Cerebus Archive Number Two Original Art, Cerebus #28 Page 2 |
DAVE SIM:
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
- CEREBUS Volume One, 16th printing has arrived! George Gatsis declares: "This COULD be the Legacy edition".
- CEREBUS ARCHIVE NUMBER ONE is that much closer to shipping. I've finished the last of the signatures (on the fully inked Cerebus head and ballpoint Cerebus head ones). All that's left is final design of the shipping package. John Funk has done three prototypes.
- Scanning of the ten earliest HIGH SOCIETY pages in the Cerebus Archive has been accomplished for CEREBUS ARCHIVE NUMBER TWO. Next step is to do the video and write the commentaries on the pages.
- CEREBUS ARCHIVE NUMBER TWO to feature Bonus Prints as per Mike Kitchen and John Funk's suggestion (among the Bonus Prints available for purchase will be: the LOCK & KEY variant cover, the glamourpuss #1 Zombie cover, Cerebus Archive Zombie covers #1, #2 and #3, the five STRANGE DEATH OF ALEX RAYMOND covers, the full X-FILES variant cover of which IDW only used the bottom portion -- along with my original script and cover letter to Chris Ryall).
1. George Gatsis' fax of 29 July reads in its entirety: "I
have reviewed the sample completed copy of Volume One and...very nice.
And...I showed it to many people at my office, pros and novices...and
asked them to point out which pages are bitmapped and which are
greyscale...And they couldn't answer. To a layman...this COULD be the
Legacy Edition...No more work required. That's it on my thinking on this
book."
Arguably, George makes a very good point. However, I'm reminded of the old ad slogan -- "an educated consumer is our best customer" -- which I think very much applies here. I was very impressed with the book, particularly with the work that George did on the white-on-black lettering and restoring the lettering in the last couple of pages of "Swords Against Imesh". THIS time around, readability was Job One and I think I can safely say that this is the most readable version of the CEREBUS volume, EVER. At no point should you be taken out of the narrative by hard to read lettering.
I'm also
impressed with the very advanced work that Sean brought to bear on issue
1 and issue 6. There is definitely more detail there -- sharper detail
and extensive detail -- than has appeared in any edition of the CEREBUS
trade. I'm ALMOST at the point of admitting that my early CEREBUS work
doesn't suck nearly as badly as I've thought it has for the last couple
of decades.
ALMOST :).
Sean has
finished his grand tour of his work on the book -- profusely illustrated
-- and we're just waiting for word that the CEREBUS trade has made it
into the hands of a comic store (Menachem? Trent? We're counting on
you!) and then into the hands of a purchaser. A week after we have
confirmation, we'll let all of you know that you can now get the book
and leave time for the book to make it from Diamond to your local store
and THEN I'll give Sean the "high sign" to post his tour and we can all
"have at it".
It's probably best explained this way:
This IS the Legacy Edition, but it's not the ULTIMATE Legacy Edition.
The ULTIMATE Legacy edition can't be declared until Sean has learned
everything there is to learn about restoration and EVERY page of art
from the first 25 issues has been found, scanned and tweaked. Is that
EVER going to happen? Mm. Probably not. But, I think I'm safe in saying
that none of us are quitting until it HAS happened.
So,
I hope all of you will enjoy the best of both worlds: 1) purchasing
the BEST version of the CEREBUS trade ever to be brought to market and
2) following along as we all work to refine and improve what we're
doing.
2) This post should include John Funk's three
prototypes for the CEREBUS ARCHIVE NUMBER ONE shipping [see below]. Contrary to
what I said before, the CANO that we shipped to Eddie Khanna did not
come in in perfect mint condition. There was a small dent on one side
of the CEREBUS ARCHIVE NUMBER ONE. Nothing major, and it might very
well be an exceptional circumstance. But we're not relying on that.
