Monday, May 12, 2008

Seattle - Day #4


Bob didn't want to make an early exit form the convention on Sunday in order to make Virgin America's final evening flight to Los Angeles, so he booked a flight out of Seattle on Monday afternoon. In hindsight, an morning flight would have been better. Without much to do before his 3:10 departure, Bob found himself sitting in front of the Sea-Tac Airport food court's enormous panoramic window where he could watch planes take off and taxi from a remarkably impressive vantage point. If you ever have the chance to fly out of Seattle, Bob recommends you give yourself an extra half-hour or so to sit and and enjoy this fascinating view.

Seattle - Day #3 (Emerald City ComiCon Day #2)


The day moves a lot slower when you have run out of items to sell. The Emerald City crowd was much lighter today, but Baby Tattoo's problem was not a lack of customers; it was a lack of merchandise. While it would have been nice to sell a few more books to fans who had to be turned away empty-handed, Baby Tattoo's available inventory for the event was reasonably on-target relative to demand. Perhaps the topic Taking Too Much Inventory vs. Taking Too Little Inventory is a good topic for a future Little Business Day post about the challenges of selling at conventions. For now, suffice it to say that Baby Tattoo was very pleased with the Emerald City ComiCon, and looks forward to returning for next year's event in early April.

John hit the road back to Portland right after the show, so Bob did dinner solo at the sort-of national Daily Grill. After eating his salad at the bar, Bob asked for his burger to be packaged to go as an in-room main course. (The same restaurant provides room service to the Sheraton where Bob was staying, but carrying it himself rather than ordering it to the room was a significant money saver. And, on the topic of money-saving tips, Daily Grill's dinner menu is devoid of almost all of the reasonably priced lunch items like burgers and sandwiches, but the Cheeseburger is available at night on the bar menu.) Bob's ratings (on a scale of 1 to 10) were as follows: Food 7 (but he gives breakfast a 9, and the thin fried onions a 10), Atmosphere 9, Service 7, Value 6.

Seattle - Day #2 (Emerald City ComiCon Day #1)


Emerald City ComiCon drew a great crowd today. Hundreds of attendees were lined up in advance. The aisles were crowded from opening to closing. Baby Tattoo sold out of several of the company's most popular titles before the day ended. Customers and vendors seemed generally and genuinely pleased. All good news, but Baby Tattoo's two-man crew was definitely more worn out than anticipated.

Tomorrow is Mother's Day. It should be interesting to see how the date affects attendance.

Dinner was at the sort-of national chain Rock Bottom Restaurant and Brewery. Bob and John's ratings (on a scale of 1 to 10) were as follows:
Bob: Food 7, Atmosphere 5, Service 7, Value 6.
John: Food 8, Atmosphere 6, Service 7, Value 7.

Friday, May 09, 2008

Seattle - Day #1



Bob flew Virgin America from Los Angeles to Seattle. Bob likes Virgin America, and will post about it another day.

John "Special Needs" Simone drove to Seattle from Portland. This is John's first shift on the Baby Tattoo crew since Fangoria Austin back in January.

Load in was easy. The locals seem nice. Come by Emerald City ComicCon this weekend and say, "Hi." What better way to celebrate Mom's special day than by bringing her to a comic book convention?

Dinner was at Noodle Ranch. Bob and John's ratings (on a scale of 1 to 10) were as follows:
Bob: Food 6, Atmosphere 4, Service 9, Value 7.
John: Food 6, Atmosphere 7, Service 8, Value 7.

The photo (above) of a downtown Seattle vacant lot was snapped by John on our walk back from tonight's opening at Roq La Rue Gallery.

Wednesday, May 07, 2008

This Is Only a Test



It is possible to type in the Edit Html pane, but not in the Compose pane. Shooting and posting a photo does not look promising. Today's test is part of tomorrow's "Little Friday is Little Business Day" post.

Tuesday, May 06, 2008

Event Appreciation Day



Wow! How much is there to do in the weeks ahead? Come to one of the listed events to meet the Baby Tattoo crew, Baby Tattoo published artists and/or Baby Tattooville Featured Artists (past and future).

