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Tom Orzechowski

Thomas Orzechowski (born March 1, 1953)[3] is a comic book letterer, primarily known for his work on Uncanny X-Men. Over the course of Orzechowski's career, he has lettered something on the order of 6,000 pages of (long-time X-Men writer) Chris Claremont's scripts.

Tom Orzechowski
BornThomas Orzechowski[1]
(1953-03-01) March 1, 1953 (age 70)
Michigan
NationalityAmerican
Area(s)Letterer
Pseudonym(s)Orz
Notable works
Uncanny X-Men
Spawn
AwardsInkpot Award, 1985[2]
Wizard Fan Award, 1993
Harvey Award, 1994,
CBG Fan Award, 1988, 1991-93

Career

Early work

In 1968, when Orzechowski was 15, he met a group of aspiring comic book artists at the Detroit Triple Fan Fair comic convention in Detroit, and joined their comics club. Some older members of the club included future comics professionals Rich Buckler, Jim Starlin, Al Milgrom, and Mike Vosburg. An aspiring comic book artist, Orzechowski quit drawing when he saw their work. None of the club members wanted to letter their own amateur comics, however, so Orzechowski took on those jobs.[4]

Tony Isabella, who knew Orzechowski from the comics club, joined Marvel Comics in 1972, and soon got Orzechowski his first professional work, lettering retouches on the Marvel UK editions of classic Fantastic Four, Thor, Hulk, The Amazing Spider-Man, and Daredevil stories. Within a few months, Orzechowski had worked his way up to lettering for some of Marvel's black-and-white monster magazines.[4] One of his first jobs of that kind was for Monsters Unleashed, on one of the first Marvel stories written by future X-Men scribe Chris Claremont.

Orzechowski's connections from the comics club days paid off again when Rich Buckler pulled him over to letter Black Panther (Jungle Action), and Jim Starlin did the same for Starlin's run on Captain Marvel.

Having moved to California by this time,[4] Orzechowski lettered a number of underground comix titles in the mid-to-late 1970s.[1]

X-Men

 
A couple of panels from Uncanny X-Men #141 (1981), p. 12, displaying a variety of Tom Orzechowski's lettering techniques.

By the time of the debut of the New X-Men in X-Men #94, Orzechowski had developed a reputation as a "new projects guy," and was given the odd issue, and then with issue #122 (June 1979) finally the title. After a number of years on X-Men over Chris Claremont's scripts, the two men paired together on many future X-Men-related projects. (Orzechowski also designed the logos for The New Mutants and Wolverine comics, among others.)[5]

When all was said and done, counting X-Men, many of its annuals, The New Mutants, Wolverine, X-Treme X-Men, and MekaniX, Orzechowksi lettered something on the order of 6,000 pages of Claremont's scripts over a 25-year period.

Post-X-Men

Orzechowski left the X-Men books shortly after Chris Claremont, in 1993. He joined the team putting out Image Comics' Spawn 1992, where his title was copy editor for most of the first six years. Orzechowski worked for the manga packaging outfit Studio Proteus from 1989 until their demise in 2004. Studio Proteus titles on which Orzechowski worked included Nausicaä, Appleseed, Dominion, and Ghost in the Shell.

In the early 2000s, with many publishers beginning to use "in-house" lettering teams, freelancers like Orzechowski lost a lot of work. Though Orzechowski still does the occasional job for DC Comics and a manga company called Studio Cutie, he did not letter comic books regularly until 2009, when he started doing the lettering for Chris Claremont's X-Men Forever books, and in 2010 for the New Mutants Forever book, also written by Claremont.

