Tag Archives: Moleskin 42

Paypal Can Help! Really?…

“I was a little frustrated – After all, I offered a perfect way to pay in Paypal and also suggested wiring the transaction. They chose not to do a more direct pay and in the end I had to wait 3 months and also wouldn’t get a full amount due to exchange and transfer fees.”

Really? Paypal Can Help… (Geek News Central)

My experience is the opposite, international transfer via PayPal is close to impossible.

I wanted to use PayPal to pay Hugh Macleod for Moleskin 42 but after weeks of trying wasn’t able to make the payment. It was the most frustrating experience of my internet life.

Hugh starts work…

How glad am I that I have Moleskin 42 now? As I sit here looking at it I can’t believe how lucky I’ve been!

“Yes, I intend to sell it when it’s done. Yes, it’ll be really expensive…”

gapingvoid: “cartoons drawn on the back of business cards”: studio update: desertmanhattan

Hugh MacLeod asks for commissions…

Hugh is asking for commissions…

“I’m going to be hanging out my shingle more in the cartooning department. I think it’s time.”

gapingvoid: “cartoons drawn on the back of business cards”: gapingvoid commissions

Anyone who has read this and this will know that think that Hugh’s work is fantastic and worth every cent.

I’ll add the final part to the story to the blog over the weekend.

Hugh MacLeod: Part II

Part I of this story can be found here… Not loving the core product… (A Hugh MacLeod story: Part I)

On May 4th 2008 Hugh published this…

moleskine42vvv-thumb1.JPG

This I loved for two reasons; first, it was a page of drawing without characters or words; second,it showed a part of the process of creating the larger work. I’m very interested about the process that artists go to to get to the final product. It’s often far more complex than most people believe.

Hugh is one of those bloggers who publishes his email address. Therefore, I simply emailed him. Told him that I loved the series of Moleskins and asked him if he’d consider framing one and selling it.

Hugh replied in minutes that he was planning on framing one for sale. I replied and asked for a price.

This is the moment that Hugh showed himself to be a true gentlemen. It would have been so easy to have sold his work on eBay or to have published on his blog that he was thinking of selling the work. Either way I believe he could have made far more money than by selling it to me. Hugh could have made life very difficult for me but he didn’t. He treated a guy that he didn’t know very well and I’m eternally grateful.

Hugh quoted a price that I think was fair; although it was enough to make me think twice and to discuss it with Mrs Wilkinson! But in 48 hours we had a deal.

Delivery is for Part III.

Not loving the core product… (A Hugh MacLeod story: Part I)

I’m often hit by a strange realization; I almost always like the least popular product of a sucessful company. Yes, I’m the one that drinks Cherry Coke, liked the McRib and bought a Smart car! At best I love something before everyone else or long after they’ve left it.

Mr Hugh MacLeod (or Mr gapingvoid) is a case in point…

Hugh’s blog says, rightly, that he’s a …

“…cartoonist and professional blogger, known for his ideas about how “Web 2.0″ affects advertising and marketing.”

Now all this is true except that I don’t like the cartoons too much and his blog is about marketing. I read the blog and smile at the cartoons as Hugh publishes them; but they don’t tend to connect. I’m not in marketing and I’ve not spent too long in any New York bars!

However, Hugh has a more minor product that I adore. Pure art! Things like this…

Grey Purpose Small

gapingvoid: “cartoons drawn on the back of business cards”: the cloud’s best-kept secret

There is something about these works that I love. I have a collection on my hard-drive; it’s difficult to describe but they touch something deep inside me.

The earlier this year Hugh announced that he was going to be doing more of these larger works. And started showing pictures of Fred 42.

I had to act quickly. How I did is for Part II.