May 10-11 - Baby Tattoo at Emerald City ComiCon - Seattle, Washington

May 10 - Gris Grimly signing at Lewis Gallery - Simi Valley, California

May 10 - Luke Chueh Solo Show at Copro Nason - Los Angeles

May 10 - Elizabeth McGrath Solo Show at Billy Shire Fine Arts - Los Angeles

May 17-18 - Baby Tattoo Books and Jeffery Scott (1019) at Glamourcon - Los Angeles

May 17 - Tim Biskup Solo Show at Jonathan LeVine Gallery - New York

May 17 - Grimly, Pigors, Ragnar and Visell at the Animation Book Look - Los Angeles

May 30 - June 1 - Baby Tattoo at Book Expo America (Professionals Only) - Los Angeles

June 6-8 - Baby Tattoo and multiple artists at Ink-n-Iron - Long Beach, California

June 7 - Gris Grimly Limited Edition Book Release at Halloweentown - Burbank, California

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Event Appreciation Day



There are two big events in Los Angeles this weekend. Fangoria's Weekend of Horrors runs Friday through Sunday at the LA Convention Center, and the Los Angeles Times Festival of Books is Saturday and Sunday on the UCLA campus. The real Baby Tattoo will be at the Festival of Books while Baby Tattoo's Evil Twin will be at Fangoria.

By the way, does anyone else think the "When Books Attack" art for the LA Times show is much more horrific than Fangoria's "Does Anyone Have a Napkin" image?

April 25-27 - Fangoria's Weekend of Horrors, Los Angeles

April 26-27 - Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, Los Angeles

May 10-11 - Emerald City ComiCon - Seattle, Washington

May 17-18 - Glamourcon - Los Angeles

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Shameless Plug Sunday #16



Ragnar's debut collection of pinup art, Chromaphile, is sold out at Baby Tattoo, and is officially out of print. His follow-up collection, Vernaculis, is destined for the same fate. Don't miss out; pick up a copy of Vernaculis now.

A third and final book in Ragnar's pinup series will be released this summer. Symptomatica will be the same size as the two previous titles, so if you want to collect a complete set, and you don't have Chromaphile yet, keep an eye out on abebooks.com for a secondary market copy.

New York Comic Con - Day #3


Kids day boasted plenty of kids. Good deals and good times were plentiful on this final day of the show. A number of exhibitors with past New York Comic Con experience, praised the show's growth. Here's to the next one. Baby Tattoo will be at a lot more conventions, fairs and trade shows in the year between now and then, so check back on Event Appreciation Day (aka Tuesday) to learn where you can find us next.

Saturday, April 19, 2008

New York Comic Con - Day #2


Crowds seemed big from Baby Tattoo's 100 square foot vantage point. After the usual and understandable lack of early sales that results from consumers wanting to check out their options before spending their money, people started buying. Sales were brisk and moods were good.

Baby Tattoo is already looking forward to next year. Tomorrow is being touted as Kid's Day, and it will be interesting to see if the super-young marketing hook pulls in a meaningful number of families. In preparation for the posibility of a room filled with the under-twelve set and their parents, Baby Tattoo is segregating our family friendly books from our more mature titles. Sometimes naughty needs to be separated from nice even though Baby Tattoo likes to see the two intermingle.

Friday, April 18, 2008

New York Comic Con - Day #1



Sales were good, but networking opportunities were even better. The professional-only hours from 10:00AM - 3:00PM genuinely provided some solid time for doing business with all sorts of folks from the book trade, the comics business and the art world.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

New York Comic Con Opens Tomorrow - Woo!



Visit the Baby Tattoo Booth (#1851) at New York Comic Con. Bob Self will be on hand as will Baby Tattoo associate (and model) Cristina Maxwell. In addition to Baby Tattoo's entire line of books, the booth will also feature books by extraordinary east coast artists Viktor Koen and Michael Whelan. Viktor will be signing at the booth on Saturday from 12:00 - 1:00, and Michael will be signing on both Friday and Saturday.

