After I finished up my Phineas and Ferb work for a Monday deadline, I drew this Alfie sketch before I went to bed last night. It was done in about an hour and was easy to draw since Alfie was tired and curled up to sleep. He occassionally kept raising his head to wonder what I was doing while looking at him. It was drawn with the Micron Pens and I used a PITT Brush Marker for his back body hair.
I have not forgotten this blog for Alfie, just been busy with other work. I have been writting a story for Alfie as a children's book and have several versions I'm still playing with but it will come together soon and I'll have more to post!
Showing posts with label Alfie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alfie. Show all posts
Monday, May 23, 2011
Monday, January 12, 2009
ALFIE Comic Strip For DCM's December Issue!
Tuesday, November 4, 2008
Alfie's Thanksgiving Meal Maze!

Thursday, October 9, 2008
ALFIE - My Original & Initial Concept Design!

Tuesday, September 30, 2008
New Alfie Comic Strip for October!
Monday, September 1, 2008
New Alfie Comic Strip for September! Co-starring Penny, the Bassett Hound!

Sunday, August 17, 2008
More of Alfie's Doggie Dictionary!
Tuesday, July 1, 2008
Some Days It's Hard To Find A Good Punchline...

The Scooby line does work as well in my mind, since it's a tip of the hat to Scooby since I draw that as well, but maybe it means that Alfie watches cartoons when the TV is left on and Scooby is his hero? Hey, it could happen...!

Tuesday, June 3, 2008
New Alfie Cartoon for June!

Labels:
Alfie,
Comic Strip,
Scott Neely,
Squirrel,
Yorkie
Tuesday, April 22, 2008
A Lazy Sunny Morning...Alfie Style!




Alfie's Doggie Dictionary!

Alfie's Property Rules! Final Color Strip!
Sunday, February 24, 2008
Alfie Comic Strip...out in the neighborhood! Final Color!


Alfie Comic Strip...out on the neighborhood! Rough Sketch

Here's a photo of Alfie out walking one morning and he stops by one of his favorite bushes. He usually puts his two paws up on the wood landscaping ties and sniffs the bush a few times. He looks kinda sleepy in this photo. I wanted to post this as well so that you can see that I try to incorporate actual landscapes and the look of the neighborhood as much as I can to base the Alfie cartoon in as much reality as I can. The smallest details can really get overlooked sometimes even when drawing a simple telephone pole so looking at a reference photo always helps. You can see the wood ties and bush in the corner of the new strip!
Next up the color and lettering....!
Sunday, January 27, 2008
Alfie in the Snow! Final color version...
Alfie in the Snow! The pencil sketches...


Tuesday, January 15, 2008
Shhh! He's sleeping...
Sunday, December 30, 2007
The Greatest Comic Series Ever Made!

That's a big and bold statement for my header but this Marvel comic series that started in 1974 (when I was 4 years old) was THE reason I started reading comics and started reading in general. There are many reasons for me liking this series and I'll go into them later on as a podcast or on other posts. THIS comic cover that is shown IS my very first comic I ever saw and owned in 1975. Most people remember the first record they bought, but I remember my first comic! Spider-Man became my favorite character, which has lasted to this day, and my interest in the Lizard character which stayed with me as well. The Lizard was a great villain of sorts for the webslinger. There's something about a human lizard in the white lab coat that attracted my eye visually and made me want to read this comic and see what it was all about! The way artist John Romita drew Spider-Man on the cover (and his art was on other countless toys, comics, and other comic-related things I grew up on) remains THE definitive version of Spidey to me. Spidey and the Lizard were such a visual fascination for me that in 1982 when I saw a comic cover (Marvel Tales #143) with the Lizard fighting Spidey, I was hooked once again! I was in a local 7-11 after school and soon after I bought the comic for 60 cents and read it at home, it started my comic book collecting hobby which has lasted to this day.
This comic series started in 1974 and lasted for 57 issues. John Romita's beautiful artwork graced many of the covers in this series early on. The series was an innovative and educational effort between Marvel Comics and The Children’s Television Workshop, Spidey Super Stories was the first nationally distributed comic book created specifically to be an “easy to read” comic series in the early 1970s and featured Marvel Comics’ flagship character, The Amazing Spider-Man.
Here are some pages from the inside to give you an idea of the format and how little dialogue and word balloons are used as opposed to the normal comic book. The guidelines for the comic were based upon the Children’s Television Workshop research and eye-movement studies conducted by Dr. Kenneth O’Bryan at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. As a result, Spidey Super Stories used an average of fewer frames per page, fewer balloons per frame, and fewer words per balloon than other comic books. The stories are written in a controlled vocabulary, and speech balloons are strategically placed to capture the eye of the reader.
This comic series started in 1974 and lasted for 57 issues. John Romita's beautiful artwork graced many of the covers in this series early on. The series was an innovative and educational effort between Marvel Comics and The Children’s Television Workshop, Spidey Super Stories was the first nationally distributed comic book created specifically to be an “easy to read” comic series in the early 1970s and featured Marvel Comics’ flagship character, The Amazing Spider-Man.
Here are some pages from the inside to give you an idea of the format and how little dialogue and word balloons are used as opposed to the normal comic book. The guidelines for the comic were based upon the Children’s Television Workshop research and eye-movement studies conducted by Dr. Kenneth O’Bryan at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. As a result, Spidey Super Stories used an average of fewer frames per page, fewer balloons per frame, and fewer words per balloon than other comic books. The stories are written in a controlled vocabulary, and speech balloons are strategically placed to capture the eye of the reader.
This comic series was such a hit with me in my early years that I decided to use the comic as a model or template for my own comic book series starring Alfie. There are very few comics made for the little ones in today's world, so it's my attempt to use this format hoping to attract young readers who will want to pick up and read The Adventures of Alfie and see the many adventures that this little dog can get into. Spidey Super Stories succeeded and The Adventures of Alfie will attempt to follow suit by making reading a positive and exciting experience to young readers and to get them excited about reading comics and the thrill of the sequential art of storytelling!
Friday, December 28, 2007
The Alfie DCM Coloring Page Prize Print!

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