Friday, February 21, 2020

Cosplay Contest Winners

There is a contest for cosplayers who pose at a convention for a picture with an issue of Visitations. If they win, the cosplayer's name appears on a tombstone in the next published issue of the book. If they wish, that same person can also have their picture printed in the book.

Starting this year, anyone who cosplays as one of the Visitations characters will themselves become a character in the book.

With C2E2 right around the corner, I thought it might be fun to look back at pictures of some of the winners.






Order a free PDF of Visitations 1 by emailing us here: visitationscomicbook@gmail.com



Friday, February 14, 2020

Chicago Ghost Stories: The St. Valentine's Day Massacre

Happy Valentines Day!  Valentine's Day in Chicago is known for something far more infamous than hearts, candy and flowers. The worst event in Chicago Gangland History took place on the holiday. Besides being the beginning of the end an era of organized crime history in the Windy City, the event spawned several ghost stories and paranormal tales.

In order to understand the St. Valentines Day Massacre, it's important to understand the history of the 1920's gangster era. Organized crime in Chicago  was built, at the turn of the century, on gambling and prostitution in an area of the city known as the Levee. Young women were lured to the city with false promises of jobs or marriages while girls as young as 13 were kidnapped and carried across state lines. They were all forced into selling themselves. There were entire blocks in which every house was a brothel. The person who took control of the area was Big Jim Colosimo. Colosimo owned a restaurant, which is now a 1920’s style dinner club called “Tommy Gun’s Garage”. When the city finally shut down the Levee before World War 1, Colosimo continued to operate out of his restaurant even though he businesses ceased to be as concentrated and  were spread  south of the area. His rackets became known as the Chicago Outfit  and  he ran it until 1920 when he was mysteriously assassinated in his restaurant.



The Chicago Outfit was originally known as the South Side Gang. After Colosimo’s murder, Johnny Torrio and his assistant Al Capone took over the organization. They decided that Prohibition was a great opportunity to make money and unite the underworld of the city. They attempted to form partnerships with different gangs through the city including the North Side Irish Gang that was run by Dean O’Bannion.



O’Bannion ran the north side gang out of a flower shop across the street from Holy Name Cathedral on State Street downtown. He had been an alter boy at the church. O’Bannion had been involved in racketeering from the time he was a teenager in an area known as “Little Hell” which is modern day River North area of the city. For whatever reason the Irish gang refused to go along with what Torrio and Capone  proposed. O’Bannion was murdered in his flower shop and a full fledged war between the 2 gangs started. Chicago was engulfed in a torrent of bullets and bombs as the 2 gangs slugged it out.  After being wounded,  JohnnyTorrio  retired and gave control of the south side gang to Al Capone.



O’Bannion’s gang continued to operate out of the flower shop. and was taken over by Hymie Weiss.  Weiss was known as the only man Al Capone ever feared. One afternoon in October 1926, after a gang meeting in the flower shop, Weiss and 2 associates were gunned down as they were leaving. Snippers with machine guns  were shooting from windows in buildings on the corner of Superior and State. These shooters were intent to make sure that Weiss and his associates were dead blanketed the area with bullets and ended up shooting not only the building where the flower shop was but also Holy Name Cathedral. 




The bullets remain in the edifice of the church.  Rumor has it that the church tried to fill the holes on several occasions but the bullet marks kept reappearing. This is the first of several paranormal events from this era. The Archdiocese of Chicago, tired to people gawking at the bullet holes in the edifice of where the flower shop stood, bought the building across the street and promptly tore it down. It became a parking lot.



Bugs Moran succeeded Hymie Weiss and the gang wars continued for another 2 1/2 years. Things came to a head on Valentines day 1929. At 10:30 in the morning, In a garage on Clark Street in Lincoln Park, the members of the North Side gang was gathered waiting for Moran to arrive. As Bugs and a couple of others approached the garage, they saw a police car arrive. The men quickly left the scene. 

What happened next was this: Two men in police uniforms carrying shotguns entered the garage and made the occupants line up facing against the wall. In addition to the five members of the gang was a mechanic and an optometrist.  Then, two men in plainclothes, carrying machine guns, came in and and shot down the seven men standing against the wall. The men in police uniforms then marched out of the garage holding their shotguns up  to the plainclothes men who walked out with their hands up. The four got back into their car and left. The only witness to the crime was a dog that had to be put down because the shooting drove him insane. Not all the men died right away. Those that lived long enough for the real police to arrive refused to tell  what happened even claiming that “no one shot me”. The case remains unsolved to this very day.