Wednesday, April 16, 2008

Missing Blogger Found in New York City



Wow. Things went silent there for two weeks. I'm sorry about that. I got overwhelmed and the whole daily posting thing went poof. I arrived in Midtown Manhattan today, and I'll be loading 17 cartons plus one giant suitcase of merchandise and marketing materials into the Javits Center tomorrow. That's right, New York Comic Con opens this Friday and the daily posts are back... hopefully. I will retroactively upload all of the missed posts so that future Baby Tattoo Blog visitors might be fooled into thinking I am more on top of things than I really am. But we'll know the truth, won't we?

- Bob Self

By the way, the image of the city is a properly purchased royalty free stock photo. I will post some thoughts on royalty free images at a future date.

Saturday, April 05, 2008

Change Has Come (Sort Of)



Back in February, there was a post titled "Change is Coming; Change is Good". The post promised imminent relocation of this blog to a redesigned Baby Tattooville web site. Well, the Baby Tattooville site has been redesigned, but the blog is staying right here for now. So, change has come, but it changed.

In case you missed the two links above, click here to visit the redesigned (but still changing) Baby Tattooville site.

Friday, April 04, 2008

Things Bob Likes



I've been a fan of Darren Waterston's art ever since I discovered his book Darren Waterston. Maybe one of these days I'll email him and introduce myself. Maybe this post is a good excuse to email him introduce myself right now. Maybe I'll just keep procrastinating.

Check out his work via the link above. The image is, of course, copyright Darren Waterston.

-Bob Self

Thursday, April 03, 2008

Little Friday is Little Business Day



It might be fun. It should be rewarding. But it's not going to be easy.

Whatever the industry, whatever your plan, regardless of all your best efforts, in spite of your experience (or lack thereof); it's not going to be easy to run your own business. It might be easy to start your own business, but starting it and keeping it going are two different things.

Running your own business can certainly be a positive journey - empowering, creatively stimulating, life-changing, life-affirming... you know the buzz words. But it's a difficult journey; that's its nature.

Don't be discouraged, but don't be foolish either. If you are considering entrepreneurship, ask yourself, "Is it going to be easy?" If your answer is, "Yes," keep your day job.

Thanks to Michael Whelan for use of his copyrighted image "Edgedancer". Michael would probably be the first to tell you that being a professional artist is the same as running your own business. Once again, not easy.

Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Subscriber Surprise



Many current subscribers to Hi-Fructose magazine received a gift from Baby Tattoo along with volume 7 of the magazine. The gift was a copy of Ragnar's Kings of the Road aka "The Strangest Book Baby Tattoo Has Published". The magazine is fantastic and is well worth the cover price without a bonus book, but who doesn't dig an occasional freebie? If you haven't already, you should subscribe to Hi-Fructose right now by clicking here.

The photo of the magazine and book combo is from Brad Colbow's Design blog.

Tuesday, April 01, 2008

Event Appreciation Day



April 5 - Eric Pigors Art Show and Book Signing at Hyaena - Burbank, California

April 18-20 - New York Comic Con - New York

April 25-27 - Fangoria's Weekend of Horrors - Los Angeles

April 26-27 - Los Angeles Times Festival of Books - Los Angeles

May 10-11 - Emerald City ComiCon - Seattle, Washington

May 17-18 - Glamourcon - Los Angeles

Monday, March 31, 2008

Marketing Monday



Perhaps Marketing Monday was too ambitious an idea. Maybe there is not really that much to say. How does Marketing Every-Other-Monday sound? Oh, right... it sounds sucky. So, Marketing Monday it is; not only because it sounds good, but because there really is that much to say. And then some.

The force-feeding image above is a detail from a painting by Baby Tattoo friend and visual wild man Jonathan Wayshak (adult content).

Sunday, March 30, 2008

Shameless Plug Sunday #13



Sturdy enough for little kids, yet sophisticated enough for discerning adults... it's Popping Through Pictures, a collection of paintings by Amanda Visell presented in a rigid yet fun board-book format.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Audrey's Evil Twin



Audrey Kawasaki has a newly updated web site. Check it out to see where she has been. The image above is apparently an indication of where she is going... somewhere dark and wonderful.

