Hi little potatoes! sorry for disappearing and not posting anything for a while now.
Uni is getting too much. Too much task to do and not enough time. I’m having my bachelorette degree at the end of may and beginning of June. After that I’ll come back with regular drawings again!
I thought I’ll share with you the sketches I started doing for my graphic design portfolio (applied there too haha). These are for book covers which I hope I’ll have enough time to finish. Let me know what you think of them, and don’t be shy to recommend books to do covers for :D
How many times do I have to say that Edward Hyde wasn't an evil tulpa but rather Doctor Jekyll's alt account that he uses to send gore to upset other users for fun
The remaining 10% in the body of Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov are human organs (transplanted pituitary and seminal glands). The donor was a bandit, thief and alcoholic killed in a fight. A typical gopnik, as an example.
So Edward will have a lot of... fun living with him!
Maybe it's because I was a PBS kid and the Jekyll and Hyde episodes of Wishbone and Arthur stood out to me more than the Frankenstein one, but I was floored when I got to school, made friends, and realized that Jekyll WASN'T the iconic mad scientist in pop culture.
On a night walk from a long-delayed visit to the theatre, Utterson mentions he never learned to dance properly. Jekyll, of course, takes it on himself to help his lawyer.
As part of my portfolio, I did a copy cat piece in the style of The Glass Scientists. I love this comic so much, if you like gay mad scientists check it out!
Utterson, last week: "My best friend is missing and his likely murderer was found dead in his lab with all the doors locked. Where could Jekyll have gone? It's all so mysterious! I can't imagine anything being stranger."
Lanyon's Ghost slamming down the hottest gossip from beyond the veil in his letter: "Bro you will not fuckin BELIEVE,"
More than a hundred years later, this tale of the mild-mannered Dr. Jekyll and the drug that unleashes his evil, inner persona—the loathsome, twisted Mr. Hyde—has lost none of its ability to shock. Its realistic police-style narrative chillingly relates Jekyll's desperation as Hyde gains control of his soul—and gives voice to our own fears of the violence and evil within us.