Don’t Get Sick!


I might not be able to draw much (at all) these days but some of the work I did earlier this year is seeing release now. Acute Care is available now at DriveThruMedia from 3Hombres Games. Dave Schuey wrote it and I did the illustrations. Imagine your worst doctor’s visit ever. Add in angry spirits and alien horrors and start running! (Too bad you’re strapped down. Good luck!)

Detour Sketch – Trunk Monkey


This is the last of the prep sketches I did for Detour, a scenario for the Dark Conspiracy RPG. I’ve also done the cover and some interior illustrations for a new, third edition of the main rulebook and, if all goes well, I’ll be providing illustrations for future supplements and scenarios. I’m certainly looking forward to it. The Dark Conspiracy environment is just the sort of place I love to illustrate. It has vast, decaying urban environments; monsters and aliens; human heroes and villains; forbidding wastelands and alien worlds.

Stay tuned!

Detour Sketch – Rock Gargoyle


Detour, and the Dark Conspiracy game that this scenario is a part of, takes place in an alternate future America. Most of the population lives in sprawling metroplex cities. The countryside has mostly become the Out-Law and and in the worst places it has become Demonground; places where the Dark Races reign.

The Dark Races are mostly nothing new. They’ve been with us for all of human history. They are the monsters of our myths and legends. Some of those legends describe the creatures accurately. Many times the old stories are no more than half-truths, glimpses of that partially describe beings in the way the blind men in the old story could only partially describe an elephant. There are a wide variety of creatures in the game but plenty of room to either invent new ones or depict interesting variations on familiar types. This rock gargoyle sits at the edge of the events of the Detour scenario. If the players aren’t careful they might get its attention.

Detour Sketch – Roadside Memorial


I love doing illustrations, taking a scene described in prose and creating a visual for it. If my client has a scene in mind I’m usually happy to go with what they ask me to portray. I will admit that I have even more fun when I get a manuscript and I’m told to come up with the illustrations myself.

If I’m illustrating a comic choosing what to draw is fairly easy. Comics are stories told with words and pictures but primarily pictures. You can have a wordless comic but not a comic without pictures. So I’d draw the quiet moments, the big climaxes and everything in between.

Illustrating a prose story is trickier. Most prose stories are intended to exist without illustrations. Even most childrens’ picture books have stories that would make sense if just read aloud. Those stories usually aren’t as much fun without the illustrations but they’ll work. When a story is intended to be read I try to be careful what I chose to illustrate. Some scenes work better in the readers’ imagination. It’s downright rude to show the hero defeating the monster or unmasking the villain. I expect that the reader is going to look at the pictures first and then read the prose. Human attention is drawn to images. I don’t want to spoil an author’s hard work by giving away the surprises so, when illustrating prose, I’m usually drawing the beginnings of scenes and actions and rarely the climaxes.

Providing illustrations for an RPG is different challenge. RPGs are kind of like those choose-your-own adventure books but the way the adventures unfold in a RPG can vary even more than with a choose-own-adventure. They’re interactive stories where the characters (the players) can take the plot in directions the original author never would have expected. The game master presents a scenario to the players, the players invent characters (or bring previous established ones) to experience the scenario and the story is created during the play. When illustrating an RPG I can depict the non-player characters that the players might meet and I can depict the inciting incidents that get the game/story started and after that the game/story can head off into unknown territory. As such I’m often creating “flavor” illustrations – pictures of the environments that the characters will pass through. For Detour and the Dark Conspiracy game in general that pretty easy. The above illustration is of one of the sights the characters could have seen on their journey. It’s not actually anything that’s described in the game manuscript. I could have invented a dozen other images to illustrate this section and all of them would have been appropriate. I love that kind of freedom.

Detour Sketch – Banner


Over the years RPG manuals have developed a set of layout conventions – most of them have a banner (art running across the top of a page) or a border (art usually running down the outside side of each page) for the pages of the book. I can’t tell you when or why these conventions developed but one or the other (sometimes both) have been in most of the material I’ve looked at. The folks at 3Hombres have asked me to illustrate banners for the projects I’ve worked on. The sketch above is for the banner for Detour. This scenario involves a road trip and … let’s call them zombies … so hopefully this banner properly represents that flavor.

Detour Sketch – Doug Wiley


I enjoy the challenge of doing NPC portraits. I try to make each portrait unique. Whenever possible I include a background behind the character that hopefully helps the gamemaster get a better sense who that character is and how to play him or her.

The rough sketch of Doug Wiley for Detour doesn’t really demonstrate that so I’m including the final illustration below as an example. In general I prefer to let the final illustrations be only in available in the actual product until the product has had a chance to sell for a while.

Detour Cover – the Dark and the Light

I mentioned yesterday that I usually color my illustrations in Photoshop because it takes me a while to get a good color combination worked out. The final cover art of Detour is a good example of that. It took me forever to get a good balance. I’d originally started with red and blue as my primary pallet but the “zombies”, being pretty blue themselves, didn’t stand out as well against the other blues. Once I substituted green I got a better contrast.

And I still needed to make adjustments at the very end. The final art looked pretty good on my computer but I’ll learned from sad experience that a dark, brooding image on a monitor just looks dark in print. Sometimes that’s what a publisher wants but I felt like I’d be doing the folks at 3Hombres Games a disservice if I didn’t give them a choice to work with. The second version below has the contrasts adjusted so it’s lighter. I figured that version was more likely to stand out on a display rack. Feel free to check out their announcement to see which version they chose.