Art Supplies Used at Continuity
For the most part, what goes on here and pays the bills requires
drawing and marker coloring.
Paper - Layout Bond, tracing, and xerox paper are used
for commercial work.
Strathmore 1 ply or 2 ply is used for comic pages.
Pencils - Neal's favorite are Mongol #2 which at least at one
time seemed to be the most popular brand. However a company called
Sanborn bought Mongol and then discontinued making them so that
they wouldn't end up competing with themselves. Thus we are left
with Dixon Ticonderoga pencils that break in the electric pencil
sharpener and have those tiny hard chips in the lead that make
it feel like you have a grain of sand between the pencil tip and
the paper. We're still looking for a quality brand pencil that
we'd be happy with. No luck so far.
Inking - When using India ink, Neal uses high quality sable
brushes and inking pen. Some comic work and all commercial work
are done with pentels and brush pens. A brand of pen called Fountain
Pentel, made in Japan, is used to do thin brush stroke lines.
Pilot Fine Liners and Pentel Sign pens are still found at the
studio but less and less frequently used. Thicker brush stroke
lines were done with a Tombo brush pen then a brand called Brushpen
from Japan. The problem with the Tombos is that the ink smudges.
The Brushpen from Japan offers a really cool effect in that it
isn't very wet and therfore gives a drybrush effect that Neal
had fun with. However when you print art work you need a solid
black line in most cases. We've recently found the possible answer.
The Copic Multi liner BM. These are nice and juicy and give a
solid black color. They also make a thinner version, the Multi-Liner
BS, but we've found that for some reason, the thinner one bleeds.
Now a lot of work here at Continuity is inked in Fountain Pentel
and Multi-Liner BM.
Marker Coloring - For years, we used strictly "ab
Markers" by Chartpak. They were the wettest and had the best
colors. Some years ago we discovered that you could color on a
xerox with Pantone and Prismacolor. This made things a lot easier
for us because every now and then a mistake is made and you can't
erase marker. We didn't need to color originals anymore. Pantone
markers by TRIA are slightly better than the Prismacolor markers
and come with a big feature the others don't have; you can refill
them with TRIA dyes. We still use the "ab" markers too
but limit it to backgrounds. They're still the best for big areas.
A while back we used Design Markers but mainly for airbrushing
because they developed a great little nozzle that you could attach
a design marker too for airbrushing. They discontinued those.
Can't imagine why. Recently we made another discovery. Copic markers.
These are used by Japanese animators and designers. These seem
to be the best by far for a few reasons. #1 they have a huge amount
of colors. #2 they are refillable. #3 Airbrush attachment. #4
Color on Xeroxes. #5 you can change the tips from chisel to different
size brush tips. We bought a set and tried them out. Had a great
time with them. The brush tips open up the coloring possibilities
a great deal. We recommend them highly.
Misc.
Colored Pencils- Prismacolor
Airbrush - AWATA A, B and C. Olympus
Dr. Martin Dyes
Premo! Sculpey
Sculpey III
Sculpey SuperFlex
Super Elasticlay
Super Sculpey