Friday, March 28, 2008

Hotel Tip



I'm a big fan of Priceline's Name Your Own Price for Hotel Rooms feature. I've had great luck with selecting four star hotels and naming a price that's about one third of the published prices for four star hotels in the same area. Sometimes you have to go as high as half price, but it's still a great deal. As long as you select the four star quality option, you're unlikely to be disappointed.

Thursday, March 27, 2008

Little Friday is Little Business Day



If you are about to start a small business, do yourself a favor and set your bookkeeping up properly from the beginning. Consult an accountant who understands the industry you are entering and establish a solid system for keeping track of all of your financial data. This is not a fun or sexy part of startup, and it can cost quite a bit of money, but it will be well worth the effort and expense. If this advice seems overly simple, it is; if it seems dismissible, it is not. Remember, you are starting a financial enterprise; success is entirely dependent on understanding your business' actual worth at any given moment in time (starting now).

The image above is from the Computer Science @ Columbia University web site.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Ahead Of Their Time



Dakin Dream Pets originally debuted in 1957, and they reappeared briefly in 2004. These unusually charming characters could easily hold their own in the current designer vinyl/plush movement. Unfortunately for us, they were ahead of their time (twice). You can buy them (or just check them out) on this atrocious web page.

Tuesday, March 25, 2008

Event Appreciation Day




April 18-20 - New York Comic Con - New York

April 25-27 - Fangoria's Weekend of Horrors, Los Angeles

April 26-27 - Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, Los Angeles

May 10-11 - Emerald City ComiCon - Seattle, Washington

May 17-18 - Glamourcon - Los Angeles

Monday, March 24, 2008

Marketing Monday



Brian McCarty aka McCarty PhotoWorks is the preeminent photographer of contemporary art toys. Just as the question, "Are they toys or are they art?" swirls around the objects, the question, "Are they commercial work or are they art photography?" swirls around McCary's images. Perhaps the answer is, "They're both." (In both cases).

The use of art photography to promote art toys helps to solidify the notion that these products are sophisticated designer showpieces.

Never underestimate the importance of the quality of marketing materials. The look and feel of any given message will likely extend to the perceived nature of the advertised product.

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Shameless Plug Sunday #12



Artist Sisters: Box of Stories contains two beautifully produced story books packaged together in a sturdy, collector-quality slipcase. Princess La La and the Little Bee by CJ Metzger is warm, poetic and charming; Teenie Weenie Tales by Miss Mindy is whimsical, unpredictable and endearing. The two books are as alike and different as the sisters who created them.

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Little Friday is Little Business Day



Years ago, I heard that Thursday was considered "Little Friday" in the nightclub business. Does that mean Wednesday is "Little Thursday" or maybe "Little Little Friday"? I love the concept of assigning nicknames to things - especially things that don't really need them. The notion of Little Friday has always stuck with me, so, for this blog's weekly small business post, Little Friday is Little Business Day.

Is there an entrepreneurial message in this? Yes. Using custom lingo to describe components of your business can be an effective method for building consumer awareness (see my previous pizza post); just try not to cross into Stupid Town.

-Bob Self

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Dreamlike



I've been a fan of Michael Whelan's art for 25 years, but I never knew the artist himself until this week when a dinner meeting regarding this year's Baby Tattooville event let to an impromptu field trip to an industrial wasteland.

I have spent countless hours wandering around the visually fascinating remains of an old oil refinery in the hills outside Los Angeles. I offered to take Michael to the location and show him around. I know from his paintings that Michael has an interest in exploring relationships between mankind's constructs and nature's, well... nature. 

What an unexpected joy to spend a few hours with a talented artist in an environment so connected to his personal visions. I feel like I lived this morning within Michael's mind's eye. Incredible.

Thanks for the doughnuts, Michael.

-Bob Self

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Event Appreciation Day



Baby Tattoo's friends at Dark Horse are hosting a swell book signing event at the Disney Soda Fountain and Studio Store in Hollywood on Wednesday, March 19, 2008 to celebrate The Return of the Gremlins. Details are listed over at the Cartoon Brew blog (click here).