Instead, we've jettisoned the idea of a bubble mailer in favour of
extra cardboard all the way around. Basically using the Amazon theory:
heavy staples and "redundant" cardboard as natural insulation and
"buffer". MY preference is for version B which I actually dropped --
corner on -- from the top of the stairs onto the hardwood floor in the
entryway. There was a mark but it was barely noticeable from that
height. I think any one of the three packaging forms will work. And,
of course, we are assuring everyone that if there is ANY damage, they
can return their copy for a replacement. The damaged copy will be
destroyed, but you'll retain "your number" and get exactly the package
that was already sent to you. No difference. No replacement charge.
Coupled
with the fact that MOST CEREBUS fans aren't usually "mint freaks", we
can afford to cater to those who are and guarantee that everyone gets
exactly what they ordered.
On the question regarding
"Club 261" -- of the 16 people not included, most are people who donated
$2 or so. It would literally cost more to send them a membership card
in the mail than they donated in the case of international orders.
If,
however, you are one of the people who didn't order the actual CEREBUS
ARCHIVE NUMBER ONE, but did order, for example, the bookplates, just let
John know and I will make up an individual membership card for you and
mail it to your personally.
I'd also like to personally
apologize to Michael R who is one of our "birthday pledge partners"
from the last day who pledged on the understanding that he would get an
update from me on his birthday on what I was working on on THE STRANGE
DEATH OF ALEX RAYMOND that day. As I wrote to him, it's a "bad news" --
I forgot your birthday (July 20) -- and "good news" deal: instead of
just getting a copy of the page I was working on that day, you get one
of the actual tracing paper transfer images that I was using to make
that page. I mailed Tim M his birthday scan of the page I was working
on (July 30) and I'm all set to send one to David M (3 August) and
Andrew L (Aug 23).
Hopefully we'll have this all
nailed down in the next couple of weeks and there will be NO MORE
FORGOTTEN BIRTHDAYS (not by us anyway).
3. I've
gotten the earliest ten pages of HIGH SOCIETY scanned in preparation for
launching the CEREBUS ARCHIVE NUMBER TWO Kickstarter campaign.
I
asked John to post the scan of CEREBUS No.28 page No.6 to Tim and Tim
to post it here to show you one of the decisions that I've already made:
As you can see the "stats" of the typesetting are very badly corroded
(this results from the stat not having been cleaned properly after it
had developed -- the developing chemicals stayed on it and eventually
pretty much ate it alive). Another stat is missing. Coincidentally,
Sean -- we he got them -- said how much he liked seeing the handwritten
text written in blue pencil visible through the yellowed adhesive.
"Hey,
you know what?" I thought. "I bet these stats are so badly rotted
that they're just about ready to let go. Why don't I peel them up and
reveal all of the blue pencil hand-lettering?" So that's what we're
going to do. Means having to have the pages re-shot, but that's kind of
a no-brainer, I think.
4. I'm going to be trying
the Bonus Print idea suggested by Mike Kitchen and seconded by John Funk
on CEREBUS ARCHIVE NUMBER TWO.
Not REALLY sure how
it's going to work specifically yet but theoretically what I want to do
is to use it to hopefully keep the revenue up even if we lose a bunch of
people who are just not in the "solvency" situation of being able to
support us on a quarterly basis.
Basically, we start with the idea that everyone can order a Bonus Print for an extra, say, $15.
But JUST one.
That's
if we can generate, say, $10,000 over 30 days. If we go past say $20K
then everyone can order two prints and instead of paying $15 each, you
pay $12 each. And if we hit $30K as we did last time, then you can
order as many of the Bonus Prints as you want for the $8 each you're
already paying for the HIGH SOCIETY pages.
That's not
carved in stone, so feel free to offer suggestions and criticism. Just
remember that the idea is to generate as much money as possible so we're
able to keep moving forward on the restoration and preservation of all
16 volumes.
I'm even thinking of some NON-print Bonus
Items you can opt for: like (for instance) a complete set of COMIC ART
NEWS & REVIEWS on disk or COLLECTED LETTERS 3 on disk or the
complete glamourpuss on disk.
