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Natasha Allegri
Natasha Allegri has a webcomic.
Actually,
she has a webcomic called Normal Life which chronicles her
day to day life, be she walking to class or asking a gay
friend if his mom can spare a tampon. You know, normal
stuff. Sound good? Well, there's more. Natasha's Normal Life
occasionally morphs into beautifully illustrated one panels
featuring mutated horses with octopus legs and hooked feet,
or tales of fat little ne’er-do-wells and the football-eyed
lizards they bring for show and tell.
Natasha Allegri has some talent.
She has some incredible imagination and some serious chops
on the Wacom board. Now that she's out of the Daily Grind
and we can all just hope that she keeps posting her
beautiful comics as frequently as she did during.
… but enough of me blowing smoke up her ass, here's the Q
and A.
STUMBLEBUM STUDIOS - You did a children's book for a
college class and then sold it on Ebay? What class was it,
what did the teacher think, and what did you end up selling
the book for?
NATASHA ALLEGRI - The children's book was written for
my English class. I actually did it the night before
because… I forgot about it. We were supposed to take an
essay we wrote before, and re-write it for an entirely
different audience. Most people re-wrote it for a college
audience, or professors, even a few as speeches for the
American body. I figured I really didn't have time to do
anything that required putting to use what we learned in the
class, so I made it into a children's book. I finished about
an hour before my class. I got an A on the actual project. I
figured because it was easy to read compared to the others,
and short. But I guess I figured to include other stuff, and
it balanced to a B-. It sold for $100 to a lovely man named
Gil Reese.
SS - You originally did your comics on paper, but
then switched to a Wacom board? What was your process then
versus now?
NA - When I used paper, I would print out the panels
from a word document, like squares, then I'd draw inside
those boxes and scan it, open it in a colouring program
thing, and then colour it kind of like a painting style. It
was a pretty long process. Now I just do the entire thing on
my colouring program thing. It's still pretty tedious, and
my hand cramps up like crazy, and I know some people feel
that it kind of cheapens the comic since there's no actual
physical trace of it. It probably takes more time to make it
now however. I never really properly learned to colour
things, and they still turn out kind of muddy, but I think
my end result is more what I want then with the paper
scan-technique thing.
SS - You get a million comments from people telling
you how awesome you are, people send you things created from
your comics, and people have taken to naming their kids
Natasha Allegri. Is that a little weird sometimes?
NA - There are kids named Natasha Allegri?!? It
doesn't really weird me out, I figure if people enjoy it,
that's good. After all, I'm only doing this for the daily
grind, not attention (BUT I DO ENJOY IT, don't get me
wrong... people are awesome).
SS - Even though you get hundreds of positive
comments from your completely free-to-read comics,
occasionally you will get the random, douche-bag, negative
comment? How's that feel?
NA - The negative comments used to really bother me.
I believe over summer I would get drunk alone and cry and
stuff? No, I mean, it doesn't bother me. I don't expect
everyone to like my stuff, and I'm glad people voice their
opinions if they don't enjoy it. It's nice to know that the
internet makes people comfortable enough to be complete
assholes.
SS- Natasha is a Russian name, Allegri sounds
Italian, but from pictures, I would guess your family is
from Kenya or Germany. Where is your family from and are
they really in the mob?
NA - Hahaha. My first name, I think my mom chose it,
mostly because she thought it was pretty (WRONG!!!). Allegri
IS Italian, I believe, but that's from my step grandfather.
I think I'm Bolivian, Japanese, American Indian, and some
kind of Middle Eastern. I'm not exactly sure though about
the mob thing though... that'd be pretty sweet though. I
wouldn't need to study so hard for class, just put animal
parts in the professors’ beds.
SS - Finally, how long is the line of boys that wanna
be your boyfriend after Sean, and are married guys allowed
in? No reason, I was just wondering.
NA - The line is THIS BIG, and yes, totally.
Alright, that's enough of me flirting awkwardly with
Natasha.
Go to
http://www.livejournal.com/users/normallife and flirt
awkwardly with her yourself. |