Oblesklk
2nd Level Yellow Feather
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2001
- Messages
- 3,461
- Points
- 63
Issue Seven is finally finished, and ready to purchase.
CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE THIS ISSUE
[Click the pic to see a much larger version]
This issue is quite unlike anything we've done before at Agency Publishing, and hopefully it will mark the first of many books like it. We've hired a profesional teams of artists to work on this issue, and we really like how it turned out. It has a darker, slightly grittier feel than anything we've done in the past.
For those interested, TickleTown members will begin to see this comic for free starting with the February 2005 edition of the site. We will showcase it over the next year, and this will be included in your membership dues. Or if you don't want to wait, you can always purchase it immediately for a 31% discount in the members' store.
This book is the first of three stories that will star Mirth (the lass chained up on the cover). She manages to get herself into some interesting trouble, and the next couple of stories are about her friends trying to get her out of it.
The image below is a sample, it's the first page of the story. Not much going on here, other than to set up the rest of the story. Mirth is alone on top of a rooftop, just questioning her place with the agency in which she's training, the city, and just life in general.
I liked the artists' depiction of the city at night in the first panel. It's a nice intro to the storyline: dark, dingy, and almost decaying. For most of the script, Mirth looks a bit different. These first few pages are dark and rainy, the rest of it (while still dark), is at least a bit cartoonish. You'll see what I mean if you read further.
Anyway, this is the direction I'd like to take some of our stories, and am always eager, as usual, to hear about your opinions on the story, the art, characters, or whatever else crosses your mind. If you frequest this subforum, the assumption is that you've already developed a taste for tickling art, so your opinions mean a lot to us, since we're still a relatively new production company.
CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE THIS ISSUE
CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE THIS ISSUE

[Click the pic to see a much larger version]
This issue is quite unlike anything we've done before at Agency Publishing, and hopefully it will mark the first of many books like it. We've hired a profesional teams of artists to work on this issue, and we really like how it turned out. It has a darker, slightly grittier feel than anything we've done in the past.
For those interested, TickleTown members will begin to see this comic for free starting with the February 2005 edition of the site. We will showcase it over the next year, and this will be included in your membership dues. Or if you don't want to wait, you can always purchase it immediately for a 31% discount in the members' store.
This book is the first of three stories that will star Mirth (the lass chained up on the cover). She manages to get herself into some interesting trouble, and the next couple of stories are about her friends trying to get her out of it.
The image below is a sample, it's the first page of the story. Not much going on here, other than to set up the rest of the story. Mirth is alone on top of a rooftop, just questioning her place with the agency in which she's training, the city, and just life in general.
I liked the artists' depiction of the city at night in the first panel. It's a nice intro to the storyline: dark, dingy, and almost decaying. For most of the script, Mirth looks a bit different. These first few pages are dark and rainy, the rest of it (while still dark), is at least a bit cartoonish. You'll see what I mean if you read further.
Anyway, this is the direction I'd like to take some of our stories, and am always eager, as usual, to hear about your opinions on the story, the art, characters, or whatever else crosses your mind. If you frequest this subforum, the assumption is that you've already developed a taste for tickling art, so your opinions mean a lot to us, since we're still a relatively new production company.

CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE THIS ISSUE