inktober 2017: week 2
It’s Week 2 of Inktober. Here’s Jeff Morrow as the mysterious “Exeter” in the 1955 science-fiction B-movie This Island Earth, a favorite of the MST3K crew.
It’s Week 2 of Inktober. Here’s Jeff Morrow as the mysterious “Exeter” in the 1955 science-fiction B-movie This Island Earth, a favorite of the MST3K crew.
Well, whadaya know! It’s Inktober again. While other online artists are attempting the “one drawing per day” challenge, I, in my infinite and self-proclaimed laziness, will be doing one drawing per week. After all, I still participate in Illustration Friday (non-stop since 2007, I might add) and I do my weekly Dead Celebrity Spotlight, posted every …
Okay. Okay. Last one…. really. Here is my final Inktober 2016 drawing. I’ll tell you once. Won’t tell you twice. You better wise up, Janet Weiss.
The final entry for Inktober 2016. It’s week five, for those of you playing along at home. It’s Bonnie, Nancy, Sarah and Rochelle — everyone’s second favorite 90s movie witches. (The Sanderson Sisters are first, of course.)
Another Inktober 2016 mid-week bonus. Mary, Winifred and Sarah! Amok, amok, amok!
As Inktober 2016 winds to a close, here is my entry for week four. Amelia is terrified by the Zuni fetish doll that is holding her captive in her own apartment in the greatest, made-for-television movie ever filmed, Trilogy of Terror — a tour de force for the late Karen Black.
The drawings and the bonuses keep coming in Inktober 2016. Maybe I’m working my way to a-drawing-a-day for next year. Maybe. “I am alone….. I am utterly alone.” – Lydia Deetz, Beetlejuice (1988)
Inktober 2016 continues. Here is my entry for week number three. Poor Nancy Thompson. Is she sleeping? Is Freddy Krueger the man of her dreams?
Here’s another Inktober 2016 bonus… “Just tell it to call you Billie, you bitch!” – Henry Northrup’s parting words to his shrewish, overbearing wife Wilma in “Creepshow” (1982) Here’s an account of my encounter with the aforementioned “Billie.”
Inktober rages on! Here is my entry for week number two. It’s Dr. Anton Phibes, as portrayed by the inimitable Vincent Price in the 1971 camp horror classic The Abominable Dr. Phibes and its sequel, Dr. Phibes Rises Again, released the following year.