Baby Tattoo is very enthusiastic about these upcoming conventions and festivals. If one of these events is in your neighborhood, please stop by and visit the Baby Tattoo gang.

April 18-20 - New York Comic Con - New York

April 25-27 - Fangoria's Weekend of Horrors, Los Angeles

April 26-27 - Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, Los Angeles

May 10-11 - Emerald City ComiCon - Seattle, Washington

May 17-18 - Glamourcon - Los Angeles

Monday, March 17, 2008

Dough, Sauce, Cheese and Toppings



I am fascinated by marketing, so I'm going to start a post called Marketing Monday.

One of my favorite marketing topics is pizza.

For years, Pizza Hut has introduced "new" pizzas on a regular basis; but the innovative pizzas are almost always the same dough, sauce, cheese and toppings in a slightly remixed configuration. It seems to me that Pizza Hut almost never really introduces new pizzas, but continually reintroduces the same pizzas in different shapes and sizes. Some of my favorite faux-new offerings have been Bigfoot and 4forALL. Recently, Pizza Hut introduced Pizza Mia, which is differentiated by price point rather than presentation, but the product description is as familiar as always.

Now, frozen pizza company Freschetta seems to be determined to join the "How Many Ways Can You Disguise the Same Product" Club by adding PizzAmore to their existing lineup of Naturally Rising, Ultra Thin and Brick Oven Pizzas. PizzAmore is innovative because it comes in a pan and is pre sliced.

Do people really need to be confronted with "New and Improved" pizzas in order to keep demand high? The marketing professionals at both Pizza Hut and Freschetta certainly seem to think that the perception of uniqueness is a significant factor in differentiating their product (which makes sense), and that the allure of something new creates a call-to-action for consumers (which also makes sense). What makes less sense is that enough consumers perceive a round pizza as being significantly different than a square pizza to justify substantial marketing budgets aimed at keeping a well-defined classic on the cutting edge of spinnovation.

Stuffed Crust Pizza photo copyright Pizza Hut, Inc.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Shameless Plug Sunday #11



When Baby Tattoo hosts a booth at a convention or trade show, our team is often asked who created the paper engineering for Seonna Hong's book Animus. The answer is that Seonna did it all by herself, and she used David A. Carter's remarkable book Elements Of Pop Up: A Pop Up Book For Aspiring Paper Engineers. Even if you never create your own pop up project, this book is a fascinating experience.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Big City



Big City is a visually stunning project that Ragnar has been developing for several years. Even though numerous images have been released via the internet, the property is shrouded in mystery. A limited edition Big City Case Files box containing two booklets and a triptych giclee was unveiled at San Diego Comic-Con 2007, and a series of pinup images is reproduced in the artist's forthcoming book Symptomatica. If you have not yet visited this remarkable world, there is no better time than now. Click here.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Little Friday is Little Business Day*



*But not today.

I am determined to discuss small business issues on a regular basis, but today I am too distracted by the terrible yet hilarious woman-stuck-to-the-toilet story that I discovered on CNN's web site. If I could afford to, I would try to acquire the movie rights to this story (including the rights to include the plate collecting neighbors featured in this video segment.

-Bob Self

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Just Do It!



Once upon a time, not too long ago, a toy manufacturer known as Zizzle Electronics released a light and sound thingamajig called Zounds. Zounds was an incredible product that one had to experience firsthand to truly appreciate. Some cool things catch on; unfortunately, Zounds was not one of those things. I suspect Zounds' manufacturing life cycle may be over, but there are still some units out there up for grabs. In fact, Toys-R-Us has Zounds for the no-brainer price of $14.95. Buy this thing while you still can. Trust me. You can thank me later. Click here.

-Bob Self

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Event Appreciation Day



This week is a big one for Baby Tattoo; it is one of several two-places-at-once weekends the company has to contend with this spring. Bob Self will be manning the Baby Tattoo booth at Wizard World Los Angeles, but he'll also be in Palm Springs for Ragnar's Fragmentia opening at M Modern Gallery in Palm Springs. Click on the links below for more info about any of the upcoming events.

