
This blog began in 1997 as a single news page called Nucelus. In 2005, during a long wait to move into a new house, I decided to learn some php and MySQL and write my own blogging system, which became inkyBlog and which now powers this, my own Webbledegook blog.
Thank you to my brother, Murray Ewing, for help with some of the more challenging aspects!
But luckily there are other people in the world (apparently) and they are doing things! Neill Cameron has given us a tasty taster of his strip for The DFC, Mo-bot High, and it looks fantastic. He's certain to be one of the stars of the show.
I had thought Matthew Badham's Overspill had been taken off air, but I'm pleased to see it is up and breathing again, now with interviews with PJ Holden and Al Ewing (no relation) and also Kenny Penman about his new venture, Blank Slate. Let's hope Overspill is here to stay - it's good comics stuff. As for Blank Slate, did you know that I designed the logo?
I want to direct your attention to a wonderful online strip. It's called Strange Times and is written and drawn by Dave West (of Accent UK). The style and stories have a personal touch that many comics could benefit from, and it has a strong clear voice that is pleasantly detached yet remains intimate. The drawing style is by way of Edward Gorey, possibly via Tom Gauld, and it works hand in hand with the tales perfectly. I strongly advise you to go and lose yourself in Dave's strange little world!
Are you aware of Sarah McIntyre's fabulous work? I just absolutely love her watercolour work, and went and bought a big pad and some watercolours for myself, inspired! Oh... it's not as easy as she makes it look. Go and look into the archives of her blog for her wonderful little sequence of 'thatchers'.
I could go on about loads of other things out there to enjoy, but for now I'll just quickly mention a great new blog called Good Comics For Kids that brings you daily news on... comics for kids! It has a US bias, but it's mostly stuff that's easily available. Add it to your bookmarks or RSS reader.
I'll end off with a sketch of no real consequence. I did it last year as a preliminary drawing for a magazine article. It didn't make it to the finished version, but I'm quite fond of it.
| "This issue's stand out strip is Garen Ewing's Rainbow Orchid, a 1920s-set high adventure. It's just so complete - everything about it is good and all fits together wonderfully. If there's any justice you'll see this turning up in local Waterstones on that spinner with the Asterix and Tintin books in." |
With the news that The Rainbow Orchid is to be published in 2009 by Egmont, the UK publisher of the Tintin books, it seems this may well actually come to pass (and Jez's justice will be done!).
When I started the strip, this was not at the forefront of my mind. My main concern was to write and draw a comic that I could enjoy whole-heartedly for myself (see the introduction I wrote here). As more and more reviewers picked out Orchid from BAM!, and then seeing the non-stop interest first-hand as I sold the black-and-white collection at the London Winterfest, and, more recently, seeing the excellent global reaction to the online version, the possibility of it being published with a wider audience in mind became apparent.
One of the really nice things about this process is that, while I had the idea I would finish Orchid before even contemplating finding a publisher (or indeed self-publishing it), events were rather hurried along somewhat by several publishers contacting me along the way. All this eventually led to my agent, Oli Munson at Blake Friedmann, approaching several of these publishers late last year, and successfully getting a deal with Egmont - the best publisher I could have wished for my story.
It's early days yet, but as Tim Jones, Egmont UK brand manager, was off to the Bologna Book Fair a couple of weeks ago, it was thought that this was as good a time as any to make the deal public, so to coincide with his mentions at the fair, a press release was sent out on April 1st. (Unfortunately, this coincided with my website's database going down, thus rendering my site somewhat inhospitable to visitors, and it took a week before Streamline were able to get the problem fixed - it was a server issue their end, so I was helpless).
Anyway, that's a bit of an overview for you. I also received a number of emails about the online strip being whittled down to just two preview episodes. This will remain the case for a while yet, though there will definitely be some new stuff going up at some point. For the moment all my energies are being directed at my new story for The DFC, Charlie Jefferson and the Tomb of Nazaleod. You can read a little about that here.
Lastly (for now), but most importantly, an enormous thanks to all those who wrote with lovely messages of congratulations on the Egmont news - it's been one of the best bits so far to hear from long-time fellow comic creators and brand new readers alike.
Newsspread and a tip of the hat...
