“Gate-A4” - Maia TomiokaJiro style!

Background painted in Photoshop, Maia drawn in SAI.

Notes about background: The grand majority of the scene (including the wear on the foundation concrete to the building,) was painted with the “Broad Tip 2” brush in my brush set, (row 4, brush 6,) and contains no sampled textures. The speckles came from spray/spatter brushes I have. The rest was a standard round opacity brush.

[Link to 1920px wide version]

Hey everyone! Thanks for all your interest for the print sale I’ve been having! Just letting you know that the first wave of orders are shipping out today, with more to follow going out on Monday.

A tip for when you receive yours: the print is fastened to the inside of the shipping tube with a strip of blue masking tape. It’s there to prevent the print from sliding back and forth within the tube, potentially denting the sides from hard falls in the mail. And, it goes without saying, but when you remove your print from the protective sleeve, wash your hands first and handle carefully by the edges or backside. EPSON Enhanced Matte is a quality paper stock, and will scratch/show oils from fingers on its surface. (These aren’t some cheap poster prints!) A can of compressed air is the best way to remove dust from prints like this. (Just make sure to test-fire the can first, so you know it won’t shoot out a spurt of liquid compressant.) Wiping dust off could cause a scratch or smear the dust into the grain of the paper.
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I’m getting really tired reading all these opinions from people all around the country trying to tell us in Boston that we were violated by the police and military in what was a temporary experimentation in creating a police state. Whether to support their asinine existing political agendas or whatever, I don’t know, but I need to get some stuff off my chest.

As someone who spent 100% of his time in the city from the moment the bombing occurred to the time the suspects were caught, here’s what I observed pertaining to most of the convictions I hear time and time again from people who weren’t even there:

“The city lockdown was a violation of individual liberty and freedoms. The vast police presence was designed as a show of force to instill fear and control the public.”
I’m diving head-first into the most BS statement. This has got to be the one. First, and I’m serious here, the lockdown didn’t even last one full day. It took place from early morning Friday the 19th to about 5 or 6 PM that evening: in total, about one work day. The only place that was closed up until friday was Copley Square and the Copley subway station, understandable as it was a crime scene. The city ran normally — shaken, yes — but normally for that entire week, even though we knew that there were two or more people still out there responsible for the attack.

The actual lockdown on Friday wasn’t anywhere near as extreme as it may have seemed in the media. Don’t be fooled by photos showing “Boston as a ghost town.” As a photographer, why would you display the photos showing otherwise? That’s just boring. Wait for just the right moment and indeed it looked like a ghost town. The lockdown was only a police advisory for your own safety. Kind of like a severe weather advisory. (Hey the MBTA gets shut down for those, too!) You could go outside, sure, but you were warned. There were not police and military personnel outside of everyone’s homes and apartment buildings forcing them to stay inside. If you went outside, police didn’t force you back in. I live on Commonwealth Avenue in Allston about 1 mile away from where all the action was happening in Watertown. There were cars driving down the street, much fewer than normal yes, but people were still going places. I commonly saw people walking down the sidewalks on both sides of the street. I even saw kids playing with a sprinkler outside the building across from mine. They didn’t look violated of their liberties to me, and we weren’t that far from the epicenter.

Most of us stayed indoors because, well, why wouldn’t you? Who wasn’t  glued to news channels or websites, watching the events unfold as they were happening that day? — You know, NOT hiding under our bedsheets crying for the boogieman to go away. Me? The weather was meh, why go out? Stay in, clean up a little, draw in photoshop, watch the news… It was a more or less average day off from work.

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Above: What my neighborhood looked like during the lockdown. Few cars… no people… no trains… Actually this photo was taken on a completely different day like a month or so before the bombings even happened, but if I told you it was taken during the lockdown, it adds a cool oppressive vibe to it that gets you all riled up!

Yeah, businesses were closed. That sucked for a lot of people who lost a days wages, (including me,) but ask anyone here whether it really affected them, and I’m sure much more than not you’ll get the response “well they got the guys didn’t they?” The positive effect of knowing the suspects had been caught was healthier for the city the next day (and every day after) than anything else. 