ANYthing to keep Sean and Dr. Mara burrowing through those 6,000 pages.
Answering some questions from last week:
a) On the
subject of pencil sharpeners, I'm pretty sure that the High Volume
X-acto model is the one that I've gotten. It still sharpens pencils, it
just doesn't sharpen them NEEDLE sharp, which is what I need,
particularly for tiny, tiny photorealism drawings. Neal Adams and Al
Williamson are about the best at it -- to me, it's what separates the
Top Rank guys from the second stringers -- which is doing figures that
are an inch high and getting all the same detail (facial features, tiny
pen lines defining the curve of the cheek, etc.) into a figure an inch
high that they do into a figure that's standard size. In fact I just
intentionally did two or three pages of "Dave as narrator" with me only
an inch high in the panel just to get some practice at it. They came
out pretty good but nowhere near Adams or Williamson level. And part of
that is my inability to get a pencil sharp enough -- NEEDLE sharp --
even using the pencil sharpener, AND an X-acto knife AND coarse
sandpaper.
I'm going to see about getting replacement
blades for the sharpener that I have but I don't think Staples carries
the blades separately.
I have tried mechanical pencils
but, again, the problem isn't the pencil, it's the sharpener. The one
that they supply with the pencil and pencil leads just sharpens to
typical pencil sharpness. Sharp but not NEEDLE sharp.
The
best I've been able to do to date has been the combination pencil
sharpener, then whittling with an X-acto knife (whittling the point of
the lead, not the wood), then maintaining the resulting NEEDLE sharpness
with the sandpaper after every two or three tiny little pencil lines.
It's
educational, I must say! Torturing yourself doing figures an inch high
makes inking normal sized faces and figures nearly effortless. I
wonder if that's how Adams and Williamson got that good?
b)
Hi Jake! Thanks for your inquiry! The Winsor & Newton brushes
are SERIES 7, number 2 sable brushes. The series 7 brush comes in a
variety of sizes from #1 up to #9 (I believe). Raymond used a number 2,
Stan Drake used a number 3 -- both series 7
c) Paul Slade: on the Legacy printing: See above!
Back next week with another Update!
Packging Prototypes:
Taking A Beating:
(Click image to enlarge) |
Surveying The Damage:
8 comments:
It's fascinating reading about the production process, not just the creative process, of something we all seem to care great deal about.
From a business standpoint, it's a marvellous way to keep us all engaged with a product that has taken time to get to market. It could have easily been a boring press release scenario, but the postings have been entertaining, educational and baffling (trying to understand moir for the first time, anyone?!). Thanks again.
Everyone, please keep up the good work.
Hey, how many Mike R' s are there? This Mike R was born on May 26.
STAR00070 as of a few minutes ago is still only back-orderable in Diamond's system. On the plus side it now says "Cerebus Vol 01 TP Remastered Ed".
Trent
"However, I'm reminded of the old ad slogan -- 'an educated consumer is our best customer'"
Concurrent with that ad was the commercial which had Sy Sperling addending, "...I'm not just the President, I'm also a customer."
"I'm ALMOST at the point of admitting that my early CEREBUS work doesn't suck nearly as badly as I've thought it has for the last couple of decades."
I really think you should quote this on the cover of the legacy edition. Funny stuff.
- Reginald P.
Update - the Cerebus TP Vol. 01 Remastered Ed. (STAR00070) is now listed as in stock and orderable in the Diamond system. The only thing missing is an updated estimated shipping date.
Trent
Just wondering, besides the remastered pages, how does the 16th edition differ from the previous? New introduction, extra pages?
I had a shipping solution that I'm going to try out again once I send out all this kickstarter stuff. I'm completely uncertain if it's less costly in materials, but probably in labor (did you guys build those envelopes by hand? Sheesh.
I cut a piece of stiff cardboard about half an inch bigger than what I was sending and then plastic wrapped the item to the center so it wouldn't move, then inserted it into a bubble mailer.
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