Archive for the ‘how to’ Category

Drink and Drawn

Thursday, October 7th, 2010

With all the different food recipes available out there, you might be feeling a little parched. Never fear, as a few brave souls have answered the call and created their own drink recipe comics, both alcoholic and non-alcoholic, to quench all manners of thirst.

If you crave the kind of beverage that drinks like a meal, Simon Mackie comes to the rescue with his recipe for Hippy Dippy Milkshake, featuring ice cream, honey, and lots of love.

But if you’re craving something with a bit more kick to it…that is, something with a touch of alcohol, a lot of artists do like to drink, and a few will even share that passion in comic form.

Tea Fougner loves making cocktails, especially with gin, as evidenced by this comic about the perfect Negroni. That isn’t to say other spirits are neglected—just make sure you know your rums before trying out her recipe for hot buttered rum.

If you ever really wanted to impress people with your drink making or brewing prowess, Chad Essley has a recipe for homemade limoncello. Pretty intense, but worth the time and effort.

Following all the recipes in this post might leave you feeling just a bit less than optimal, but Simon Mackie has the remedy for that, too, providing a hangover cure (though judging from the ingredients, it might actually leave you feeling still a bit ill).

How to Make a Comic Box and Not Suck At It

Wednesday, October 6th, 2010

It’s Wednesday, which for a lot of you folks is comic book day. That, coupled with New York Comic Con coming up this weekend, means that there will be plenty of comic buying in many people’s future. Of course, you need a place to put your score, and a comic box is one of the more well-known forms of comic book storage around. Thing is, comic boxes usually don’t come pre-assembled. How do you build your box without looking like a spaz as I did the first time I gave it a go? Like so.

The Alternate Mindz blog put up a simple eight panel strip detailing the steps needed to put together a comic box without having to ask for help. Had I found this strip when I was putting together my first longbox, I wouldn’t have had to shout for my girlfriend to help me because I couldn’t figure the darn thing out. Oh, the embarrassment! Alternate Mindz said it was going to eventually put up a comic on how to put a drawerbox together, but it looks like the sequel strip has yet to arrive; still, take a look through the site, as there are a bunch of other webcomics, educational and otherwise, to be found. And please, remember to do better than Ian when assembling your comic boxes.

A Witch’s Brew

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

Tomorrow begins the month of October, so it’s time to start putting out those Halloween decorations, including some carved pumpkins! While we couldn’t find any comics to teach you how to do that, Simon Mackie does show you what to do with the squishy, delicious innards after you cut them out: make pumpkin soup!

In fact, the start of October means we’re well into the harvest season, when lots of delicious fresh fruits and vegetables will grace our tables. It might be a good idea to brush up on your cooking skills before Thanksgiving, so why not start with a quick guide to blanching and shocking vegetables, courtesy of Tea Fougner? She also has her own bit of soup advice to impart, showing how to make three different vegetable soups (Autumn root veggie puree, celery and onion puree, and veggie stock), all using the same pot!

A Baker’s Half Dozen

Thursday, September 23rd, 2010

People love baked goods—cookies, cakes, bread, buns—so what’s not to love about baking comics?

Cookies are a popular item, either to bring to the dessert table at Thanksgiving or to give as gifts for Christmas. Jin Wicked recommends the latter in her biographical web comic, A Dollar Late and a Day Short. In a series of strips from a few years ago, she outlines easy recipes for sugar cookies, peanut butter cookies, and lemon cookies (with frosting). Though she doesn’t fully illustrate the process for each, she still gives the exact measurements needed (essential in baking) and she doesn’t ask for any complicated or obscure techniques in her directions. She even gives instructions for plating…with a punchline.

For the more adventurous among you, Madeleine Ball has a brief primer on how to make sourdough starter—it really is that easy.  This is her only cooking comic, though she does do the occasional science-themed humor comic along with a regular series of science gag cartoons.

Though it’s not about how to bake bread, Ryan Alexander-Tanner of Williamette Week did a profile of Dave’s Killer Bread a few years back, presenting it in comic style instead of a standard text with photograph; it’s certainly fitting for someone as unorthodox as Dave Dahl. Dave was happy enough with it that he asked Ryan to create his logo.

