Honey and Mark Simpson!
I really liked these designs that @nanuuiycacahuates made, and since I'd wanted to draw them for a while, I took advantage of the moment š
I hope you like it!
#interview with the vampire#iwtv#amc tvl#sam reid#jacob anderson







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Honey and Mark Simpson!
I really liked these designs that @nanuuiycacahuates made, and since I'd wanted to draw them for a while, I took advantage of the moment š
I hope you like it!

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Batman by Jock
Detective Comics, Vol. 1 # 880 by Jock
The Losers #3 - Goliath, Part Two (August 27, 2003)
writer: Andy Diggle | artist [penciller and inker]: Mark Simpson (AKA Jock) | colorist: Lee Loughridge | letterer: Clem Robins | editor: Will Dennis | assistant editor: Zachary Rau | publishing company: Vertigo [DC Comics]
Daredevil by Jock

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
Wytches #1 (2014)
Art by: Mark āJockā Simpson
Batman #125 variants by Alex Ross, MarkĀ āJockā Simpson & Chip Zdarsky.
Star Warsā Handsomest Hand-Me-Down
If I had to list my favorite Star Wars costumes, third place would go to Lukeās dad-rescuing goth number and runner-up to Padmeās meadow dress, but first place would go to something way more obscure: Atton Randās jacket.
An image seared into my mind.
KotOR IIās Atton Rand is Star Warsā baddest Han Solo knockoff, and heās got the duds to prove it. Heās wearing the same exact pair of pants and sexy cowboy holster, but like any good knockoff heās added his own little something-something: fingerless gloves, a side part, and of course, those three extra sleeve layers onto the vest. Something about this jacket is so fun and spacey, so silly but so flattering, so dangerous but so approachable -- in a word, handsome. Itās such a shame that you can only find it in one video game...
Or can you? KotORs I and II (2003-4) are clearly inspired by the Star Wars movies that immediately preceded them, Phantom Menace (1999) and Attack of the Clones (2002), with their shared themes of a corrupt Republic, a hypocritical Jedi Order, a cursed Chosen One, capitalist violence, and forbidden love. But the KotORs also had a weirder, more plot-significant influence: those 90s comics Iām always going on about, Tales of the Jedi! In fact, the KotORs are set one generation after TotJ and reference many TotJ characters by name, especially Exar Kun and various Siths.
But back to the jacket -- did Atton make such a beautiful thing himself, or did that no-good pirate steal it right off the corpse of noble comic book character Andur Sunrider?!
The long sleeves and pocket were lost in the confusion.
The resemblance could be a coincidence, but itās fun to imagine the black market shenanigans that might have transpired between Andurās murder and Attonās acquisition. I also love the parallel of the two men: Andur the gallant Jedi teacher, honorable husband and tragic father, versus Atton the AWOL murderer and romantic wastrel who humbles himself as your student and (sometimes) learns his lesson. They even have similar names. Anyway, you know I love to argue that Star Wars comics did it first.
But after Atton followed the Jedi Exile to the ends of the galaxy, what happened to the jacket?
Well, 4000 years passed, and it ended up with someone new:
The sleeves grew back.
DJ from The Last Jedi is the next character, timeline-wise, who has that excessive sleeve thing going on, and heās exactly the sort of mysterious, debonair trickster who deserves this ancient hand-me-down. Iām sure Andur would not approve, but personally I can think of no more fitting fate for such a legendary garment than with someone who doesnāt join either side.
Iāll add onto this post if I ever find more instances of this sexy design in Star Wars, and Iāll try to imagine how each new owner got it, and how their stories align with the rest of the Sisterhood of the Traveling Jacket.
But letās give three cheers for Andur Sunrider, who wore it first, and four cheers for Janine Johnston, who designed it.
Addendum:
Snokeās ribbed robe is a bit too off-model to convince even me that it could be the same jacket, but itās fun to imagine that DJ could have stolen it right out of the Supreme Leaderās closet. Perhaps the jacket has limited shape-shifting abilities?
Credits:
Promotional art of Atton Rand from 2004. I canāt find the artistās name, but Wikipedia says I need to creditĀ āObsidian Entertainment, LucasArts and Disney,ā which is better (and worse) than nothing. The lead artist of KotOR II was Aaron Meyers, and the entire art team was Aaron Brown, Brian Menze, Dennis Presnell, Doug Cope, Ed Lacabanne, Glenn Price, Lucas Feld, Mustazar Essa, Timothy Cox, Trent Campbell, TJ Frame, Robert Giampa, Will Harper, and David Espinoza.
The picture of Andur is from āTales of the Jedi, issue 3: The Saga of Nomi Sunrider, part 1.ā Dark Horse. December 1, 1993. Writer: Tom Veitch. Penciller: Janine Johnston. Inker: Mike Barreiro. Letterer: Willie Schubert. Colorist: Pamela Rambo.
Concept art of DJ by Jock (Mark Simpson), from The Art of Star Wars: The Last Jedi, written by Phil Szostak, published 2017.
The picture of Snoke is fromĀ āThe Rise of Kylo Renā trade paperback. Marvel. August 11, 2020. Writer: Charles Soule. Penciller and Inker: Will Sliney. Letterer: Travis Lanham. Colorist: Guru-eFX.