Thursday, August 29, 2013

Heka Endora Character sheet

So this is the final design for the character I've been designing. That's what all those sketches are about.




Heka Endora CS by ~KirbBrimstone on deviantART

Thursday, August 22, 2013

Sneak peak

 Sneak peek at a little sommin' sommin' I'm working on right now.


Friday, August 16, 2013

Safehouse Pinup color commission.

Commission for Andrea Owens of his Character Safe house. The Commission kicked my butt becuase it took awhile for me to stop messing with it and tweaking it.





 




Here is the Web site www.forcegalaxia.com/
Character is created by Andre Owens, the lines art is by Cristian Alaminos and the colors are by me!

Tuesday, August 13, 2013

FLORIDA SUPERCON 2013

 Oh I almost forgot! I went to Florida Super Con back in July and I had a blast! Here are some photos I took




 
 Her dress is a map of Middle Earth! So cool!



 Deadpool!!!


 Who says Star Trek can't be sexy.


                                            So wait if that's female Loki and that's male Loki... than who am I?







                                                               Black widow is all business.


 Big sword. From some manga I don't even know bi that is a big sword.


 She really fit the part.





 Umbrella trooper guy.






 Really great Cosplay! The embroidering on the S shield was really nice touch.
Seriously the embroidering.
Yes I noticed the embroidering... and no I am not gay.



Pink Cat woman.  Not practical but who cares.


 Tell me the Zelda theme song isn't playing in your head.


 Again Big sword. I like big swords. Pause.




 Doom!!!! Seriously. Doom.











I can't tell you how much it meant to me to sit with talent like Johnboy. His advice is priceless.


 Oliver Coipel is a fantastic artist and a great guy. He spent time critiquing my art when he didn't have to. he even let me snap this pic of him.


 .
  The big dude from Walking Dead season 3!


 Some Sailor Scouts



Cool cosplay. And Harley Quinn was really into character she sounded like her and everything!!


 Real cool that this comic art master literally sat down with me and taught me some invaluable pointers. Great guy. He really gave back.

I wanna go back in time. Random delorean!






Phobeon Character Sheet





Remember the sketch I posted earlier? No?

Well take a look.




Here is the finished colored character sheet.




Phobeon CS by ~KirbBrimstone on deviantART

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

COE: Pin-up WIP stage 8

Added Asha with flats. I have a lot more characters to add this is going to be a massive pin-up when it's done.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Logo Designs!

Here are some logo design I made for my logopholio.





Man of Steel: A rant about the controversy. *Spoilers*

As a life long Superman fan I've gotta say I enjoyed Man of Steel. It had it's flaws and I have my gripes but it was nice to finally get a Superman that felt like the Superman from the comics as opposed to a rehash of another adaptation. Now I expected this to displease some pop-culture Superman fans who didn't get their understanding of Superman from the comics. But I was shocked when I heard supposed fan boys complain about the ending, chanting the mantra "SUPERMAN NEVER KILLS!!!!" And as a long time Superman/DC comics fan I'm thinking "Are they reading the same comics I am?"

I just don't buy the Man of Steel sucks because "Superman never kills" argument. It doesn't hold up considering; Superman does kill in the comics, more specifically Superman #22 by John Byrne on  October 1988. He didn't just kill anyone he killed Zod in particular. The movie was heavily influenced by John Byrne's Superman: Man of Steel (see: Man of Steel: Five Things The Movie Took From John Byrne’s Superman)  Is it possible that David Goyer and Zach Snyder were influenced by John Byrne's Superman for the ending?

 Eat green Zod! 

In fact the comic book death was worse. Zod and the two other Kryptonians had just slaughtered a few billion people and Superman couldn't send them back to the Phantom Zone because the Phantom Zone projector was previously destroyed, so he felt his hand was forced and he killed them to prevent them from killing again. Sound familiar? Yep, he killed them. It was a deliberate, premeditated, slow, and painful execution. They died slowly and begged for their lives (the female even offered Superman sexual favors if he allowed her to live). Now keep in mind, this isn't some wacky golden age Superman story where he eats kryptonite or Lois turns into an African American woman for a little while or some other crazy story people choose to forget. This is Post-Crisis John Byrne Superman. John Byrne's Superman has been called the gold standard for Superman. Superman #22 was lauded by Wizard Magazine as one of the greatest Superman stories ever told. CBR put this story on their "The 75 Greatest Superman Stories of All-Time!" list.

 Shame on you Mr. Byrne. You've obviously never seen the Donner films.

  This story was what catapulted Superman to take the vow never to kill again. This decision haunted him a for years to come. This was a defining moment for a rookie Superman. Just like in Man of Steel. Zach Snyder has said as much:

 ….David, Chris and I had long talks about it, and I said that I really feel like we should kill Zod, and that Superman should kill him. The ‘Why?’ of it for me was that if was truly an origin story, his aversion to killing is unexplained… I wanted to create a scenario where Superman, either he’s going to see [Metropolis' citizens] chopped in half, or he’s gotta do what he’s gotta do.

 So no, Superman isn't going all Punisher like and killing everyone he sees. This was a one time deal. Now that I think about it he broke his vow when he killed Doomsday! Sure Doomsday reincarnates but Superman didn't know that at the time. That's at least twice Superman has killed a living creature in the comics. So my question is, "What comic books are they reading?" Are they really Superman fans or are they just fans of the Superman in pop-culture? Because Death of Superman was one of the highest selling comics in it's day and was fairly mainstream for a comic book.




  Dammit Dan Jurgens! Don't you know that Superman NEVER kills! Not even in self-defense! Hasn't this guy even watched an episode of Smallville?

But wait-a-minute! The other reason I don't buy the "Man of Steel sucks because Superman never kills" reasoning is because he not only killed Zod in the comics he killed him in Superman II! He crushes Zod's hands, picks him up over his head, and casually throws him against a wall and allows him to fall to his death. Mind you Zod was powerless and no longer a threat. No one mourned for Zod, Superman didn't show regret or remorse for the decision he felt he had to make just like in the comic books, nope he threw away a living person like a piece of garbage and flew off into the sunset while three of his kind lay dead somewhere in the deep.

Zod:  Wait! I'm powerless and no longer pose a threat to you! Do you really have to kill me? 
Superman: No, but I've got a bright costume and I say "gosh" and "gee wiz" so it's okay.
Zod: What?

So Superman executing Zod out of necessity was cannon in the comics for 20 something years and similar to Man of Steel it's what drove a rookie Superman to take a vow never to kill and preserve all life.  In fact  I prefer it to Superman II. Because when Superman killed Zod in that movie, there are no consequences and no remorse. He didn't learn a thing about preserving life he flies off into the sunset and goes on to kill Nuclearman in Superman IV: Quest for "Peace". 

 Alright you can kill it Superman. Please God kill it!

 In every other instance I've mentioned, fan boys have a laissez–faire attitude towards Superman's actions; however, when it comes to the Man of Steel fans are incredulous and inexorable. Is there is a double standard here? If so why? Maybe it's the darker color scheme in his costume, the less then graceful depiction by Snyder, or the influence of critics on people who can't think for themselves. Are they really fans of the 75 year old character or are they popular culture groupies who had no knowledge of the other examples I listed and thus clung unto a simplified understanding of Superman?  Either way Ol' Sups' has taken a life. More than once.

Thursday, June 20, 2013

COE Pin-up WIP stage 7

Still working on this here Pin up but I've got a ways to go. Started with some colors on Jude.