Remember that Boston is an EXCEEDINGLY small city. Even its metropolitan area is small. It’s maybe 5 or 6 miles square. You can walk across the entire metro area in just under two hours or so. It’s entirely possible that downtown businesses could have remained open with no ill effect on the operations occurring between Cambridge and Watertown. But as this has never happened before in the history of Boston, the decision was to take no chances that day, minimize possibilities for additional loss of life. The suspects, after all, were still capable of an attack, and since everything is so close to each other here, it’s not impossible that it could happen anywhere. For all the police knew, the initial track down of the suspects could have turned into a dangerous chase through the middle of the city. Again,why chance it?

And yeah, people celebrated with the police directly after Suspect #2 was caught. Ever see police officers high-five civilians? I did. It was awesome.

The nutjobs are blowing it way out of proportion. “The public cooperated with the police because they had no choice. When fully automatic battle rifle-equipped soldiers force you to cooperate, that’s your only choice” Give me a fucking break. The only people who can speak about that happening are a very select few in the small area of Watertown where the manhunt happened. And even then, I doubt those people were treated with malicious intent. But, I can’t speak for them. And neither can you.

“The people of Boston gave into the terrorists with fear. They stayed in their homes, cowering.”
I’ve heard countless non-Boston dwellers claim that the city was cowering in fear, that we hid in our homes for a whole week and succumbed to the shock of the events. You know what DIDN’T happen in Boston that week? Exactly what I just described. The three days after the bombings, I went out for some walks, got a gyro from a food truck near Kenmore and ate it in the BU school of music while listening to students practice. I went to the park with my girlfriend and pet bunny to enjoy the nice weather and get some exercise. There were people out and about doing their daily things. They went to work. Went out to eat. Went to the gym. Went to class. Rode their bikes. Sure, not in or around Copley, but that’s only one small-ish section of the city. I’d hardly call that “everyone cowering in fear in their homes.”

“They shouldn’t have killed Suspect #1. Whatever happened to ‘innocent until proven guilty?’”
In an ideal world, no they shouldn’t have — and I really don’t think the plan WAS to kill him. Plus, I mean seriously, if you are visibly and actively firing upon police (even gunning one down) who have surrounded your house, I think it’s safe to say — regardless of whether or not you’re a suspect of a bombing — you’re a threat that probably has to be dealt with immediately. Reports also state the brother was incapacitated by police, but was actually killed by his younger brother when he frantically ran him over with the get-away vehicle.

I would’ve liked to have seen the guy caught and questioned. But it didn’t turn out that way.

“If the US overreacted this badly to a 19-year-old-honors-student gone bad, that’s sending the wrong messages to terrorists everywhere to have a go at us.”
It’s hard for me to comment on this one. I have bias of living in the city where this happened, so of course I wanted a quick resolve so life could go on normally again. I honestly thought months would go by without any leads — nevermind closure — surfacing from the attacks. Four days after the attacks, the guys are identified and caught on the fifth day? I dunno, it may have been an overreaction with thousands of forces at the cities disposal, but damn were we pumped to get it over with THAT fast.

The reaction for shutting down parts of the city and services and such may send out the wrong signal, sure. So might dispatching shitloads of police and military. Makes you think a terrorist would jump on that recognition to go bigger and badder. But the manhunt side of it is present, too. Unless one commits the crime without fear of getting caught, okay, nothing will stop you, might as well commit suicide in the means of the attack. But for many others, the fear of the resulting manhunt is deterrence. Your photo plastered all over the internet and the news. Thousands of cops and the FBI looking for you. It WOULD be only a matter of time before you’re caught.

Boston may have gone a bit too far. I also think if it didn’t, there would be people slamming it for not going far enough.

Also, for the record, stop referring to him as a 19-year-old-honor-student. He’s not a kid. He’s old enough to know full well what he was going to do, the effects of what he was going to do, and the consequences of his actions. Describing such a person to belittle his actions and the city affected by his actions is despicable.

“The bombings were small. No, like, really small. Only a few dead and under 200 injured. All this for just that? I’d like to remind you of 9/11. That’s true terrorism. Is this going to be a thing for regular crimes now?”
It’s easy to say that when it didn’t happen in your city. I can say, absolutely, that the events of 9/11 are still more impactful and chilling to most anyone in Boston than the events of the marathon (who were not directly affected or nearby the bombings, that is). But this isn’t a contest. As I’ve said, Boston is a really small place. Shit like this just doesn’t happen every day here.

