MySpace


Elfquest2008

Richard Pini


Last Updated: 11/19/2009

Send Message
Instant Message
Email to a Friend
Subscribe

Gender: Male
Status: In a Relationship
Age: 31
Sign: Pisces

City: POUGHKEEPSIE
State: New York
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/19/2008

Who Gives Kudos:


Monday, November 24, 2008 
Forgive the melodramatic title. It's a movie reference. It appeals to my bent sense of humor.

It's a very dark, very cold evening. Winter's here with a vengeance, at least temperature- and wind-wise. Thank the High Ones there's no snow yet. Shortly I'll be going out for the evening to catch a spot of dinner, methinks.

I'm in that quiet space between the busy-ness of the day and the small chaos of a pre-Thanksgiving evening. (Even though it's a Sunday, I'm certain stores are already open late, getting a jump on what used to be the the post-Thanksgiving retail season.) And in that quiet space I am thinking about what I've just finished working on.

Nothing.

Well, nothing anyone would notice. Because if they were going to notice it, they would have already. But they haven't. So... nothing. I just finished making a bunch of tweaks and corrections to a number of pages in the big-ass (and getting bigger every week) Digital EQ online comics project. Things like, an extra editorial page that needed to go into this issue, and a story page from that installment that somehow went completely missing for months and months! Stuff like that. Editor-thing type stuff. That no one will notice.

For years and years, while Team EQ was scurrying about, writing, penciling, inking, coloring, lettering, printing, marketing, and everything else-ing the hundreds of issues and thousands of pages that comprise the complete (to date) Elfquest saga, it was easy to fall into a certain mindset. I think many people do at some point, whatever their vocation. I call it "good-enough-itis." It's what you allow yourself to settle for when you feel rushed, or jammed up against a deadline. It's what motivates an artist to take a shortcut here or there, hoping the inker will pull things together. It's what hangs up a writer who's pretty sure there's some little detail of character or bit of continuity that's off... but what the hell, it reads pretty good as is. It's what causes an editor to let a story page through the system that's maybe seventy or eighty percent of what it could be, but it's good enough and besides the book's got to get to the printer tomorrow.

Good-enough-itis. And heaven knows, as the "buck stops here" person at Warp Graphics, over the years I indulged in that particular malaise plenty of times. I remember I used to argue a lot about it, if anyone critiqued this or that issue as not up to par. I'd get very defensive, and bolster the writing or the artwork or whatever, knowing in my heart of hearts that the issue was below the standard I wanted to maintain... but I'd be dipped if someone else was going to get away with saying it out loud to my face! Hah!

But now, all the Elfquest comics and stories are going on-line. Literally millions of copies of the print comics and books are out there, but (1) most of those volumes are out of print now, and (2) I'm not in the old paper game any more. The Digital EQ project is - at least until someone else picks up the print publishing baton and runs with it - not only Warp's creative legacy but the best way we've discovered yet to introduce lots and lots of new readers to the adventures of Cutter and company. With the elfquest.com website getting mega-hits every week, I know we're doing something right!

Back when, if a comic issue or book got printed and published and distributed containing an error, that was it. Either (if the mistake was horrendous enough) you tried to recall every copy and incurred the expense of another print run; or (if it was a simple glitch) you lived with it. And nodded sheepishly when fan after fan pointed it out to you in letters or at conventions or book signings. After all, even with the goof, the issue or volume was plenty good enough. But in the digital realm, second chances are easy. A page is out of order? Just renumber it in the HTML code-list. Color is off? Photoshop to the rescue! Don't have the original art boards any more to scan? Use the printed copy, and work whatever magic you can on the image file to make the art look at least as good as it was once - or at least as good as you remember it being.

So even if nobody notices, or knows what's been tweaked to make it just a little bit better, I'm doing it - because I can. And because this is the Elfquest that many people are going to see for the first time, even thirty years after its debut. And we all know what they say about first impressions.

I lied, sort of. Even if nobody else knows, I know. And that makes me happy.
Scott

 
aw geeze! you're adding new stuff? Now I gotta go back and look in issues i've already read, to fFind new changes! I mean, it'sexciting getting more more new new, but er, any clue where i should look fFirst?

