What I always loved about Kirby was the cool machinery he'd fill the walls of laboratories with, like in the next-to-last panel. I first encountered Kirby's work in Fantastic Four #72, and fell in love with all the neat devices that filled Reed's lab.
9 comments:
These posts on Jack Kirby just keep becoming better and better. Keep up the great work, John.
Great for study. Kirby is brillant.
Hey John, is Kirby worth studying if i want to get a drawing?
Kirbys a fellow wrinkle-lover, eh?
What I always loved about Kirby was the cool machinery he'd fill the walls of laboratories with, like in the next-to-last panel. I first encountered Kirby's work in Fantastic Four #72, and fell in love with all the neat devices that filled Reed's lab.
More great Kirby. Which of Kirby's inkers do you prefer? I love Mike Royer's inking over Kirby.
Wow! every time I try to draw wrinkles they just come out too out of place and ugly.
Hi Kevin,
I like Joe Sinott, George Bell and the guy that inked the 60s Captain America...
I like some of the late 430s and 50s inkers too, but I don't know their names.
Have you tried Dynamic wrinkles and drapery by B. Hogarth? An amazing book!
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