There are over 100 known definitions and qualifiers for “terrorism.” The Tsarnaev brothers were criminal radicals in reality, (and not very good ones at that,) who committed an act of senseless violence on completely innocent people. The same kind of people who might commit a school shooting, but with the knowhow to create and implement explosives. School shootings and bombings are a kind of terrorism because they emotionally charge the public with all sorts of topics from gun control to… well, this very rant. Convenience stores and banks get held up all the time, but you tend not to hear them become the focus of debate for days and weeks onward after it happens. That’s sort of the dividing line for me.

The term terrorism carries, these days, images of 9/11 and controversial destruction on a large scale. But really, just as a Weapon of Mass Destruction doesn’t have to be a nuclear device, a terrorist attack doesn’t have to kill thousands of people to clear the threshold.

In the days after the Boston bombings and even after the suspects were caught, crime did continue as normal in Boston. There were still shootings in Dorchester. Fights and stabbings between local rivals. They weren’t met with brute military force and city lockdowns to deal with them. It was regular police duty for those incidents. And will continue to be.

It wasn’t a police state. It isn’t a police state.

Alright. I’m done, had enough of this. Obviously these are mostly just my opinions and observations. I’m not speaking for the whole of Boston. But I seriously think I’m not far off from the general consensus here.

Thanks for reading all of this if you did, it means a lot to us.

Jenna, another character from Synthesis. Here in her uniform as part of the Aricean light-response military, (mostly doing civil-servant / in-city-peace-keeping duties.) All Aricee youth are required to go through a brief basic training. Jenna is one of the few who stuck with it after all those years. Her relatively low rank causes her to act a bit tougher than she normally would be.


My first city with the new SimCity!

I pre-ordered the game, so I pretty much lived on it all day yesterday when it was released. It’s a lot of fun, as you can see I’m making good use of the curved roads feature in this one.

My impressions of the game are very much positive. A lot of “diehard” SimCity fans like to make a lot of noise about their sore disappointment with this game, but if you ask me their expectations were too unrealistic to begin with. (Or, in many other cases, they’re the annoying knee-jerk reaction “0/10 because this game has DRM and is made by evil EA” dumbass type.)

I, myself, have played every SimCity title since the first, and I like the new direction Maxis has taken the game very much. Many other people were expecting (read: wanting) this game to be exactly what they had in SimCity 4 … just remake in 3D. If you ask me that’s a little boring, isn’t it? I don’t care about having the same game I did before, just with better graphics. The improvements they made to the simulation in this version meant there had to be sacrifices such as map size, but I’d much rather take the smaller map size for these changes rather than a rehash of old gameplay any day.

The new regional gameplay completely overtakes the old SC4 regional play. In SC4, every map on the region had to have it’s own collection of government and utilities buildings. Yeah, you could make trades with neighboring cities to buy power or water, but never enough to run the entire city on it. (In the new SimCity, my main city has a nuclear power plant which creates a massive surplus of power. I have other cities in the region that this plant is feeding entirely, how cool is that.) My main city has a city hall with different department annexes to make more advanced purchasing options available — and this one city hall rules the entire region. I don’t need 7 city halls for the 7 available cities in my region.

The regional play in SC4 never really felt truly connected, either. You could make connections, but that was only so you could make some really basic electric/water/garbage deals. But now, for example, my neighboring city has a lot of low-tech industrial zoned on it. My main city does not. People will commute from my main city to the other one to go to work there. The high industrial development there actually lowers the industrial demand of my other city, and I get to separate the pollution it generates! I will admit, the city sizes are small, yes, but this level of regional play really makes them feel a lot less smaller when you work on a grander scheme.

It’s also nice now that safety and utility buildings don’t have a “circle of effect” anymore. This meant you had to put a fire station or a police station every other 3 blocks in your city to make sure you blanket it with even, overlapping circles of coverage. In this new game, I haven’t had a problem with crime and fires in my city (Yet!) and I only have one fire station and one police station. The reason why is that the stations (just like schools, hospitals, utility stations etc,) are upgradable and expandable to properly serve your city’s needs. My police station has a 10 squad cars and a jail attached, enough to respond to anything going on in the city. For schools, you can have just one school, just make sure it has enough added classroom annexes to handle all the kids in your city, and that you place bus stops to all the residential areas. Buying more busses will ensure they make their rounds without them filling up, or falling behind on schedule. 

