I think.  This was well-after the infamous ROBERT MAXWELL
had bought their YOUTH GROUP, the division responsible for the
various comic periodicals that IPC created for the nation's youth.

What you're looking at above, is a scan of a photocopy of a strip
which appeared in Loaded mag, which I took it upon myself to re-letter
as the original lettering was pretty poor.  I then sent it in to the magazine
and it was this that led to them asking me to letter a couple of strips for
them as they were quite impressed with my calligraphic skills.

When I spoke to the editor about remuneration, I quoted him
£20 per page, this being the going rate for 2000 A.D. at that time.
The editor (whose name I forget, sorry) told me to invoice for £50 and
I wasn't going to argue with him.  So each page I lettered for Loaded
was worth a fabulous £50 per pop, a very nice paying gig indeed.

However, I'm not here to rub your faces in what I was capable
of earning for half an hour's work 20 years ago.  No, the reason I've
included the above page is because I'm really proud of my lettering on
it.  See, there's quite a big difference in working on something at one's
own pace and for one's own amusement, and doing it under a dead-
line for a professional publication in order to earn a living.

When I used to letter my own home-grown strips, I employed an
ordinary fountain pen and took as long as I needed.  However, when
I first started my professional career for IPC, I was using Rotring pens
I wasn't yet comfortable with, and the wrong kind of patch-paper (matt
instead of gloss), which the 2000 A.D. boys kindly provided me with
to start me off.  (Patch-paper is the generic name for the adhesive
paper on which one lettered and then stuck onto the art.)

Consequently, some of my early lettering for various comics
wasn't exactly as good as it might've been, and it took me a while to
develop a style I was happy with.  By the time I did the above page, I
was at a point in my career where I'd achieved a standard I was proud
of, and I'm still proud when I see it today.  Which is why I decided
to share it here on the blog with all you pantin' Criv-ites.

So if you ever see any of my early pages and think they aren't
particularly good, remember that I improved, and became one of
the better letterers then working in U.K. comics.  Truth to tell, I was
almost as good as I am modest and humble, and as you can see, I'm
very modest and humble indeed.  In fact, I'm actually quite proud
of my humility and am justly famed for it.

Huh?  Wait, come back!  What did I say?

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