ayup.

depressioncomix:

depression comix #10 

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not, you know, that I have any of that stuff.

dantesfire:

Page one of Dante’s Fire is UP!

Read, please read, let me know what you think. I plan on opening a live journal for Dante as well. He’s worth it. Updates are planned to be weekly or more often if I have time. Thank you for reading!

No idea exactly what this comic will be about, but it looks cool :)

depressioncomix:

depression comix #21

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depressioncomix:

depression comix #35

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blogwell:

See more fantagonizing comics at Loldwell.com! 

softerworld:

A Softer World: 862

(the shuffle of crabs on the ocean floor)

I just cataloged this book at work: Darth Vader and Son, by Jeffrey Brown.

Library of Congress classification PN6727 .B7575 D37 2012, if you want to know, and subject headings include Vader, Darth (Fictitious character) ‡v Comic books, strips, etc.

Srs bsns.

(Fictitious character. Pah!)

…You know, this actually is kind of absurd srs bsns because now I find myself wondering if that name subject heading was established correctly. It’s done in a surname, first name style (there is also a style for people known by single names, e.g. Cher) but “Darth” is not a forename in the sense that “Anakin” or “Luke” are; it’s a title. This arrangement is like saying “Who, Doctor.” Usually titles are not included in the established forms of names, but they are left in when removing them would leave only an unadorned surname (Doctor Who is established as Doctor Who (Fictitious character)). But then Darth Vader is sometimes referred to as just “Vader” and Doctor Who is not normally referred to as just “Who.” I wonder if that severability is why the heading was established that way. Hoom, hom.

Well anyway, somehow I don’t feel professionally qualified enough to bring up this issue with the LC Policy and Standards Division…

(Source: e-spad, via thegreenwolf)

lionesswithamane:

One of my favourite pages from TheriThere. :D

…no kidding.

(Source: , via roguesareth)

childofthefoxes:

rememberedheroes:

Today Jojo draws a scene from The Last Unicorn.

While Jojo is in France, I’ll be posting some non-Remembered Heroes comics that we did together.

This was originally published in The Devastator, a quarterly humor magazine. Click on that link if you want a hard copy of it, which will also have other great things.

Also for people who ask what Jojo’s art looks like when she’s not “goofing around,” this is pretty much it.

More to come…

YES THIS IS SO ACCURATE.

Guys remember when we were trying to hard to watch TLU and we ended up watching the first two minutes like 900,000 times? 

This totally makes up for that.

oh god I cracked up so much.

pagekind:

jaredsbagelbiscuits:

rockgroin:

Step one: acquire plastic bags filled with air.

Step two: Cosplay Rob Liefeld’s Captain America.

so accurate it hurts

i’m gOING TO THROW UP AJFKDSLA OH MY GOD CAP NO

I tagged this “escher guys” (if that’s a thing) but actually this makes me think more Picasso, more Cubist…you know, showing us the same subject from multiple sides we couldn’t be seeing at the same time in real life? Picasso guys. Hum.

(Source: blinkocracy, via sirinterrobang)

Umm… except no, book Snape is very much not Alan Rickman…

(Source: aclimator, via roguesareth)

(Source: jenmariesweet, via thegreenwolf)

beatonna:

It’s an update, a comic update, the strongest update, click that picture click it

You guys, I always like Hark! A Vagrant, but this one was particularly hilarious for some reason. Maybe it was the panel where Georgia O’Queefe apparently had her pointy-cone boob-armor coming out of her armpit (because you know, she’s posed so we can SEE IT ALL even though she kinda has her back to us in midair?), or maybe it was the last panel where Susan B. Assthony is all ass in the air and in serious need of a chiropractor.