Lolcroft the Unseen
24 Sunday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
24 Sunday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
21 Thursday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
Ethernautica, Season 1 Recap and Ethernautica, Season 1 Recap – Part 2. Some 22 free episodes and specials, trimmed and edited down. I haven’t yet got as far as discovering if there will also be a “Part 3”, but I guess there might be.
Set in an amalgam of Neo-Victorian and Lovecraftian worlds, combining the genres of Steampunk and Cosmic Horror, ETHERNAUTICA seeks to create a world of retro science fiction in a strange and exciting universe of both eldritch monstrosities and grand pulp adventure! … An Actual Play podcast, playing a combination Space 1889 and Call of Cthulhu [RPG] game, utilizing the Cortex Classic System.
19 Tuesday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts
DMR surveys the heroic fantasy paintings of Michael Whelan, as translated to rock album covers from their original paperback covers. Also has two Lovecraft horror examples.
14 Thursday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.
A new short animation, featuring a dreaming Lovecraft…
[youtube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rkpj9h99g1w?start=29&w=560&h=315]
I assume hand-made drawings and then Adobe After Effects for the layering and animation.
13 Wednesday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, New books
Todd Theyer is gearing up to Kickstart a printed Lovecraftian bundle of his own letter-pressed goodness, to be named “Lovecraft’s Journal”. It will evoke and hint at the progress of a scientific expedition to the maddening wilds of Siberia, via a field journal complete with maps, field drawings, newspapers cuttings and suchlike story-props. The project is planning its launch to align with the timing of NeconomiCon 2019, but you can follow the previews on Instagram.
10 Sunday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, New books
Necronomicon Press now has a reprint of Lovecraft’s “The Lurking Fear” in something close to its original Home Brew magazine serial format from 1923. For this edition Robert H. Knox has revivified the illustrations done by Clark Ashton Smith, although the colourizing seems to me to be a bit too garish for the tone of the story. Still, for collectors of Smith’s art this will probably be rather desirable.
07 Thursday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, New books
British comedy writer Ben Clark’s The Spine Chillers is a short graphic novel that treats readers to yet another fictional Lovecraft. Only just released, it’s getting good reviews which say it’s a laugh-out-loud comedy.
The set-up is that H.P. Lovecraft lives in a grotty boarding-house with Edgar Allen Poe and Ambrose Bierce. Something is hiding in the attic. Arthur Conan Doyle (Sherlock Holmes) turns up to investigate. Sadly the art is in child-o-vision. Which won’t entice many to part with a hefty £14 for it in paper, but apparently the writing is brilliant. One suspects that it’s a little bit more of a pitch for a TV series or movie than it is a graphic novel. Still, it’s another in the small crop of recent graphic novels featuring Lovecraft as a character.
05 Tuesday Mar 2019
Posted in Fonts, Lovecraftian arts, New books, Odd scratchings
New on Archive.org… Elder Props (1981), an 84 page compendium of printable pages, presumably for use as photocopies made as RPG game prompts and elements. The artist has a nice clean toony ink style, which I like a lot.
If you wanted these in colour, look at Krita’s 4.0’s new ability to auto-paint line-art.
I see that the same book can also be downloaded from the site of the artist for free, though there’s it’s confusing labelled Evil Dead, which makes one think of tiresome video-nasty zombies movies of the 1980s rather than the Neconomicon.
The artist is still working, and has a similar product for the awesome Gravity Falls series. Also free Fonts…
04 Monday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, Podcasts etc.
Most folks would be content to bung their new Lovecraft story reading on YouTube, along with the 30 others that now appear there each day. But H. P. Lovecraft’s “Dagon”, “The Cats of Ulthar” & “The Music of Erich Zann” does things more elegantly. A vinyl LP record, superb 12″ sleeve art, and a… “new original score by cinematic instrumentalists Anima Morte”.
Worth a peek just for the quality artwork by Karmazid.
02 Saturday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, New books
Here’s a glimpse of the style of the manga-style comics adaptation of The Shadow Out of Time adaptation, recently completed by Gou Tanabe in Japan. This book is apparently getting manga fans excited, and he’s said to have a cult following. Personally it’s not an art style I greatly appreciate, but it’s good to get a full-length adaptation of this major story.
02 Saturday Mar 2019
Posted in Lovecraftian arts, Scholarly works
Newly added to the Open Lovecraft page on this blog…
* K. Dodd, “Narrative Archaeology: Excavating Object Encounter in Lovecraftian Video Games”, Studies in Gothic Fiction, forthcoming 2019.
* V. Sirangelo, “Sulla natura lunare di Shub-Niggurath: dalla mythopoeia di Howard Phillips Lovecraft a The Moon-Lens di Ramsey Campbell”, Caietele Echinox, Volume 35, 2018. (Short article in French on Shub-Niggurath in Lovecraft and Ramsey Campbell. Part of a special issue on the Neo-Gothic).
Caietele Echinox‘s large archive of themed special issues also looks interesting, though articles need to be bunged through Google Translate unless you can work with English abstracts.
01 Friday Mar 2019
Posted in 3D, Lovecraftian arts
Stefano Ciarrocchi is making the first steps to modelling a 3D bust of H.P. Lovecraft using the Blender software. He obviously hasn’t quite got the period clothing yet, as he’s using a 1970s ‘Bill Gates’ collar and tie that Lovecraft would have run screaming from. But it’s an interesting try in 3D.
Masket Charro gets a lot closer, and avoids the ‘uncanny valley’ effect by going a little toony. Still let down by the collar and tie.
In a similar 3D format, the My neighbor Cthulhu scene. Ruined by the crappiest sort of sign lettering. But in this case one can buy and download the 3D model, in which case the lettering could presumably be removed. Although beware that it’s a .Blend file. Though Blender is free, navigating the infernal Blender interface (to cleanly extract a 3D mesh with aligned material zones) is usually a bit of a nightmare.
It helps if you know Miyazaki, to get the sweetly inter-twingled cultural reference in this scene.
If you want to do something similar then the Miyre Store has a good and affordable Lovecraft 3D figure for the Poser software, and there’s a free pack of face expressions for him.