Tuesday, March 3, 2026

A Certain Hallucinatory Tone










I was feeling so bad yesterday I missed my regular Diary Entries; today I’m going to miss Tolkien Tuesday as well, I’m afraid. Still not quite 100%, as they say; probably only about 40. One thing that does not take up too much energy is AI Enhancements, and here is the next batch.

Alien Scene dates back to middle school. It is one of those kitchen-sink style drawings, where I would begin any old how and just keep adding more details.

Dain Vs. Azog is another attempt at a Middle-earth tableau.

Elf and Bear Again is a correction of an earlier enhancement. Better, but when I said the Elf was dressed all in blue, I should have mentioned brown boots. Tried an animation of it, and he inexplicably grew a white beard. Taking the hat as a clue?

Wizard Fights Demon was a very early attempt at illustrating the primal scene of Gandalf and the Balrog. I should have specified 1) that it was in a cave on a bridge, 2) the Balrog carried a broken sword, and 3) that he had wings, as per the picture I had drawn showed and as I was certain of at the time.

Not much to say about Green Dragon. Another one of the innumerable dragons I used to draw. It was in a rather unusual perspective.

Grendel I definitely drew in high school, probably about the time I drew Troll Hut. Not period accurate.

Inkraven 2 has those corrections I was talking about, though I must admit a three-footed raven was a rather novel idea and seemed to work. No jokes about removing his ‘third leg.’

Spither is the result of not wanting to have the bother of drawing all eight legs of a monster spider. I’ll include some interesting animations of it later.

The Shadow Waits was drawn not as a particular illustration but more of an ominous ‘tone poem’ about doom waiting in the falling dark.

Chat GPT keeps setting the time for my sessions later and later into the night. I’m thinking of just skipping a day and then seeing if it will reset to an earlier time. Ideally about 8 PM. Or just breaking down and paying the $20 a month for expanded service.



Monday, March 2, 2026

Monkish Me









This one is based on an actual photograph of me. In the original I am sitting at the kitchen table piled with dishes and reading a magazine, perhaps Newsweek.  You can still vaguely see the kitchen cabinets in the background.

The House on the Cliff was a very simple sketch.

A Dark Lord on a Dark Throne, if not the Dark Lord. This was another drawing from middle school; I did not have a very clear idea of Sauron at the time. What I did have was a half-size spiral notebook that I would draw in. I was surprised years later when Greg Hildebrandt produced a painting that was eerily similar.

Eighty-Three commemorates my first drawing of 1983; the calendar is a clue, and the date is woven in runes into the tapestry om the table. How well the picture reproduces the runes or the numbers is moot.

Melichus illustrates another scene from The Face in the Frost. Prospero and Roger Bacon peer in on the evil wizard as he’s learning a powerful spell to destroy the world.

Orc Guard is just that; I would often idly draw Orcs; since they were ugly and irregular it didn’t quite matter how they turned out.

The Sword in the Stone is self-explanatory.

But the jewel of the crop has to be Troll Hut; a Troll and his Wolf wait to ambush the owner of the hut. He looks very much like a Norse Troll, or even a Drauger. I include the drawing to show all the original detail.

I meant to write more details, but I had a rough night and a pretty rough morning.



Sunday, March 1, 2026

Sunday Tour Through the Past







Fir Castle was another early production of mine, made special at the time by using map colors to shade it in. Next is The Old Fountain, an early exercise in layering. Before that, most of my efforts were straight line-ups along the red margins of the notebook paper. Inkraven looks pretty good, until you realize he has three claws, a feature not in the original sketch. I'd probably make the potion red next time. Monastary expresses the rain better than I ever could and elaborates the tiny stick figure I had climbing the hill into a real character. Morg City was an early expression of the capital of Forlan; the original was drawn in ink without a smudge. I now have a more complex idea of it in my head. It features what appears to be the King Vez Memorial Rollercoaster. Lastly is another shot at Elf & Bear, from an admittedly rather sketchy sketch. A lesson on giving explicit notes in your prompt; Bear was strangely (though perhaps not inexplicably) interpreted as a polar bear, perhaps taking a hint from his muffler. The Elf should be wearing all blue, and is oddly proportioned.

Maybe I should upgrade my account to $20 a month. That would make corrections a more affordable endeavor in terms of time; as it is, I’m lucky if I can do 6 or 7 images a night. 


 

Saturday, February 28, 2026

I Fascinate Me





"I know! Let's bring him back using Science!" Three views of me through the years, mediated through art. The first was from a sketch I made of myself using a mirror; the hair and beard, though grizzled at the time, should be blacker. The second of course is the parody Oz cover I made, and the third is from the birthday card my brother John made me. Put in the proper order it is a fine record in which you can see me wither and die.

They Live! They Move! They Babble Inanely!





Dreaming in Color









Here is another batch of AI ‘embellishments’ that I did last night, elaborating some of my old drawings, as one does. How much the pictures thus produced may be called mine is a strange question; of course, I produce the general design and provide notes to elaborate on them, while the AI does all the fiddly bits that I have neither the expertise nor patience to apply. I have to say the vision is all mine and is something no algorithm can generate.

Case in point, Bryan Babel in Oz. The drawing dates back to 1984 or 1985. Del Rey was in the process of reprinting all the old Oz books, and now were getting into the Ruth Plumley Thompson sequels, ‘Founded on and Continuing the Famous Oz Books.’ I did this parody of a cover, a caricature of me with cross on a chain and bamboo ‘staff,’ ramping through Oz to the horror of the Scarecrow and Tin Woodsman.

The Devil and His Followers Cross the Dee tries to reproduce an illustration that I saw in a dream. A drawing of an illustration that I saw in a dream. The weird thing is that years later I ran into a painting that bore a more than passing resemblance to it. Had I seen it before somewhere, and forgotten it with my waking mind?

Dreamsky is not from a dream. Or was it? Maybe just dreamlike. Hm. It shows a figure invoking a spell to part the clouds and reveal the moon.

The Book Grim is an imaginary spirit I made up, a gnome that haunts and protects libraries. The original Grim does not look so ‘grim’ but rather wistful and melancholy. The background is provided by AI from my prompt.

Bronze Dragon is perhaps the most AI and least Brer of the pictures in this batch. Not only did AI elaborate many of the details (though I had drawn many elements of the fiddly parts), it also rearranged the composition quite a bit.

Lady Willow supplies an illustration for a short story of the same name published on this blog. But I drew the original picture back in high school.

The original Samuel had a more wistful look as he mourned over the loss of a tree. He was based at first on Samwise Gamgee as he restored the Shire after the War of the Ring; the boots and lack of hairy feet made me later reconsider the title (not quite accurate, I felt) as a sort of backhanded reference to its inception.

A Spirit of the Air shows a strange elemental treading through the heavens, his scepter a moving point of light like a falling star. Who? Why? Your guess is as good as mine. Looking back, I might have provided him with a smaller nose. The final production looks very Hildebrandtish, especially the Greg Hildebrandt of A Christmas Carol.


Friday, February 27, 2026