The St. Valentines Day Massacre was the end of the Moran gang, which had become a rag tag group of petty criminals. It also was the precursor to the end of Al Capone. Capone had been at his vacation home in Florida and claimed to have nothing to do with the murders. The story got front page headlines across the country and many law enforcement agencies decided that there had been enough bloodshed in Chicago and it was time to put an end to it. A few months late,r after a gathering of crime families around the country in Atlantic City, Capone was arrested in Philadelphia for carrying a handgun and sentenced to one year in prison at Eastern Pennsylvania Penitentiary. In his absence the United States Federal Government began investigating his businesses for tax violations and shutting down his illegal liquor operations. When he returned to Chicago in 1930 everything had changed. He eventually was sentenced to prison for 11 years for income tax evasion. While in prison the syphilis he contracted years before when he worked in  a brothel caught up to him. By the time he was released he was a broken man.  


The St. Valentines’ day Massacre has a number of different paranormal stories attached to it. The first is the site itself. The building was torn down in 1967 and is currently an empty lot ( just like the Levee and the flower shop), People passing by the site at night have reported hearing screams as well as the sounds of machine guns. There is an indescribable feeling of fear that even animals seem to notice. Dogs bark and howl at the spot. 

In addition to this, the bricks from the wall that the murder victims stood against seem to carry some kind of curse. A club in Canada had purchased the bricks after the building was demolished and had rebuilt the wall in the men’s bathroom. When the wall closed, the owner decided to sell the bricks off one at a time. However, people started sending the bricks back. They claimed that bad things started happening to them because they owned the bricks. The bricks somehow became filled with negative energy causing illness, financial ruin, divorce. and death. The bricks, rebuilt as a wall, can now be seen at the Mob Museum in Las Vegas.



The story doesn’t stop there. When Al Capone was in prison in Philadelphia, he apparently started being haunted by one of the massacre victims James Clark. Capone would start screaming in his cell, begging “Jimmy” to go away and leave him alone. The ghost followed him back to Chicago. Capone’s body guards frequently would hear him screaming and when finding him hear the story of Clark’s ghost. 

Was Capone involved in the massacre? No one knows for sure. In fact it’s one of the great mysteries of the era. There were members of the mob who supposedly confessed to it. However Capone’s niece has recently told anyone who would listen that his was not her uncle but the actual police. Author Jonathan Eig in his book “Get Capone” also claimed it was the police. But what about the ghost that haunted Al? A couple of years ago I had spoken to someone who said that he had spoken to many mobster ghosts and claimed that he also spoke to Jimmy Clark. He asked Clark why he had haunted Capone. Clark had a very simple answer - he too thought Capone was guilty and didn’t find out until later that he wasn’t. Clearly ghosts are also prone to making mistakes!

Capone is buried at M.t Carmel Cemetery along with just about all of the other 1920’s mobsters, including his family members,  Dean O’ Bannion, and Hymie Weiss.




Order a free PDF of Visitations 1 by emailing us here: visitationscomicbook@gmail.com

Friday, February 7, 2020

Designing Visitations Issue Two

When I came up with the idea for Visitations and decided to publish it, I wanted to make sure it was unlike any other comic book that has been done. The concept, I knew was pretty unique. However I also wanted to push the storytelling medium further in unknown directions.

Issue one was designed as mostly pin-up pages spotlighting each character. I planned issue two to be different. 



The story titled " The Great Balloon Disaster" featured the character of Nellie McCullough. Instead of pin-ups, like issue 1, each sequence is a double page spread. To bring the audience into the narrative, the book requires the reader to literally turn the book around and around as each page progresses.






Visitations 2 is now available. Print copies, which turn, are $15. Digital copies, which unfortunately do NOT turn, are $5. Please email visitationscomicbook@gmail.com for more information.


Order a free PDF of Visitations 1 by emailing us here: visitationscomicbook@gmail.com

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

VISITATIONS 5 FIRST LOOK



Visitations 5: The Snake Lady Of The Fair is a story that visits the famous World's Columbian Exposition. Meet new characters Anne and Mooney as they explore the Chicago World's Fair.




When they run into trouble when they encounter the evil Cult Of The Snake, Mooney and Anne receive help from an unexpected source.