Other cool changes are that, unlike previous SimCity games, having schools and stuff actually matters. In SC4, you needed schools to simply get higher mayor approval rating and unlock high-tech industry and raise sim wealth. That still happens in this new game, but it goes a step further: you need schools and colleges to educate your citizens so that the more complex jobs that are available in your city can be conducted correctly. For instance, there was a period in my city where I forgot to check on my schools — and it turns out they had filled to capacity a while ago and I forgot to plop bus stops to make sure all the people are being enrolled. My nuclear power plant had uneducated workers and I was getting warnings that if left to the hands of these idiots, the plant’s reactors will crack and leak radiation into my city. To prevent that from happening, I shut down the plant (awesome that you can shut things down without destroying them,) bought power from my neighboring city to keep things going, built up my schools to proper capacity, then when the education level rose enough, turned the nuclear plant back on and normal life continued. When you shut something down, everyone that works there gets fired. When you start it back up again, it has to rehire workers before operating again. Thus, the plant hired all new smart-people and a meltdown was averted!

Anyway, despite what a lot of people on the internet try to convince me, I’m having a blast with this new game, and so are all my friends who bought it as well. It does have a few downsides, (such as no offline mode and small maps,) but they either don’t affect me very much, or they don’t by any means make the game broken or even slightly unplayable. It feels quite a lot like a fantastic foundation for a bright SimCity future. Yes, some of that future will involve DLC, there’s no getting around that, but the beauty of DLC is that the majority of it isn’t necessary, and you can just get the ones you want in the future.

Overall, awesome job Maxis. By the way, give your teams sound designer some major credit — the sound in this game is just absolutely incredible and fresh.

I still like to look back every now and then, though.

Quick note: to people who complain about the loss of terraforming, so what? SC4 was the ONLY title with terraforming you know? SC3K and SC2K had a really primitive “slope maker” and SC1 was a 2D overhead where you couldn’t do any landscaping at all. I don’t miss terraforming one bit whatsoever, never used it in SC4 to begin with. It makes more sense doesn’t it? You’re a mayor, not a god. You can do some fundamental landscaping, but forget flattening entire mountains — that just circumvents the challenge of using the landscape that was given to you.

So, you make text posts with embedded images to the body and for some annoying reason the images always appear to look horizontally squished (or vertically stretched if you prefer) to fit the width of your layout! It ruins the looks of your posts as well as the content itself! How do you fix this? Turns out it’s ridiculously simple!

Go to your Tumblr Customize page, (you should see it as a button in the upper-right corner of your blog page itself,) and click the “Edit HTML” button.

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Now, you should see a huge mess of code. Don’t worry about all of this too much, we’re going to be dealing with 99.98% none of it.

What we’re going to be doing is either adding or editing one parameter of your theme’s CSS section to tell images to automatically resize their vertical dimension based on the width of their container. Thus, maintaining a constrained aspect ratio.

First thing is first, we need to check whether your layout already has the CSS entry. Within the first 1/4 of your theme’s coding, there should be a line that has the tag <style type=”text/css”>. This is the start of your CSS. The CSS ends when you find a line further down that contains </style>. Take a quick look through this section to see whether or not it contains an entry called “img” — if it does it would likely be near the beginning.

If this “img” entry already exists, we’re going to add one simple piece of code to it. Within the { } brackets following “img”, add this code (in bold) just before the closing } backet: height:auto;

If this “img” entry does not exist, we’re going to add it by making a new line between any other two entries in the CSS section. Copy and paste the following code (in bold) into that line: img {height:auto;}

*Note about the following bit: My theme thinks it’s being clever by substituting traditional greater-than / lesser-than symbols used for HTML tags with left and right arrows. Please disregard this and read them as normal greater-than/lesser-than symbols. Copying and pasting the code text will still work fine in your theme.*

If for some reason your theme HTML does NOT contain a <style> CSS section at all, we can simply create one. Search the first 1/3 of your theme’s code for the line with </head> in it. This is the end of your <head> section, and where your CSS parameters should be. So, just above the </head> line, add the following code (in bold):

<style type=”text/css”>
img {height:auto;}
</style>

Hit preview, then save! You’re all set.

So with this simple code fix, your posts can go from looking like this:

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to this:

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Just wanted to share this little terrifying moment I had this morning, and what a possible solution might be.