Recently, Orzechowski has been working on a comic book anthology called YEET Presents.[6]

Lettering style and influences

Orzechowski's letters are almost perfectly square, with the exception of the letter "I." Everything has a solid, uniform look to it. Letters stand straight up and down, not at a tilt. They are all painstakingly the same height. Similarly, Orzechowski's standard word balloon outlines are meticulously uniform. He also helped popularize non-standard (non-bubble-shaped) designs for word balloons, to reflect different character voices (square for robots, jagged/dripping for demons, etc.). In the mid-1970s, while Marvel’s production boss and cover letterer Dan Crespi was developing a tight, attractive house style, Orzechowski was 3,000 miles away in California, "buried in design books." Orzechowski figured that "since the X-Men didn’t overlap the rest of the Marvel Universe," there was no reason not to be influenced by calligraphy, record jackets, old movie posters — everything except comics.[4]

Early influences on Orzechowski's distinctive style included the work of Alphonse Mucha, and the comics lettering of Artie Simek and Abe Kanegson.[1] Orzechowski modeled his lettering on the Flash Gordon newspaper strips of the 1930s. Another influence was Robert Crumb's Zap Comix:[1] Orzechowski recognized that Crumb’s title work was clearly derived from the brush techniques of that same era, the 1920s and '30s. Orzechowski studied everything of Crumb's (as well as the late 1960s DCs and Marvels), and developed a lettering style based on all of those influences.

Computer lettering

In 1992, Orzechowski was among the first letterers to experiment with computer fonts. Working on Studio Proteus's Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind, Orzechowski found the sound-effect work to be so demanding that computer lettering seemed like a way to save time on the extensive dialogue. His font program, however, was primitive, and he ended up doing that series entirely by hand after all. By 1994, however, Orzechowksi was lettering mainly on the computer, and in 2002 he switched completely to digital lettering, using a Wacom pen on a graphics tablet, in Adobe Illustrator. He explained in a 2003 interview on Comicon.com's The Pulse that "even then [2002] I was losing the knack, as the majority of my work had been digital for a couple of years. The fine motor control slips if the muscles aren’t in continual use."[4]

Personal life

Orzechowski is not related to comics artist/designer Bob Orzechowski.[1]

Orzechowski lives in Lakewood, Ohio,[7] where he operates a typography and logo design studio. His wife is L. Lois Buhalis,[7] herself a letterer in the comics industry for two decades.

Quotes

On his favorite lettering projects:

Chris Claremont’s Uncanny X-Men was the top of the stack for me. There’s no way to describe how it felt to watch those characters evolve under one writer for such a remarkably long spell.[4]

On the toughest parts of hand lettering to master:

Letter "X" is the toughest. Seriously. I‘ve probably drawn “X” more often than anyone in the history of written language, and half of them were lousy. After that, numeral "8" is the one that will give you nightmares. Letters "J," "R" and "S" will show the most variety. I'd bet money I spotted the letterer on the '40s stories in the Black Canary Archive by his "J"s. I’m sure it was Gaspar Saladino, who later worked on all of the late '50s DC hero revivals for Julie Schwartz.[4]

On comic book logo design:

The logo I did for Wolverine is based on 1930s elements, and I’m proud to see it’s one of the few old ones still in use. Designing a logo is probably a lot like designing a costume, to catch the tone of the character while pulling some unexpected elements together.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Orzechowski entry, Who's Who of American Comic Books, 1928–1999. Accessed Nov. 19, 2013.
  2. ^ Inkpot Award
  3. ^ Miller, John Jackson. "Comics Industry Birthdays", Comics Buyer's Guide, June 10, 2005. Accessed December 21, 2010. WebCitation archive.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Contino, Jennifer. "ABCs with Orzechowski," Comicon.com: The Pulse (Dec. 30, 2003). Retrieved January 3, 2010.
  5. ^ Klein, Todd. "Logo Study: X-Men part 3," Todd's Blog (Oct 5th, 2007). Retrieved July 20, 2008.
  6. ^ "Yeet Presents on Facebook". Facebook. Archived from the original on 2022-04-30.[user-generated source]
  7. ^ a b facebook.com (August 3, 2017). "Tom Orzechowshi". facebook.com. Retrieved August 3, 2017. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)