You'll perhaps notice that all but two preview episodes of the strip have been taken offline. This is not necessarily a permanent state of affairs, but will certainly remain so for now.
Press release here and news at booktrade.info here.

His collection of short stories, Of Time and Stars, was a perennial favourite from my teenage years onwards. Many times I put it in the box for the charity shop, but always fished it out again at the last minute.
![]() I created The Rainbow Orchid because making comics is such hard work that I wanted to write and draw one that I could be absolutely certain at least one person would really like - that person being me. It is steeped in all the things I love. From the adventure stories of H. Rider Haggard, Jules Verne and Arthur Conan Doyle I took the long build-up to a fantastic element, made all the more amazing because the characters are immersed in the 'real world' for so much of the story. From the comics medium I dipped my pen into the European tradition of Hergé, Edgar P. Jacobs, Yves Chaland and the descendents of their ligne claire legacy, along with the strong sense of environment - a believable world - from Asterix and Tintin. Yet I wanted characters and a setting that were very strongly British, without being patriotic. Mixed into all this is my fondness for an involving and compelling plot, and artistic influences absorbed from a wealth of comic artists and illustrators, from Kay Neilsen to Bryan Talbot, and a simple love of history and adventure. No zombies, no bikini-clad gun-toting nubiles, and no teeth-gritting... grittiness. Just a huge slice of pure adventure, made to go with a big mug of tea. |
Ken sent me his brief and I drew it up (see below). Sadly, the 6th edition never happened, in fact, a 6th edition was skipped, though it did eventually go to a 7th edition. The cover, this time, has been painted by T&T's rightful artist - Liz Danforth (who I was delighted to meet in 1986 at Origins, even if I was a bit too shy to say a lot to her). You can see the cover to the first edition, by Rob Carver, here.
Anyway, I was 13 (this was late 1982), and a school-friend had recently returned from a holiday in Florida, clutching the red boxed set of Basic Dungeons and Dragons! Bitten most severely by the RPG bug, we soon joined a local role-playing club, where I was very quickly turned away from D&D, and on to T&T - Tunnels and Trolls - something of a small-time rival to Gygax's mainstream success.
Tunnels and Trolls (written in 1975 by Ken St. Andre), was simpler, less rule-bound, and therefore, I thought, smoother to play, allowing imagination to flow more freely. Furthermore, it only used six-sided dice, so you could just borrow them from Trivial Pursuit or Monopoly. I don't think I ever went back to D&D, but I did move around into other games - Traveller, Runequest, Call of Cthulhu and Paranoia, though T&T was the mainstay.
Looking back, the bit I enjoyed most was writing the adventures more than actually playing them (though those were not bereft of fun). Gaming got me into self-publishing (printing my first fanzine, 'Demon Issue' in March 1985), and similarly, I enjoyed the writing and illustrating more than the actual playing. After a few years I looked at my shelf with all the games I'd accumulated, and didn't play, and the hobby quickly faded out for me. In some ways, I kind of regret the amount of time I spent writing RPG adventures - it took up a lot of hours, and maybe (I sometimes ponder) I'd be a better artist today if I'd have spent those valuable 'developing years' drawing more, instead of filling in character sheets.
But hey-ho, there you go. I did have some fun, and it did kick off my drawing more a bit later, as I started illustrating for other fanzines too, a road that has definitely lead to me doing my own thing with The Rainbow Orchid thus far.
To end off, here's a letter I wrote to the local paper in 1993, though I'd stopped playing by then. It's slightly embarrassing when I read it now, but the sentiment still holds water.

And sorry my RSS feed is currently not working - it will be fixed next weekend, when I'm going to have a computery-updatey-day, including upgrading my MacPro to Leopard... thought you'd like to know.
I have received quite a few emails concerning The DFC project. I can't say anything about it! Don't make me! (I probably don't know the answer anyway). Keep an eye on the DFC website - sign up, even. To answer one question, yes, I'm pretty certain you can subscribe from overseas. All public domain information is available within the current press release, or you could send a few questions to John Freeman, who will soon be interviewing The DFC's editor, Ben Sharpe.
Secondly, a short but interesting podcast interview with Julian Friedmann (of Blake Friedmann literary agency) on the business of books to film.