COMICS: Jim Lee, DC Comics co-Publisher on the ReDesigns and Reboots

COMICS: Jim Lee, DC Comics co-Publisher on the ReDesigns and Reboots

Find out Jim Lee's thoughts and reasons for the upheaval taking place this September.

By MarkJulian - Jun 10, 2011 04:06 AM EST
Filed Under: DC Comics
Source: DCU blog aka The Source

On the DCU blog, Jim Lee shares his thoughts about rebooting some of DC's title and provides insight on the process behind the decision:

" Months ago, when the decision was made to launch 52 new number ones, Co-Publisher Dan Didio, Editor-in-Chief Bob Harras along with DCU Executive Editor Eddie Berganza and VP-Art Direction and Design Mark Chiarello and I went over the entire proposed DCU lineup and bookmarked the characters we felt would benefit the most from a visual redesign. That initial list started at around 30 characters but quickly ballooned up as books got under way. Realizing the amount of time and effort it would take to complete the long list of designs, Mark Chiarello and I enlisted artist Cully Hamner onto the team, giving us not just another set of hands but another style altogether so we would have a variety of styles to literally draw from.

Cully, as many of you know, is a veteran artist with diverse professional experiences, one of the co-founders of Atlanta’s Gaijin studios and also the co-creator of the WildStorm comic RED. He had also done a spectacular redesign of Blue Beetle some years back which Mark and DC loved so he was a natural choice for this project. Having known Cully both professionally and personally over the years, I knew his collaborative mindset and sheer creative skills would be perfect for this massive undertaking. Cully in particular took point in creating many of the designs you guys have seen debut in our staggered announcements, and his feedback and input and revisions on countless others were just as instrumental. On top of all this, there was the input provided by Mark Chiarello, a terrific artist in his own right, who gave countless notes and corralled all the images and feedback to make sure all the creators working on the titles had the information they needed and that every voice in this highly collaborative project was taken into account.

The entire redesign process was very organic in that every character’s final design came about in an entirely unique fashion. More often than not, Cully and I worked independently or in parallel but sometimes, we jammed together on the same set of designs. And of course, all the designs were shaped and refined by the input of a series editor, writer and artist. In the end, we wanted to make sure all the key creators on a title were satisfied with the final look of the characters as the creative teams were the ones who had to live with and draw the new looks on a near daily basis. For instance, on Birds of Prey, the design process started with initial sketches by the series artist Jesus Saiz which Cully and I then used to riff off of. After rounds of input and alterations, the near final looks were then tweaked by Jesus himself at the end. Or on a series like Teen Titans, Brett Booth contributed most of the designs and Cully and I served as sounding boards, tossing out suggestions and visual counterpoints as we hammered out the final looks almost in real time over massive email chains. And lastly, for other titles altogether, the series’ artists did all the designs and Mark and I just chimed in and signed off on the final approvals.

All in all, a huge project, one which only now is finally coming to light. On a reader level, we realize changing even the smallest detail of any character’s costume brings out the passion in every fan, but I thought it important to describe the process so you all knew the time and care and thought that was put into each and every redesign. In the end, while you may not always agree with the changes, at least you know they were not made lightly or without great effort.

Finally, I wanted to thank all the DC editors for their incredible patience and invaluable input and so many of the the creative teams for allowing Cully and me to jam along with you. It was definitely an honor.

Best,
Jim Lee
Co-Publisher
DC Comics

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One2three
One2three - 6/10/2011, 5:39 AM
Im liking the redesigns, all of them. Are we going to
see a rebooted Dr. Fate, or have they issued one and
I missed it. Costume should stay close to the countdown
to mystery outfit.

Oxion
Oxion - 6/10/2011, 6:26 AM
Alot of the costumes are a bit much and a bit over-done but I love how it separates them so much. I mean its better this way because there was the usual 4 changes in a costume that kept them apart: masks, cape, logo, color. Other than that, they were the same for the most part. But now, the costumes more so are connected to that individual hero instead of looking like they ordered a template out the superhero costume magazine. Still, some changes seem unnecessary and ridiculous but hey, it's the comics, they will change again come Christmas.
Shaman
Shaman - 6/10/2011, 6:58 AM
Well i have not yet seen ONE re-desing that i like from all the new covers and i'm not nearly big enough of a classic stickler to be simply annoyed with just ANY change. Hell, i was ALL FOR Superman loosing his briefs but every re-design i've seen has been a cheap, flimsy, lazy conceptualisation that looks like little to no thought was even put in what so ever. Costumes ARE fashion and random lines to make leotards look busier are probably the worst possible things to put on something someone would WANT to wear. Every aspect of the costume should have a logic behind it. "Looking Alien" simply doesn't cut it as an excuse. Blue briefs on a blue leotard with a shitload of seems of the same color, a He-Man looking clunky bright red belt and metal boots do NOT make a good looking Superman costume. The boots and belt look out of place since they're the only metal pieces on, the blue seems on a blue suit look idiotic and blue briefs ON A BLUE SUIT, for the love of all that is holy, is flat out retarded! Even more so since we've seen plenty of cool looking Superman costumes from various elseworlds titles to even fanfiction. You have no excuses for this shit, DC! Get back to the drawing board!
duncboy
duncboy - 6/10/2011, 8:49 AM
So basically, he is saying "Yeah you may think these new costumes suck, but we really worked hard on them." Sorry - but I still think they suck and don't really care what work went into them. I'm a HUGE Jim Lee fan too. :( FAIL DC!
JULEZ13
JULEZ13 - 6/10/2011, 9:04 AM
EPIC FAIL! I also have yet to see a redesigned costume that I like, let alone love! This is terrible and I hope they don't stick. If only Michael Turner was still around, he always made great costume designs. Jim Lee is a great cartoonist, but when it comes to redesigning I would prefer he not be the man in charge.

Superman's costume is DISGUSTING! Yes, disgusting! It looks fricking terrible!
Wonder Woman's costume also looks like sh!t. It looks like he just took the redesign he made not too long ago and just turned the gold into silver.

SMH!
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