External links

  • Orzechowski's Facebook Homepage

Interviews

  • The Silver Age Sage

orzechowski, thomas, orzechowski, born, march, 1953, comic, book, letterer, primarily, known, work, uncanny, over, course, orzechowski, career, lettered, something, order, pages, long, time, writer, chris, claremont, scripts, bornthomas, orzechowski, 1953, mar. Thomas Orzechowski born March 1 1953 3 is a comic book letterer primarily known for his work on Uncanny X Men Over the course of Orzechowski s career he has lettered something on the order of 6 000 pages of long time X Men writer Chris Claremont s scripts Tom OrzechowskiBornThomas Orzechowski 1 1953 03 01 March 1 1953 age 70 MichiganNationalityAmericanArea s LettererPseudonym s OrzNotable worksUncanny X MenSpawnAwardsInkpot Award 1985 2 Wizard Fan Award 1993Harvey Award 1994 CBG Fan Award 1988 1991 93 Contents 1 Career 1 1 Early work 1 2 X Men 1 3 Post X Men 2 Lettering style and influences 2 1 Computer lettering 3 Personal life 4 Quotes 5 References 6 External links 6 1 InterviewsCareer EditEarly work Edit In 1968 when Orzechowski was 15 he met a group of aspiring comic book artists at the Detroit Triple Fan Fair comic convention in Detroit and joined their comics club Some older members of the club included future comics professionals Rich Buckler Jim Starlin Al Milgrom and Mike Vosburg An aspiring comic book artist Orzechowski quit drawing when he saw their work None of the club members wanted to letter their own amateur comics however so Orzechowski took on those jobs 4 Tony Isabella who knew Orzechowski from the comics club joined Marvel Comics in 1972 and soon got Orzechowski his first professional work lettering retouches on the Marvel UK editions of classic Fantastic Four Thor Hulk The Amazing Spider Man and Daredevil stories Within a few months Orzechowski had worked his way up to lettering for some of Marvel s black and white monster magazines 4 One of his first jobs of that kind was for Monsters Unleashed on one of the first Marvel stories written by future X Men scribe Chris Claremont Orzechowski s connections from the comics club days paid off again when Rich Buckler pulled him over to letter Black Panther Jungle Action and Jim Starlin did the same for Starlin s run on Captain Marvel Having moved to California by this time 4 Orzechowski lettered a number of underground comix titles in the mid to late 1970s 1 X Men Edit A couple of panels from Uncanny X Men 141 1981 p 12 displaying a variety of Tom Orzechowski s lettering techniques By the time of the debut of the New X Men in X Men 94 Orzechowski had developed a reputation as a new projects guy and was given the odd issue and then with issue 122 June 1979 finally the title After a number of years on X Men over Chris Claremont s scripts the two men paired together on many future X Men related projects Orzechowski also designed the logos for The New Mutants and Wolverine comics among others 5 When all was said and done counting X Men many of its annuals The New Mutants Wolverine X Treme X Men and MekaniX Orzechowksi lettered something on the order of 6 000 pages of Claremont s scripts over a 25 year period Post X Men Edit Orzechowski left the X Men books shortly after Chris Claremont in 1993 He joined the team putting out Image Comics Spawn 1992 where his title was copy editor for most of the first six years Orzechowski worked for the manga packaging outfit Studio Proteus from 1989 until their demise in 2004 Studio Proteus titles on which Orzechowski worked included Nausicaa Appleseed Dominion and Ghost in the Shell In the early 2000s with many publishers beginning to use in house lettering teams freelancers like Orzechowski lost a lot of work Though Orzechowski still does the occasional job for DC Comics and a manga company called Studio Cutie he did not letter comic books regularly until 2009 when he started doing the lettering for Chris Claremont s X Men Forever books and in 2010 for the New Mutants Forever book also written by Claremont Recently Orzechowski has been working on a comic book anthology called YEET Presents 6 Lettering style and influences EditOrzechowski s letters are almost perfectly square with the exception of the letter I Everything has a solid uniform look to it Letters stand straight up and down not at a tilt They are all painstakingly the same height Similarly Orzechowski s standard word balloon outlines are meticulously