I’ve been working on an artwork for someone over the last few days, and I’m almost done with it. Wake up this morning, go to open it, and I’m met with this:

“Photoshop could not complete your request because the file is not compatible with this version.”

You know, you let it sink in a minute. “No, no it’s not corrupted. Hahah good one Photoshop.” — open it again

“Photoshop could not complete your request because the file is not compatible with this version.”

So then you don your best “I am not amused” face and try like 4 more times before turning to google. You search the error, and find people talking about how your file has corrupted layers. Search “how to repair corrupt PSD files” and see people saying the work is as good as gone, so cut your losses etc. So then you officially freak out.

At this point, I’ve tried every trial of every app I could think of. CS6 couldn’t open it, so I tried CS5, CS4, CS3, and CS2 all without success. Corel Painter, nope. Tool SAI, doesn’t even try. OSX Preview? Opens it, but completely flattened which doesn’t entirely help me.

And then I remember:

Freaking Gimp.

Never used the program before, never had to. But it was the last one I could think of that’s capable of opening PSD files with layers. I go download it, install it, and, to my complete amazement the file opens — layers intact and able to be re-exported to safety.

So what was the problem? I had a layer in the PSD file that was more than 30,000 pixels wide (or tall.) Adobe never told me this, but apparently the PSD file has a layer limitation of 30,000 x 30,000 pixels — and my artwork had one in it. (A transformed texture layer that, after conforming to perspective, became VERY wide at the base.) How nice of Photoshop, then, to allow me to save the PSD and not inform me of the incompatible layer.

Gimp is just weird enough to simply plow right through the glaring error in the file and display it anyway, go figure. It even informed me that in order to re-save the file, I’d have to remove (or shrink) the oversized layer. How nice of you, Gimp, if only some other big name softwares could follow in your example.

So remember: if you see that error not ALL hope is lost. Give GIMP a shot, it just might save you and your families life.

I’m trying out this photoshop plugin called Blow Up 3 by Alien Skin. [Check out the samples on their site — they’re actually not fooling you.]

It uses some interesting interpolation algorithms along with smearing and selective sharpening to retain sharp edges and try its best to avoid pixelation. In practice, it does a really good job at maintaining the original image even after enlarging by 200% scale. It’s not perfect, obviously since it’s trying to make up new pixel information that wasn’t there before. But it’s a marked improvement over the standard Photoshop bicubic method.

They market this toward photographers who want to crop and enlarge sections of photos, but it looks like this can be pretty handy for illustrators too, especially comic artists and those looking to print a smaller artwork at a larger size. I’ll take slightly smeary details over pixelated ones in a print.


This is why I always shoot with RAW.

Image 1: Original as shot
Image 2: JPG, Processed
Image 3: RAW, Processed

The above photo was shot with RAW+JPG mode, so I had one of each. As you can see in post processing, RAW files contain much more information that can be recovered from blown out highlights and dark shadows, as well as much more subtle color accuracy (the magenta hue in the snow wasn’t lost.) All of this “additional” information of course makes RAW files huge, but, well, I buy 32GB SDXC cards for a reason. If this scene were shot as a JPG, the sky would have been lost forever, but the photo would have been sharable immediately without any processing first — sometimes a time consuming task.

While RAW is what I recommend you shoot with if your camera supports it, not all cameras can be as flexible as this with their post-processing. Typically, the more expensive the camera, or larger the sensor, the more flexible (and therefore valuable) a RAW file can be. My Sony RX100 can only be processed to about half the extent my A77 can be. If I had a full frame camera, I’d have even more room.

But regardless of having more accurate flexibility to adjust your exposure in post, perhaps the best feature of all is not having to worry about setting white balance at all — as all RAW files are ignorant to light temperature. Accidentally shot tungsten light with daylight settings? No problem, just switch it and post and the outcome will be perfect as it you shot it that way to begin with. This handy feature works without a hitch no matter the camera.


Some of the work I did for a freelance gig I was brought in for at Neoscape. I was asked to do sketches of the architectural plans of the commercial/residential block being built by Pike & Rose in Maryland. These drawings were used in promotional material (print brochures and video) to entice prospective businesses and residents.

Click here to see the video where some of these drawings were utilized.

Pike & Rose’s website
(Note: I did not do the drawings on the home screen.)

Photoshop CS6Cintiq