Twin Lollipops

While waiting for feedback for the last batch of House of Odd pencils, I finally got my new website up and running! It took me a while to get things sorted out, and parts of the site is still under construction, but at least my registered domain name finally pointed to the site it was supposed to point. It actually took a bit of wrangling, due to issues over transferring a domain name. At least that’s over… for now.

 

I celebrate by showing another batch of felt toys I made. This time, it’s a pair of lollipops! I’m not into candy-type felting because I find the results too small and not very delicate, but this was too cute to pass up, and they’re the right size for a key ring or a hanging decoration.

 

Lollipops - Step 1
Step 1: I bought this Chinese kit in Chinatown for $3.50.

 

Lollipops - Step 2
Step 2: None of the pieces you see here are pre-cut – I had to cut the paper drawings out, trace the outlines onto the pieces of felt, then cut them out. Luckily, it was a very simple design, so it was quick and easy. Most Chinese kits are not pre-cut, so I expected the extra work.

 

Lollipops - Step 3
Step 3: Sewing the bits and pieces together. Namely the swirls.

 

Lollipops - Step 4
Step 4: Sewing the lollipops together, and stuff them with filling.

 

Lollipops - Step 5
Step 5: Sewing the little bows on. This was the most adorable part.

 

And voila, the final product:


Twin Lollipops
Twin Lollipops – Strawberry Cream and Caramel Chocolate!

 

Slice ‘o Orange Cake

It’s the end of June, and the third “Odd Thomas” book with Dean Koontz, titled “House of Odd”, is up to the final stages. I’ve done all the pencils for the whole book, currently around 190 pages, and after the last 50 pages are inked (and toned by fantastic toner Dee DuPuy), it’ll be officially over. The book is due in April 2012, just after the movie, so keep your eyes peeled for it!

 

On another note, I’ve been doing some more “Knits and Bits” projects on the side. To show folks how my little cakes are put together, I’ve taken a series of step-by-step photos of how I make them from the kits.

 

Step 1: Slice o' Orange Cake
Step 1: The full kit, in its original box. I bought it off an Internet Shopping site, Rakuten.co.jp. It’s kinda like a Japanese eBay of sorts, but with English translations.

 

Step 2: Slice o' Orange Cake
Step 2: Take everything out of the box, and make sure it’s all there. The needle is NOT included in the kit though, and I didn’t know that. Luckily, I had one leftover from a previous project.

 

Step 3: Slice o' Orange Cake
Step 3: Roll up the large white wool, and put it into the cup. The size of the rolled-up wool was huge, and it took a LONG time for it to be made compact enough. Lots of stabbing.

 

Step 4: Slice o' Orange Cake
Step 4: Stabbed the thin layer of Chocolate to the top of the Vanilla. Easy, this part.

 

Step 5: Slice o' Orange Cake
Step 5: Made each of the orange slices. This took AGES and a lot of stabbing all directions, since they have to be shaped in a particular way. My hand got pretty tired.

 

Step 6: Slice o' Orange Cake
Step 6: I then added the little fluffy brown bits, which was quite difficult as the wool felt was kinda disobedient, and was flying all over the place. I struggled to get it under control, then stabbed it down too much. The brown topping is supposed to look more fluffy than this, but oh well. Started stabbing the oranges on.

 

Step 7: Slice o' Orange Cake
Step 7: Adding the little bits of green. Mint? This is the last step. Afterwards, Viola!

 

And now for the finished cake, the Slice o’ Orange Cake-in-a-Cup:

 

Finished Cake
Final Product: This took me 4 hours to make, in-between working on “Odd Thomas 3”, listening to music, watching a Chinese Martial Arts movie on Youtube, and random internet surfing.

 

Sister Holmes: Dectective Nun

Hi all, I’m mid-way through inking Odd Thomas 3 (while watching Colbert Nation and making squiggly lines from laughing while inking), and there’s an interview with me up on the Graphic Novel Reporter, by Danica Davidson. Thanks, Danica and GNR.