uniform He also helped popularize non standard non bubble shaped designs for word balloons to reflect different character voices square for robots jagged dripping for demons etc In the mid 1970s while Marvel s production boss and cover letterer Dan Crespi was developing a tight attractive house style Orzechowski was 3 000 miles away in California buried in design books Orzechowski figured that since the X Men didn t overlap the rest of the Marvel Universe there was no reason not to be influenced by calligraphy record jackets old movie posters everything except comics 4 Early influences on Orzechowski s distinctive style included the work of Alphonse Mucha and the comics lettering of Artie Simek and Abe Kanegson 1 Orzechowski modeled his lettering on the Flash Gordon newspaper strips of the 1930s Another influence was Robert Crumb s Zap Comix 1 Orzechowski recognized that Crumb s title work was clearly derived from the brush techniques of that same era the 1920s and 30s Orzechowski studied everything of Crumb s as well as the late 1960s DCs and Marvels and developed a lettering style based on all of those influences Computer lettering Edit In 1992 Orzechowski was among the first letterers to experiment with computer fonts Working on Studio Proteus s Nausicaa of the Valley of the Wind Orzechowski found the sound effect work to be so demanding that computer lettering seemed like a way to save time on the extensive dialogue His font program however was primitive and he ended up doing that series entirely by hand after all By 1994 however Orzechowksi was lettering mainly on the computer and in 2002 he switched completely to digital lettering using a Wacom pen on a graphics tablet in Adobe Illustrator He explained in a 2003 interview on Comicon com s The Pulse that even then 2002 I was losing the knack as the majority of my work had been digital for a couple of years The fine motor control slips if the muscles aren t in continual use 4 Personal life EditOrzechowski is not related to comics artist designer Bob Orzechowski 1 Orzechowski lives in Lakewood Ohio 7 where he operates a typography and logo design studio His wife is L Lois Buhalis 7 herself a letterer in the comics industry for two decades Quotes EditThis page is a candidate to be copied to Wikiquote using the Transwiki process If the page can be expanded into an encyclopedic article rather than a list of quotations please do so and remove this message On his favorite lettering projects Chris Claremont s Uncanny X Men was the top of the stack for me There s no way to describe how it felt to watch those characters evolve under one writer for such a remarkably long spell 4 On the toughest parts of hand lettering to master Letter X is the toughest Seriously I ve probably drawn X more often than anyone in the history of written language and half of them were lousy After that numeral 8 is the one that will give you nightmares Letters J R and S will show the most variety I d bet money I spotted the letterer on the 40s stories in the Black Canary Archive by his J s I m sure it was Gaspar Saladino who later worked on all of the late 50s DC hero revivals for Julie Schwartz 4 On comic book logo design The logo I did for Wolverine is based on 1930s elements and I m proud to see it s one of the few old ones still in use Designing a logo is probably a lot like designing a costume to catch the tone of the character while pulling some unexpected elements together 4 References Edit a b c d e Orzechowski entry Who s Who of American Comic Books 1928 1999 Accessed Nov 19 2013 Inkpot Award Miller John Jackson Comics Industry Birthdays Comics Buyer s Guide June 10 2005 Accessed December 21 2010 WebCitation archive a b c d e f g h Contino Jennifer ABCs with Orzechowski Comicon com The Pulse Dec 30 2003 Retrieved January 3 2010 Klein Todd Logo Study X Men part 3 Todd s Blog Oct 5th 2007 Retrieved July 20 2008 Yeet Presents on Facebook Facebook Archived from the original on 2022 04 30 user generated source a b facebook com August 3 2017 Tom Orzechowshi facebook com Retrieved August 3 2017 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help External links EditOrzechowski s Facebook HomepageInterviews Edit The Silver Age Sage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tom Orzechowski amp oldid 1142150523, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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