Saturday, August 13, 2011

The Jabbergluck

Now that the dust surrounding the whirlwind of gaming that was KantCon 2011 has settled, I would like to tell you all about my part in making it a little more fun for those who participated.

First off, a little background. Last year was the first time I had been to KantCon (which was, at that time, only a year old). I had never attended a gaming convention before, and KantCon seemed an inexpensive and obtainable alternative to the bigger conventions out there (ComicCon, DragonCon, and GenCon to name a few). Despite its humble beginnings at a friend's house with no more than 30 participants, in only a year, Ethan Parker—the convention's founder—brought it much closer to 100 participants all crammed into half a meeting room at Johnson County's Regnier Center. Sufice it to say, when I arrived, I could tell this was going to be big.

KantCon was always ever just a way for old friends and other gaming enthusiasts (translation: new friends) to get together and do what we love, so the whole event was non-profit. All around me were people who volunteered their time, energy, and creativity to make the event something special, memorable, and unique. I saw the potential of it and wanted to do something, too. And so, I volunteered my services as a designer.

It took awhile for Ethan to get back to me about what he wanted Con to look like in 2011, but when he did I was gung ho! No idea was too far-fetched, and as you can see below, we ended up with a lot of stuff. The most needful thing was a proper logo, but I didn't want to just leave him with that to stamp on everything from iPod cases to dog shirts (although you can get those). No, I wanted to put my time, energy, and creativity into making everything I did for KantCon special, memorable, and unique, just like I had seen everyone else doing. You can see below what we ended up with.

The logo itself has its own story. At first, we toyed around with ideas for a mascot. Something steampunk? Something fantasy-ish? I entertained the idea of a noble gentleman with a clockwork arm named Lord Cogsworth, but Ethan leaped on one of my earlier ideas: the Jabbergluck.

The Jabbergluck first came to me some years ago when I was living in California. I was laying in bed, staring at the ceiling, when my mind started to find pictures in the splattered plaster above me. Here was this image of a troll with long, pointy ears and an enormous, unhingeable jaw. I simply had to capture it (you can see my original sketch at right). I held on to the image and the name I picked for him for many years without doing much with the idea. Once, I incorporated him into a college illustration assignment where he played the part of the troll under the bridge in a rendition of The Billy Goats Gruff. (Look below to see Jabber sporting a red color scheme.) At last, when Ethan liked him so much as KantCon's mascot, I decided it was time I dusted him off and let him get out into the real world.

Jabber is a fearsome fellow! Somehow this troll's lower jaw ended up too big for his skull, and consequently it has a tendency to unhinge when he gets angry, excited, or (apparently) indifferent. This helps when he's trying to eat things that are far too big for his mouth, which could be anything, as he's cursed with a voracious hunger. He talks like a cockney brute, or maybe a mobster's meathead, we're not quite sure. But when he's not talking he just mumbles his thoughts to himself (hence the "jabber" in the name), which causes his oversized bottom lip to wobble up and down attractively. He's a nice guy if you get on his good side, but he can get terribly cross if you make him angry. Like any big softy, though, he get's scared sometimes, too. Oh yeah, and he evidently rides motorcycles. Who knew?

Now that KantCon's all over for the year, I just wanted to pay homage to what came out of the whole adventure by showing how far Ethan and I went with Mr. Jabber. It seems the reception was so good, Jabber's been asked to come back next year! (See more after the jump.)



The classic KantCon 2011 logo






2 comments:

  1. Thanks for this, while I've not attended Kantcon yet. I've been good friends with Ethan for a while. and I've seen this Jabbergluck guy around and I've always wondered what his story was.

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    1. Glad to meet a friend of Ethan's! Will you be going to KantCon this year? I'm also glad to hear you've seen the Jabbergluck around: that means we're doing something right. :) Out of curiosity, where have you seen Mr. Jabber? (I'm always curious about the places this troll gets to.)

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