Today, good news if you’re attending Sakura Con 2011 in Seattle this weekend. The BentoComics people have a table there and at least two anthologies for sale, the first a collection of Sherlock Holmes related stories by many of BentoComics’ contributing artists, including myself.

Update: So popular was this anthology that it sold out completely at Sakura Con on Day 1!

I contributed a 16-page story in the manner of a Sherlock Holmes story, except that it’s about Sister Holmes, Detective Nun. Because I looked it up online, and the only badass nun we had in comics was Warrior Nun Areala, so obviously what we needed was a cool, logical nun who solves baffling mysteries with rational deduction. If you see this anthology at Sakura Con, may the Power of Christ compel you to buy it (and also the second anthology, which I outline below).

 

Anthology cover for Sherlocke Holmes

 

Above is the cover (drawn by Myung), and you can read the Sister Holmes story by clicking the cover page below.

 

Sister Holmes: Detective Nun
Click to read on Bentocomics.com!

 

I’m not sure what it was about the “Write a Sherlock Holmes Story” request, that made me want to re-write Sherlock Holmes as a nun. It may be because of all the “re-imaginings” of Sherlock Holmes lately. You have Movie Sherlock, which “re-imagines” Sherlock as a man of action. You have Young Sherlock Holmes, Modern-Day Sherlock Holmes, and Steampunk Sherlock Holmes… all of which amounts to something like a change of scenery. If they’re re-imagining Sherlock Holmes, they’re not re-imagining him enough.

Apart than that, there’s also the wonderful original stories by Arthur Conan Doyle, who I recently re-read with fresh eyes and new appreciation. The first thing that struck me about the Holmes stories is how perfect they are. They are all fairly different, yet formulaic enough for people to be entertained, but not alienated. They are the reason why Sherlock Holmes is one of the most widely recognised literary archetypes in the world, and continues to be. What can I add to something so perfect, so archetypal?

So I subverted it. That’s the only way I felt I could put an interesting spin on it – the stories all have to be good mystery stories, but the bit players are up for some fun. So Sister Holmes is female and a nun, and Father Watson, while not in this story, is extremely impressed by her powers of observation and deduction. The two live in a small chapel in 221 Baker St, two doors down from the Ye Olde London Secret Sisterhood of Cake Decorators. She is no joke, folks.

 
 

Queenie Chan Anthology – 2000-2010: Then there’s also this anthology for sale at the Bento table, which is a 150-page book containing a collection of my 10 best short stories drawn over the past decade, 9 of which are available to read on my website. Readers and fans have asked me for a long time where they can buy a collection of my short stories, and now you can, in book form.

 

Queenie Chan Short Stories - 2000-2010
Click to Buy this on Lulu.com!

 

It’s a print-on-demand book, so you can go to this page at Lulu to order a copy, if you can’t make it to Sakura Con. I’ll do a more detailed post on this on a later date, but for now, I’ll just mention that it’s there and available.

 

Workshops in Istabul, Turkey in November 2010!

Hi all, Happy New Year! I hope everyone had a great Xmas and New Year! As for me, I made it onto an interesting list with the Courier Mail. 2011 looks to be an interesting year!

Here’s the post I’ve been meaning to do about my week-long trip to Istanbul, Turkey last November. I had to do all this work for Odd Thomas 3 first, and now that I’ve done it, I can finally say that the trip was fantastic and the hospitality of the Turks was wonderful.

I was in Istanbul from the 31st October to the 8th November, as a guest of the Turkish International Book Fair (which I visited to do a workshop on the 7th). I was brought there by publisher Tudem, who published the Turkish version of “The Dreaming”, called “Okuldaki Sir”, which translates to “The Secret of the Schools” (The name change is customary for Turkish versions of international works). The series was quite a success in Turkey (which is why they flew me over there), and I even made it into the biggest-selling newspaper! Other than that, most of the time there was spent doing workshops at schools and museums, with a bit of time leftover for sight-seeing. Oh yes, plus a lot of great Turkish food!