Saturday, March 15 - Ragnar's Fragmentia show - Palm Springs, California

March 14-16 - Wizard World - Los Angeles, California

April 18-20 - New York Comic Con - New York, New York

April 25-27 - Fangoria's Weekend of Horrors, Los Angeles

April 26-27 - Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, Los Angeles

May 10-11 - Emerald City ComiCon - Seattle, Washington

Monday, March 10, 2008

Credit Where It's Due



The fact that Baby Tattoo owes a debt of gratitude to Last Gasp for blazing a trail that other independent publishers could follow has been posted on this blog previously. Of course, there are a number of other institutions that additionally inspired Baby Tattoo. One of Baby Tattoo's less obvious muses is The Criterion Collection. Incredible content and equally incredible presentation are what Criterion offers with every home video product they release. Baby Tattoo aspires to Criterion's level of consistency.

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Shameless Plug Sunday #10



In honor of our previous Save the Rainforest post, today's plug is The Art and Flair of Mary Blair. While we didn't publish it, we did publish books by Seonna Hong and Amanda Visell who count Mary Blair as a significant source of inspiration.

Saturday, March 08, 2008

Save The Rainforest



Rumors of the rainforest scene in Disneyland's It's a Small World being removed and replaced with an all-American scene have a lot of fans outraged. Some well written thoughts on the matter can be found here, and a call to action can be found here.

Of course, there is a real-world rainforest crisis to combat, but I guess some people find it much more comfortable to focus on the smaller things.

Friday, March 07, 2008

Michael Whelan



Today's post is a simple nod to one of Baby Tattooville's Featured Artists for 2008. Michael Whelan is one of the greatest living American illustrators, who has made a significant transition from commercial commissions to personal work. His newly redesigned web site is filled with a career-spanning selection of fantastic art. Check it out.

Thursday, March 06, 2008

Notes On a Scam (Part 2) aka Little Friday is Little Business Day



So, as mentioned in last week's first small business post, Baby Tattoo fell for the I'll Send You Money For Books Plus Shipping Then You Forward The Shipping Money To My Freight Person scam. Baby Tattoo ran a credit card, got an approval, wired a big chunk of the money to a third party, then the credit card number turned out to be stolen (or something else sinister) and the merchant bank will almost certainly require that the full amount of the credit card transaction be refunded after the wired money is long gone. Bob Self, who should have noticed the situation was extremely iffy, simply didn't think this one through. He also didn't do his internet fraud homework. There is a well-organized page at craigslist.org that clearly explains the basic form of this scam; if you sell anything online, read the warnings here.

A couple of notes:

In Baby Tattoo's situation, the false funds came from a credit card, not a money order or cashier's check. The credit card approval obtained through Baby Tattoo's online merchant account created a false sense of security. A credit card transaction (even an "approved" one) can be just as bogus as a fake check, so be cautious with out-of-the-ordinary, non face-to-face (i.e. "card not present") transactions.

In Baby Tattoo's situation, the instigating communication was not a single email; it was a series of emails that started off unsuspicious then added the questionable aspects a little at a time.

And here's a little useful lingo that Baby Tattoo learned the by way of multiple frantic phone calls. If you call a credit card issuing bank's fraud/security department about a suspicious transaction, you need to ask if the card in question is, "Still open." The issuing bank will probably not give you much of any information about the card or the cardholder (which is frustrating if you are trying to uncover a fraudulent payment), but if you ask specifically if the card is open, they will probably be able to tell you, "Yes" or "No." Obviously, a card that is no longer open indicates a problem.

You are probably thinking, "Duh." Well, just remember that the easiest people to fool are often people who think of themselves as hard to fool.

Note: The Fool image used at the top of this post was found deep in cyberspace. Baby Tattoo does not know who the copyright should be attributed to. If copyright information becomes available, this post will be updated appropriately.

More small business information will be posted next Thursday.

Wednesday, March 05, 2008

Kevin Kelly



This post should probably be called 1,000 True Fans, but I wanted to make sure to give credit to the intellect behind the idea, so Kevin Kelly seemed like the right title to use. By the way, I can take no credit for being ahead of the curve on this information since I found it on the highly trafficked boingboing.net.

