Skip to content

saturday morning

saturday morning published on 6 Comments on saturday morning

(click here for a high resolution version of this illustration)

illustration day mates! i think i really should study how cool/warm light and shadow works because i have no idea what i’m doing. this time i snuck in a few sedna easter eggs. see if you can spot any (that is if you can be bothered).

fun fact: the saturn jigsaw puzzle is actually based on a true story. my sister gave me a 1,000 piece jupiter jigsaw last christmas and is was by far the hardest puzzle i’ve ever completed in my life. still, it was worth it just for the moment when we put the last piece in while blasting the musical piece ‘jupiter’ from ‘the planets, op 32’ by gustav holst. i know i’m a dork but it felt good man.

tiny ninja vs alien invasion

tiny ninja vs alien invasion published on No Comments on tiny ninja vs alien invasion

(click here for a high resolution version of this illustration)

“hey! complex geometric structures are fun to draw!” – said literally no-one ever.

oh no! tentacle aliens are attacking the sydney coathanger! but fear not civilian, ninja sedna is here to… poke holes in it i guess. ever wonder what would happen if aliens attacked a country that wasn’t the us or uk? or what it would look like if an iconic bridge that wasn’t the golden gate bridge got destroyed for once? well, wonder no more!

in hindsight, i probably should’ve picked an angle where you can see the opera house, because without it this could really be any lemon-slice-shaped bridge in the world.

a street in western sydney

a street in western sydney published on No Comments on a street in western sydney

(click here for a high resolution version of this illustration)

it’s illustration day lads! not 100% happy with the colours in this one but i’ve spent so much time fruitlessly tweaking it that i really just need to move on with my life. hope you guys like it.

being able to do chalk art like this is one nice perk about living in a cul-de-sac in a country that doesn’t rain every second day. for reference, a diplodocus is about 26 metres (85 feet) long , and a redstone rocket (which carried alan shepard, the first american into space in 1961) is 25 metres (82 feet) tall. so i think the rocket is a little scaled down in this illustration, but if i zoomed out any further, sedna and dini would have just been tiny little specs.

a boy and his dinosaur

a boy and his dinosaur published on 2 Comments on a boy and his dinosaur

(click here for a high resolution version of this illustration)

oh boy. this one took me a long time to draw. illustration is so haaard! what am i even doing drawing a webcomic?

fun fact: a fully-grown t-rex would be over 5 metres from head to bum, much larger than this little guy.

fun fact 2: grass didn’t exist in the mesozoic when the dinos were kicking around, meaning the time traveller in this imaginary scenario isn’t dini but the t-rex.

rocket scientist

rocket scientist published on No Comments on rocket scientist

(click here for a high resolution version of this illustration)

hey, look! a full-colour illustration. that’s the thing that real artists do, right?

i’m gonna do one of these every ten comics or so to have a bit of fun with colour and see what fun situations sedna and dini dream themselves up in. i kinda suck at digital illustration though, so be gentle with me. i’m still figuring this out as i go.