Don’t Bunko Your Career

Friday, September 10th, 2010

One thing that higher education doesn’t seem to be very good at is telling you what to do next. Oh, you can visit the career counselor and they’ll give you tips on your resume and interviewing; if you’re lucky they’ll point you in a general direction, though that direction might not always be the right one.

As a result, it’s really easy to get stuck in a job you don’t particularly enjoy, or aren’t particularly good at, like the titular hero of The Adventures of Johnny Bunko, by author Daniel H. Pink and illustrated by Rob Ten Pas. Johnny majored in accounting because his father told him it was a good “fallback,” a way to always be employed if his dreams didn’t work out. Unfortunately, Johnny is nowhere near where he really wants to be, and he’s gained a reputation around the office as the guy who makes mistakes—to the point where a screw up is called a “Bunko.”

Everything changes when Johnny gets his hands on a bundle of enchanted chopsticks; splitting a pair summons a magical being named Diana. Diana offers to help Johnny by showing him the keys to a successful career, all he needs to do is snap a new pair of chopsticks and she’ll come and impart some useful advice. He only has six pairs, but it’s okay because Diana has six lessons to impart, each told through an amusing vignette at his company.

Rather than fall into the usual cliché of having Johnny attempt to tell his coworkers about Diana and fail miserably, thus looking like a delusional fool, Johnny Bunko instead bucks the trend by letting the coworkers in on the secret and having them benefit from the knowledge Diana imparts. In this manner the book follows its own advice: “The most valuable people in any job bring out the best in others. They make their boss look good. They help their teammates succeed.” We watch as Johnny switches departments and works on a major advertising campaign whose success will be a major boon for the company—and for Johnny, of course. He makes mistakes, but as the book explains, this is all part of the process.

The art by Rob Ten Pas is clean and energetic, making it easy to forget that you’re reading a career guide, much less “the last career guide you’ll ever need.” That’s the tagline, but I can’t say I completely agree. This book is only so long, and can only cover so much; it doesn’t tell you how to deal with troublesome coworkers, or how to get yourself the job in the first place. But for such a quick read, it’s pretty packed full of useful advice that had me wondering where my own career decisions fit into Diana’s six lessons.

The Adventures of Johnny Bunko
written by Daniel H. Pink
illustrated by Rob Ten Pas
published by Riverhead Books (New York, 2008)
ISBN 978-1-59448-291-5

Attack of the Killer Trinomials

Tuesday, September 7th, 2010

Continuing our coverage of all things Gene Yang (we brought you his Christian comics and his thoughts on The Last Airbender previously), I present to you some math. Factoring, to be exact.

Lots of comic book creators have day jobs to assist in paying for their craft; Gene Yang is no exception. He’s worked as a math teacher and technical advisor for multiple Catholic high schools in the California area since 1998. So, what do you do to marry these two passions into one package? You make lessons in the form of comics, of course. Gene created an entire website, Factoring with Mr. Yang and Mosley the Alien as part of his final project for a Master’s Degree in Education. The site is split into five lessons, with a bunch of examples thrown in to try and make factoring as simple as possible.

The lessons start small and work their way up, introducing Prime Factoring (reducing the factors of a number down to their prime numbers), Greatest Common Factors (the largest number you can factor into two different numbers), and the dreaded trinomials. Trinomials still give me nightmares as they were one of the few parts of algebra that took me a while to grasp, but the comics do a good job of explaining them anyway. As for the website itself, it is easy to navigate, has handy buttons to skip forward and backward in large chunks or one by one, and is devoid of flashy, over-the-top graphics. Whether you’re a teacher looking to assign a website to your kids, or if you’re a high schooler that needs help with your homework, I’d give Gene’s site a go. Then, let me know if you find a real-life scenario where algebra is needed; my high-school self is still trying to figure that one out.

I Cast Lightning Bolt

Monday, August 30th, 2010

LARP (also known as “larping”) is a very misunderstood activity; most people don’t even know that it’s an acronym for “Live Action Role Playing,” much less that it’s not a bunch of nerds in bad costumes running around public parks with a tenuous grasp of reality. Well, that it’s not JUST that.

In an attempt to educate, as well as exercise his illustration skills, Nick Edwards put together a LARP guide book that touches on the basics of  larping—genres, costumes, weapons, why people do it, the dangers, and relationship dynamics. The comic doesn’t go into the history of LARP too much, or really argue for it as a legitimate activity, leaving that to a brief infodump on the first page; instead the intended audience is people who are looking to join a LARP game. The most useful part is the “dos and don’ts” section, which clearly and humorously lays out what you should and shouldn’t do in order to make the LARP experience enjoyable to everyone.

