Saul
The second prince of Spritz, blackguard and blood magic user32, straight, maleTypically bored and disengaged with everything around him
The second prince of Spritz, blackguard and blood magic user32, straight, maleTypically bored and disengaged with everything around him
Hey everyone! I mentioned last commentary that I’m going to take a break between chapters, in part to organize my storyboards for next chapter, and in part because I will be having a baby. I had thought maybe I’d pick[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
“Kid?” you say (presumably). While the ages of the characters should become much clearer in the following chapters, yes. Kid. Though. Of all the people to say that, Briar is probably the funniest since you could argue she’s a kid,[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
This is a random reminder that Baeza has leathery brown skin, Cameron has sickly green skin, Opilione’s torso is a dark purple and her legs are an assortment of other colors from pale to black to blue, and Saul and[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
If you follow my instagram, you might’ve seen the story I posted about making the last panel. Story short, it was a bunch of difficult stuff for me to draw and I had to be overly dramatic about it.
Hey, more than zero backgrounds! Funny story: it seems to be easier for me to draw Baeza as expressive with just the one eye in storyboarding stick figure form than in detailed form. What’s up with that? But I do[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
I once again ought’ve added Cameron in the background, but that’s an exercise for later I suppose. Meanwhile, I’ll just leave the panel where I’d like him empty.
So I hit a point where there was more stuff I wanted to put in, in the background – primarily, I wanted to draw Cameron continuing to harass the prisoners by taking their stuff, which is slightly plot significant, but[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…
If this was a D&D campaign, Baeza would probably just say, “K.” No one likes to delay the party getting together. Though the people I game with do tend to stick more towards their characters than the conveniences of forming[…]↓ Read the rest of this entry…