And, you are quite correct sir: The digital age is great! Some people complain because online media is non-permanent. Somehow, that means it doesn't count. It's just a slack-jawed, unarchived version of the real thing.
I don't believe it fFor a minute, and fFrankly turn that argument against it's peddlers, saying: Lack of Permanency means non-permanent errors, too!
 
Posted by Scott on Monday, November 24, 2008 - 4:35 AM
[Reply to this
Karyn

 
I think I told you this before: If you're doing what you love, it's not really work, is it?

Some day, when you're old and grey and bored (Insert raucous laughter here), you can go back and re-tweak all the things that YOU, in your omniscient and omnipresent wisdom, believe didn't go exactly right, or could have been better, or might have worked more succinctly if you'd only...... Capisce?

As it stands, you have always and consistently done a rough and somewhat thankless job being invisible and highly competent. And even if you don't think that you did it as well as you might have, you've STILL managed to do it better than 99% of the other schlemiels out there.
Your "good-enough" is leagues beyond what most of us consider "might-hit-on-the-best-day-I-ever-live"!

You done good. You do good. And we can be selfishly glad that you do it for yourself, but we get to reap the benefits.
Helluva system, ain't it?
 
Posted by Karyn on Monday, November 24, 2008 - 4:36 AM
[Reply to this
Kandis [[The Dorky Sprite]]

 
and now I know....

:D
 
Posted by Kandis [[The Dorky Sprite]] on Monday, November 24, 2008 - 4:37 AM
[Reply to this
Da Hoku
Hoku Kaanapu

 
I'm glad the EQ Online is running.
I actually got my bus driver re-reading it and several of my customers/friends reading it for the first time and LOVING it!
 
Posted by Da Hoku on Monday, November 24, 2008 - 4:41 AM
[Reply to this
happily mortal

 
i'm assuming richard wrote this blog?

i want to say that i appreciate the detail and perfection you guys strive for. i'm not necessarily a "comics" fan or a "graphic novels" fan or a fan of "anime" and "manga." yeah, i'll look at it. but i won't spend money on it.


however, i've lost and let go of a lot of things in my adult life. you can't be a total packrat. plus a couple of bad divorces and fleeing an abusive marriage kind of leaves you with less than you had going in. that being said.....

in the second bedroom of my apartment is a box that contains everything (except a couple of things i bought recently) Elfquest that i have ever owned. it's full. i started the collection when my dad bought for me an issue of the comic off a comics stand in the grocery store when i was fourteen. i had long grown out of richie rich, hot stuff and spooky. we were going on a road trip and he thought i'd enjoy something to read. that one issue (where cutter and skywise come across the human tribe just before finding the forbidden grove) hooked me. i found the original four graphic novels in the bookstore not long after. i've been a major fan ever since.


i think part of the draw was not just the richness of the story and wendy's drawing, but the glorious beauty of the color in the original graphic novels. i must say i was disappointed in their reissues. i mean at their being dull (in color) in comparison.


so i get what you're saying. and i'm saying that although we avid readers may not notice EVERY little tweak you make, we certainly notice and appreciate your dedication and overall how cared-for this universe and all its manifestations are.


thanks.
:D

oh, btw, i'm 36 now. and still reading all the digital issues that i never could find in my podunk part of nc. i REALLY thank you for making everything universally available now.

 
Posted by happily mortal on Monday, November 24, 2008 - 4:42 AM
[Reply to this
KT

 
And now that EQ is digital, I can do what I'd never dare to do to my graphic novels: Bust out Photoshop and doodle moustaches on every single elf, Snidley-style~!

Not that I've done that before, because I haven't.


YET.

 
Posted by KT on Monday, November 24, 2008 - 2:05 PM
[Reply to this
Moonjammer
Douglas Horvat

 
And this, Sir, is why I hold Warp Graphics and its publications in such high regard. Because there is always someone who cares enough to sweat the details.

 
Posted by Moonjammer on Tuesday, November 25, 2008 - 3:36 AM
[Reply to this
Kaia

 
Take a moment to understand that every little thing you and your lady and your team do and have done with this work has touched the lives of thousands. What you're doing might not be fireworks and huge eye catchers, but they are heart movers, life shapers and dream makers.


Every little bit counts, and we love you all the more for it.
<3

Thank you.