Visitations issue 5 is the most exciting chapter of the story yet- no one is safe! The end is near! Meet new characters! See the World's Fair! Learn the origin of the city of Chicago!  Beware the Cult Of The Snake! There IS a devil in the White City- it's just not who you think it is!

Print copies will be available February 28th at C2E2. Digital copies are available now. Email visitationscomicbook@gmail.com for more details.


Order a free PDF of Visitations 1 by emailing us here: visitationscomicbook@gmail.com

Monday, January 13, 2020

How To Tell A Story On A Comic Book Page

Thumbnail pages can be looked at as a blueprint or a map to where the finished comic page will end up. They are used as a way to work out the overall design of the page. The page design is a bit more complex then it may seem. For one, it has to convey an idea - tell a story. I view it as how a writer would write a paragraph. An introductory sentence followed by the main idea. Finally the concluding sentence leads you to the next paragraph. Visually, this starts as an establishing panel, followed by panels depicting the action of the page. The last panel is meant to lead you to the next page:



Sometimes the designs change a little by the time the penciled are finished, but the idea remains:


The overall design has to move the reader's eye through the page. This is done with the "Z" principle:

From Will Eisner's Comics & Sequential Art






Without some kind of design, a story can not be properly told. Thumbnails help work out that design. 


Order a free PDF of Visitations 1 by emailing us here: visitationscomicbook@gmail.com

Monday, January 6, 2020

Visitations Characters: Creating the look of Nellie McCullough

Visitations is a complicated story about the history of a city and a century disguised as a ghost and superhero tale. But Before the idea of Visitations came to me, I conceived of the series' central character, Nellie McCullough. This is the story of where Nellie's look came from.

In an effort to expand my skills as an illustrator, I had been doing open studio figure drawing with live models at the Palette and Chisel Academy Of Fine Art in Chicago. While I became good at drawing the human form, I  hit a wall artistically. The problem with drawing from a live model - unless dong gesture drawings of people on trains, coffee shops or wherever- is that after a while it becomes ...well, boring. Repetitive poses are a big part of this. After about a year or so of life drawing, my work completely plateaued.

Typical 15 minute figure drawing pose from a live model

30 second gesture drawing done at a coffee shop 


It was suggested to me that I try my hand at sculpting. This completely opened up a new world because instead of working in two dimensions, I began working in three dimensions. working with my hands allowed me to understand the form and structure much better than drawing on a flat piece of paper ever could.

Scupture from Audy Cramblit's class


After doing open studio sessions I took a 4 week class at Palette and Chisel under Audry Cramblit The model, Paige, took the time during her breaks to walk around and talk to the people taking the class. She mentioned to me that she would be posing at Aaron Miller's Platform Studios. Miller has models dress up in costume for artists to draw once a month. I hadn't been there and Paige's invitation seemed like the perfect opportunity to go.

Email from Aaron Miller featuring Paige the model in steampunk outfit.


The thing that makes Miller's drawing sessions so intriguing is the variety of costumes his models wear. They've been pirates, Star Wars Stormtroopers, comic book and anime characters. It's definitely more interesting then the run of the mill nude model in a sitting pose. Paige was in a steampunk outfit - a costume that she created herself.



I thought the costume was really cool. The drawings were fun and I decided to file her look away for a future character, in case I would need it one day.







When it came time to start Visitations, Paige's costume determined the era in which the story would be set. But where did the character of Nellie, not to mention the entire concept of Visitations,  come from? 

To be continued...


Order a free PDF of Visitations 1 by emailing us here: visitationscomicbook@gmail.com

Monday, December 23, 2019

Christmas Cards by Visitations Creator Scott Larson

Christmas cards has always been a fun tradition. For many years I illustrated my own. Since we're so close to the holidayI thought it would be nice the artwork from them:


2007
Gouache paint on watercolor paper



2008
Gouache paint on watercolor paper


2009
This is a photograph of my Grandpa Larson from the 1920's



2010
Gouache paint on watercolor paper


2011
Ink on bristol board colored digitally


2012
Digitally created


2013
Ink on bristol board colored digitally



2014
Ink on bristol board colored digitally



2015
Ink on bristol board 


2017
Ink on bristol board colored digitally




Have a wonderful holiday!


Order a free PDF of Visitations 1 by emailing us here: visitationscomicbook@gmail.com


Visitations Character Sketches and Plans

 One of the fun things about creating Visitations is designing the characters and settings. Some are inspired by real life people and place...