However, my favorite section is probably the “dangers” page, because it doesn’t use words to explain, letting the images do all the work in showcasing some of the common problems.

I larped back in high school, and let me just say this: YEP.

Cooking by Comic

Thursday, August 26th, 2010

Out of all the available types of how-to manuals, cookbooks are probably the ones that people have the most experience with, but the majority of cookbooks published in the past do not offer step-by-step instructions with photographic accompaniment; instead they are merely pages of recipes with the occasional enticing photo.

As few as photographic cookbooks might be, there are even fewer actual cookbook comics, but a number of people have stepped up to the challenge regardless. Now you can try your hand at a number of recipes, lovingly rendered or photographed to guide the reader through every step of the process.

Lucy Knisley is currently working on Relish, a collection of “stories, histories and recipes of food, all inspired by growing up with a chef for a mom,” due out from First Second in “a couple years.” Until then, you can enjoy her recipes for summer pickles and chai tea syrup.

Other recipe comics include:

And though it’s not a webcomic nor a specific cooking comic, let’s not forget that in volume 2 of Scott Pilgrim by Brian Lee O’Malley, Stephen Stills shows us how to make vegan shepherd’s pie. Daisy Edwards followed this advice, posting the scanned pages from the comic along with her own photos of the process. I once did something similar, using the description posted in volume 14 of xxxHoLiC by CLAMP to make potato-nishigori (read right-to-left):

Finally there’s Cheap Thrills Cuisine, a weekly syndicated strip by Thach Bui and Bill Lombardo. Running since 1993, the strip illustrates recipes as diverse as Cajun roast chicken and Tuscan bean salad, and the archive can be viewed on Comics.com as far back as January 2000.

Getting Hands-On With a Little Help

Tuesday, August 17th, 2010

While I was writing about comics apps yesterday, namely comiXology, one thing I failed to look at were the instructions. To teach users how to read a comic on the app, they use… a comic!

The instructional comic walks you through the process step-by-step, showing you where to tap on the screen to go backward and forward, to use multi-touch to zoom in-and-out, and to rotate the device to view images in landscape mode. It’s an effective hands-on demonstration.

Both the Marvel and DC apps are built off of comiXology, so they have all the same features—including the instructional comic. The text is exactly the same, but each puts their own twist on it by inserting their own company’s character.

(more…)

Ubunchu!

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

What’s this, another computer post? Purely a coincidence, I assure you.

Ubunchu

Ubunchu is a manga detailing the trials and tribulations of three members of a high school sys-admin club as they attempt to install and use the Ubuntu operating system. Written and illustrated by Hiroshi Seo, the comic first appeared in ASCII Magazine “Kantan Ubuntu!”

That would be the end of it for us English-speakers, but for the intervention of Martin Owens. While browsing the web for Ubuntu-based artwork, he came across Ubunchu, and a few weeks later had worked out the rights to translate the comic into English with the help of Fumihito Yoshida and Hajime Mizuno. Not only has it been translated, but even the artwork has been flipped for those who prefer to read comics western-style, from left-to-right. Those who would like the art untouched have no need to worry: right-to-left is available in English, too.

Two chapters of the manga are available in English right now, as well as Spanish, French, Portuguese, Italian, Vietnamese and a few other languages. Chapter 1 has more languages available (at the time of this post) than Chapter 2.

I can't play games

There are three main characters: Akane, the club president and an aficionado of Linux; vice president Masato, a Windows user, and Risa, a Mac person. Akane is a strong believer in the command line and thrives on complexity, while Masato seems to prefer Windows for what it lets him do, namely surf YouTube and play porn games. Risa is the one who brings Ubuntu to the club in the first place, mispronouncing it as “Ubunchu” repeatedly.

Though the comic bills itself as a “Ubuntu romantic school comedy,” there’s little romance to be found. Instead there’s plenty of hijinks and Ubuntu usage. The first chapter covers the installation of Ubuntu on their computers, while the second chapter focuses on the Command Line Inferface. And that’s fine, because it achieves exactly what it should do—get people interested in Ubuntu.

Ubuntu!