 
Posted by Kaia on Tuesday, November 25, 2008 - 3:36 AM
[Reply to this
Shorty
Amanda Kelly

 
Your work is golden. I find my self on your website every Friday. I own alot of the books and comics myself, yet still read them online. I love them. Keep up the good work.
Please?!?
 
Posted by Shorty on Tuesday, November 25, 2008 - 3:37 AM
[Reply to this
It's Me
Tiffany Pena

 
Well, super kudos to you. Even if no one else ever notices every little thing you do for the title - you know, and we fans appreciate the endwork. I am so glad the comics have gone digital for 2 reasons, 1) I am a packrat and my space keeps getting smaller, this way I can still enjoy my faves w/o running out of room, and 2) I can now catch up on quite a few missing back issues! I tried to buy what all I could when it came out, but between moving and crappy small town supplies I missed a lot.
Now I can catch up!
 
Posted by It's Me on Tuesday, November 25, 2008 - 3:37 AM
[Reply to this
Jade

 
You mean like Shale having five fingers instead of four? You must have heard that quite a lot over the years. Personally i love what you have done with the online comics and any tweaking you do will make it all the better for old and new readers alike.

 
Posted by Jade on Tuesday, November 25, 2008 - 3:37 AM
[Reply to this
Kristin

 
Shale still has 5 fingers in Hidden Years 5!! Page 14, final panel. That's the one huge EG mistake I can still remember.


I applaud the digital archive, what a great way to introduce my friends to EQ, since I refuse to lend my books out anymore!
 
Posted by Kristin on Tuesday, November 25, 2008 - 3:38 AM
[Reply to this
Elfquest2008
Richard Pini

 
Heh. Misspelled words I can fix. Missing pages I can find and post. Icky coloring I can tweak. But surgery on the art... uh uh! Shale's gonna have 5 fingers forever, same as Clearbrook in that infamous "Day in the Lives" cartoon!
 
Posted by Elfquest2008 on Tuesday, November 25, 2008 - 3:45 AM
[Reply to this
Kristin

 
Honestly, that particular mistake has always made me feel better about my own art. Idolizing Wendy so much growing up, it's a good feeling to know that no matter how magical her art talents are, she is indeed human and she makes mistakes too.

I'm in the process of meeting a huge deadline myself, and I am beginning to feel some of my panels are starting to look rushed.....so your blog was most timely! Thanks for reminding me even the folks who been at this a long time have the "good-enough-itis" too.
:)
 
Posted by Kristin on Wednesday, November 26, 2008 - 1:06 AM
[Reply to this
PariahArts
Pariah Pickuupbyurpuppyscruff

 
Perfectionism can be something of a curse but a justifiable quirk that I definitly can appreciate. I wonder if the old saying is still true that artists are their own worst critics? Probably so.


Besides, how can you be lonely there with all those elves dancing around in your head???



:)
 
Posted by PariahArts on Wednesday, November 26, 2008 - 1:06 AM
[Reply to this
r

 
Thanks for your enthusiastic love of these beings and their story! Without you, where would they have gone? I fear the young ones would have been lost to the future generations of this world long before the quest was complete! Carry on the quest!
 
Posted by r on Thursday, November 27, 2008 - 4:09 AM
[Reply to this
Fairylite
Crystal Rauch

 
Couple things I can say about flaws from personal experience is this:

DON'T LET *PERFECTION* BE THE *ENEMY* OF *GOOD*!!

Any screwups you make just show what you created is Yours! That just shows it's hand-made! (I knit, so flaws are normal to me)

I have ALWAYS loved Elfquest in WHATEVER form you & yours have graced us fans with! The only one you're TRULY answerable to is YOURSELF.


As for those of us who are "addicted" to finding flaws, I say these immortal words from William Shatner when he was on Saturday Night Live--GET A LIFE!!!

All Appreciation Meant & Given to You For Your Hard Work!!
Fairylite-One Happy Elfquest Follower
 
Posted by Fairylite on Tuesday, December 09, 2008 - 6:41 PM
[Reply to this
Hoshiko

 
Ya'll are doing right! I wonder though...with all the success of the recent marvel and DC comics turning to movies...will an Elf-quest movie series be in the works soon as well?

That'd kick arse! I can totally tell you some good actor's and actresses that would perfect for some of the characters xD Let's do this thing!
 
Posted by Hoshiko on Monday, February 23, 2009 - 5:51 AM
[Reply to this