While I’ll talk a bit about Turkish schools, sadly I didn’t manage to take any photoes there. All my snap-happy moments were on the sight-seeing trip, which involved me (and my kind shepherd/guide Arden) making a bee-line for the closest tourist-friendly mosque. Like the New Mosque, also known as the Mosque of the Valide Sultan, located right next to the Spice Markets:

 

The New Mosque
The New Mosque from the outside, during evening prayers. For some reason, the New Mosque allows tourists at prayer time, whereas other mosques do not.

 

Prayers at the New Mosque

 

Prayers at the New Mosque
Not that there were that many people at evening prayers anyway.

 

Turkey is predominantly a Muslim country (with some Armenian Christians and Jews mixed in), so it has calls to prayer five times a day. However, apart from the mosques and some architectural differences, it looks much like any other European city. I lived near Taksim Square, one of Istanbul’s city centres, and the place is full of Starbucks, designer shops and thriving clubs and restuarants. The Turks (especially the guys) are red-blooded folks who like to drink, eat and have a good time. I guess nothing much has changed from the day of the Ottoman Empire, where Turkey ruled much of the Middle East as one big Islamic Empire. Some of the fruits of that Empire can be seen at the Topkapi Palace, one of many palaces in Istanbul.

 

Topkapi Palace

 

 

Topkapi Palace 2
I wish I took better pictures of the Topkapi Palace.

 

Blue Mosque 1

 

Blue Mosque 2

 

 

Red Church
…And the massive Cathedral opposite it (which sadly was closed on the day I was there).

 

 

Ottoman Architecture
And a pic of Ottoman architecture. This looked European to my eyes, but apparently it’s old Ottoman.

 

What has changed is that modern Turkey is a strictly secular country, something that Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey, enshrined in the nation’s constitution. Ataturk was a military man whose legacy lives on in the Turkish Army, who takes it upon themselves to initiate a coup if the civilian leaders of the country gets any funny ideas. The last time that happened was many years ago, but while no one wants a military dictatorship, no one wants Sharia law either. Just before I flew to Istanbul, I read an article in the Gulf Times discussing the impropriety of the Turkish Prime Minister’s wife wearing a hijab to the reception of a state function. Much consternation and suspicion abounded. Were Turkish liberties being challenged? Considering you can walk down a street in Istanbul and not see a single woman wearing a hijab, you can imagine the alarm over this seemingly innocuous gesture.

 

 

 

Spice Market 3

 

 

Grand Bazaar 2

 

Grand Bazaar 3

 

But the best and most important part of the trip were meeting the students at the (expensive) private schools. Turkish private schools, oddly enough, were mostly run by large Turkish corporations, and many have K-12 classes on the same campus. It was mighty strange seeing 17 year-olds on the same campus as 6 year-olds. I imagine the children go straight onto university, and the brightest ones are head-hunted by the corporations sponsoring their education. Thus the education standards are all very high, and nearly all of the older students speak very good English. I had my translator Abdul and Kemal with me, and sometimes they weren’t needed because the children had no trouble understanding my English at all.

The students ranged from kids who knew what manga was, and many who didn’t, but then all of the older students I spoke to knew what “One Piece” and “Naruto” was. I did a series of drawing workshops with them, and they were all talented and enthusiastic (some exceptionally so), and I can imagine a few future Turkish manga artists emerging from there. The savviness of the older kids especially surprised me – since they are fluent in English, they probably read a lot of manga from English manga sites, which is why they seem so up-to-date with the latest releases. I also sold quite a few books of “The Dreaming”, and doodled a little dog in most of them as well (Tudem’s logo is a dog’s head, and I drew the body on it).

 

 

Turka Cola
I’d wanted to buy some Mecca cola, but couldn’t find any. But I found Turka cola instead! Apparently Mecca cola isn’t distributed in Turkey.

 

All in all, I had a fun time in Istanbul, and wouldn’t hesitate to go back for another visit. The city is so big, so cultured, and with so much to explore, that it would be a pity if I didn’t get to go again. Next time, I would definitely spend more than a week there. In closing, I drew a picture of Jeanie and Amber from “The Dreaming”, taking inspiration from a Harem book I bought at the Topaki Palace.

 

 

Thanks
Thanks for Tudem for inviting me to Istanbul, and many thanks to Arden for showing me around!