Kevin Kelly has written an essay called 1,000 True Fans. His premise should be an incredible source of inspiration to content creators. Basically, if an artist (or other creator) can cultivate 1000 dedicated consumers who will spend $100 a year on the artist's products, then that artist can gross $100,000 per year. You owe it to yourself to read the entire essay here.

For a publishing company like Baby Tattoo, the goal of attracting and maintaing 1000 true fans seems attainable. More importantly, for many of the artists Baby Tattoo publishes, the goal of cultivating 1000 true fans has either been achieved already or is well underway.

In January, I uploaded a post titled I'll Take A Dozen about one of the factors Baby Tattoo considers when deciding what books to publish. The concept of 1000 True Fans succinctly defines another factor. If you're interested in having Baby Tattoo publish your work, Baby Tattoo would be interested in knowing how many True Fans you have.

-Bob Self

Tuesday, March 04, 2008

Event Appreciation Day

Here are some forthcoming event listings. Come out and meet the Baby Tattoo crew.

March 14-16 - Wizard World - Los Angeles, California

April 18-20 - New York Comic Con - New York, New York

April 25-27 - Fangoria's Weekend of Horrors, Los Angeles

April 26-27 - Los Angeles Times Festival of Books, Los Angeles

Monday, March 03, 2008

Glad To Be Noticed



The March issue of Cookie Magazine features a cover story about The Unheralded Classics. The article showcases, "The 33 best children's books you're probably not reading. Yet."

Seonna Hong's remarkable picture book Animus made the list, and Baby Tattoo is quite honored that Cookie took notice of this great title. Baby Tattoo has been thanking Seonna profusely ever since she allowed us to publish this project; now seems like a good time to thank her again. Thanks, Seonna.

Sunday, March 02, 2008

Shameless Plug Sunday #9



Baby Tattoo is pleased to announce the release of the company's newest book, Unkle Pigors' Cryptic Art. Bob Self fondly describes this book as a train wreck of art. Eric Pigors crams a seemingly impossible amount of his work into one volume for cover-to-cover visual insanity. Eric is strongly influenced by Ed "Big Daddy" Roth and Wacky Packages stickers (among other things), so, if you like your gross-out monster humor piled high and deep, buy this book directly from Toxic Toons (good luck trying to navigate) or wherever crazy books are sold.

Saturday, March 01, 2008

Nothing



Yesterday's post was going to be titled Nothing, and was going to go into more depth, and was going to include links to a couple of interesting books on the subject of Nothing. Then I realized that since my blogger's block might continue for a day or two, I should save the books for a future post. Well, the future is now.

Nothing is a fascinating subject. If you have never given it much thought, you might want to read about nothing. Two interesting books are The Book of Nothing: Vacuums, Voids, and the Latest Ideas about the Origins of the Universe and The Hole in the Universe: How Scientists Peered over the Edge of Emptiness and Found Everything.

-Bob Self

Friday, February 29, 2008

What Now?


Grumpy and under-inspired (which is a step up from uninspired), I face the question that all daily bloggers invariably face. What do I do when I feel like I have nothing to say, nothing to show and nothing to link to? Do I skip a day and give up my "daily" posting status? Do I write something utterly meaningless or obviously redundant and risk alienating the regular readers I have managed to cultivate? Do I snap out of my funk, rise to the occasion and come up with something worthwhile because that is my job? Feel free to provide some feedback, unless you are too grumpy and under-inspired to care.

-Bob Self

Thursday, February 28, 2008

Notes On a Scam (Part 1)




Baby Tattoo may have been ripped off today by an obvious sales scam. We should know better (even if the situation turns out not to be fraudulent). We haven't posted much on this blog about the ups and downs of running a small business, but maybe we'll start dedicating one day a week to the topic. How about Thursdays? Tune in next Thursday for a full report on our momentary lapse of good judgement.

The Pulp Dunce pictured above is copyright Gary Baseman and Critterbox.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008



I miss Jim Henson.

-Bob Self