AJK: Yeah, it’s been -- that’s been an interesting perspective. Some folks you said have embraced it and, you know, I’ve seen them, you know, a couple that are face-to-faces, they had their tablet right there and like some special brushes and it was amazing to me because I’ve always thought that transition from the, you know, on the actual, you know, paper or painting on the canvas, like that whole -- to transform that, the learning curve, I always felt like would be so dramatic for me if I --
Howell: Well it used to be. It used to be worse than it is now and now it’s getting easier and easier. I’m getting -- sometimes I like -- I have this epiphany and be like well, I don’t want to just do this, why do I have to scan this in and clean it up and blah, blah, blah if I could just do it on the computer? And I think technology is getting to the point where it’s becoming easier and easier and it’s less and less of a disparity thing to -- and it’s getting easier for people to make the leap I think.
AJK: That’s -- it’s exciting and I just -- yeah, I think I always -- maybe like just learning Photoshop or other software’s, like I know what can be done but just kind of learning and making it feel like it’s second nature and I feel art, what -- if you were having to think too much about well how does this work or how does this technology represent what I’m trying to do that, you know, that’s where I always find interesting that some folk can just be able to not really skip a beat and having not be okay, I’m learning the software, I just want the software just --
Howell: Right, yeah. But yeah, that -- I think that’s what I was trying to say it’s become more intuitive I believe.
It’s just there’s lot of disparity between the two now whereas before you had to learn how to do it, finagle it and sort of, you know, get back after it and sort of make it look more like it was real, later and edit it and stuff like that but now it’s more intuitive I think.
AJK: Yeah, one of the gentleman Tim who does some of the work for Veil Brewing he had just his little satchel on, he said normally in the past if I was mobile and I knew I’d be drawing, I had to bring, you know, ten or 15 different pen, you know I’d have like, you know, backpack or two worth of stuff and now I have, you know, couple of clicks and I can get that brush or that, you know, that texture that I’m looking for. He said, you know, he was pretty new on it so you can kind of -- it was like a kid at Christmas, you know pretty early on -- kind of see like he just kind of had that crack moment where he figured it out and was like this is going to make things a lot easier because while he was waiting, while I was setting up he was just doing some sketching, so it was cool to see that.
Howell: Yeah. I mean I used to have to -- had a lot of different materials. For example I used to do a lot -- well, I still do but I used to do a lot of scratch board art work which is -- I don’t know if you’re familiar with it but it’s scratch into a black board and it scratches into a white so you can make a, you know, it looks like engraving like you don’t have to actually print anything, it’s -- you scratch it into the board and I used to do that a lot and I used to struggle with against it all the time because half of it was trying to you know get the drawing onto the board, to transfer it on there, you know, struggled with the sharpness of the tool, the tool’s not working, you know, if you make a mistake you got to go back in with the ink and be careful not to scrape too much away because then it’s too much, but now I just do it on the computer and it looks better, it’s faster, I can make infinite changes and it’s just a whole new world of what it used to be. I don’t have to struggle up against anything.
So, it’s a great day and age to be in for artists like with materials but also for reference. All I got to do is go on Google and search for things to, you know, to reference things, to draw them whereas before I had to go to a library or a, you know, search through national geographic magazines or, you know, like just spend a lot of time looking through reference to -- for drawing and now, you know, at the tip of your fingers.
AJK: Now since this won’t be out for probably another month and a half, since you’re working on a label now, you -- I have to ask my -- as an investigative journalist, that’s what I call myself right now, what are you working on right now?