|
Post by Vassaggo on Nov 15, 2018 22:49:46 GMT
I was searching for Rob Liefeld, Todd McFarlane and Stan Lee's video on Youtube. I have seen this dramatic reading before and cried laughing. So even if I shared this before, I am going to share it again.
|
|
|
Post by Rey Kahuka on Nov 16, 2018 13:47:48 GMT
Just think, Liefeld was all the rage back in those days. It was all things Liefeld along with McFarlane depicting crouching characters with knees sharpened into points that chased me out of comics. Suddenly everyone was a brooding anti-hero, and a poorly drawn one at that. Those were dark times indeed.
|
|
|
Post by Vassaggo on Nov 16, 2018 14:38:29 GMT
Just think, Liefeld was all the rage back in those days. It was all things Liefeld along with McFarlane depicting crouching characters with knees sharpened into points that chased me out of comics. Suddenly everyone was a brooding anti-hero, and a poorly drawn one at that. Those were dark times indeed. Also in the 90's there was a push for Major Event Comic books in 19 different variants. One sealed extra super duper rare collectors item that everyone bought because it wasn't rare at all. Looking at you Death of Superman. 90's comics had a lot of faults but at least it was drawn by an artist, inked by an artist, colored by an artist on paper with no clean up done digitally. Now it's shifted over towards digital. It's either scanned in and polished or was drawn digitally and polished. If and big IF it was ever on paper then it's so cleaned up digitally it looks like it was digitally drawn. You'd never know it was drawn on paper. Mostly it's done digitally now from drawing, inking, coloring and polish work.
|
|
|
Post by Rey Kahuka on Nov 16, 2018 15:07:10 GMT
Just think, Liefeld was all the rage back in those days. It was all things Liefeld along with McFarlane depicting crouching characters with knees sharpened into points that chased me out of comics. Suddenly everyone was a brooding anti-hero, and a poorly drawn one at that. Those were dark times indeed. Also in the 90's there was a push for Major Event Comic books in 19 different variants. One sealed extra super duper rare collectors item that everyone bought because it wasn't rare at all. Looking at you Death of Superman. 90's comics had a lot of faults but at least it was drawn by an artist, inked by an artist, colored by an artist on paper with no clean up done digitally. Now it's shifted over towards digital. It's either scanned in and polished or was drawn digitally and polished. If and big IF it was ever on paper then it's so cleaned up digitally it looks like it was digitally drawn. You'd never know it was drawn on paper. Mostly it's done digitally now from drawing, inking, coloring and polish work. The thing I miss the most is the smell. Nothing beats the scent of an old comic book when you open it up. If they made a scented candle out of that, I'd buy it.
|
|
|
Post by Vassaggo on Nov 16, 2018 16:12:04 GMT
Also in the 90's there was a push for Major Event Comic books in 19 different variants. One sealed extra super duper rare collectors item that everyone bought because it wasn't rare at all. Looking at you Death of Superman. 90's comics had a lot of faults but at least it was drawn by an artist, inked by an artist, colored by an artist on paper with no clean up done digitally. Now it's shifted over towards digital. It's either scanned in and polished or was drawn digitally and polished. If and big IF it was ever on paper then it's so cleaned up digitally it looks like it was digitally drawn. You'd never know it was drawn on paper. Mostly it's done digitally now from drawing, inking, coloring and polish work. The thing I miss the most is the smell. Nothing beats the scent of an old comic book when you open it up. If they made a scented candle out of that, I'd buy it. I like the smell to. We are now old. When you share a point of view with Giles in the first Season of Buffy you are old.
|
|