As I mentioned at the start of the post, a version of this map is available as an 17" x 11" print in my online store: https://mouseguard.bigcartel.com/product/map-of-the-mouse-territories-11x17-print
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
1149 Map
As I mentioned at the start of the post, a version of this map is available as an 17" x 11" print in my online store: https://mouseguard.bigcartel.com/product/map-of-the-mouse-territories-11x17-print
Tuesday, May 5, 2026
Ildur Hall Model Video
In the video below, I show and talk about building it for The Black Axe and it's modularity, how it was used, and why having models like this are important for my design process as well as for the reference in drawing the same location over and over again.
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
Mouse Guard Coloring Book
I have released a new Mouse Guard coloring book! It is a 10" x 10" 96 page coloring book! This item is available EXCLUSIVELY through my online store and at conventions I attend:http://mouseguard.bigcartel.com/product/mouse-guard-coloring-book
"Experience David Petersen's beloved comic series Mouse Guard with this lush coloring book. Featuring over 90 black and white illustrations showcasing the intricate detail of the environments, cities, and characters from across the Mouse Territories, readers of Mouse Guard and colorists alike can bring this world to life with th vivid colors of their imaginations."
We also went with a lay-flat binding option so that you can open the book to any page and have the book stay open without having to fight the page next to you closing or break the spine to stop it.
Tuesday, April 21, 2026
Usagi Yojimbo Kaito 84' Cover
To the side you can see my finished cover, and in this post I'll talk about the process of creating it.
I over-did the color blocking, but this was partly to assure, Stan, Zack, Jared and their editor I knew where I was going with this––but it was also to show myself that I knew where I was going. I still left the cabinet decoration loose until I knew they were all on board.
The inks were done by printing out the layout and taping it to the back of a sheet of Strathmore bristol. On my Huion lightpad I was able to ink while using the printout as a guide instead of traditional pencils.
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
Kestrel Archer
Sketchbook illustrations are often a chance to explore corners of Mouse Guard that I haven't gotten to yet. Whether it's certain locations, characters, or just ideas or thematic tones. For this illustration it's a Kestrel archer with a mouse helper. In this post I'll break down the steps to creating the illustration
Leaning into the era of Mouse Guard before the Guard...when mice were in the employ of other beasts (see Jeremy Bastian's Legends of the Guard Vol 1) I wanted to show a bird using a weapon of its own as a mouse helper rode with it keeping arrows stocked.
I drew the kestrel based on photo reference (though I made anatomical adjustments to get the legs in the right position to draw back the bowstring) and then on another sheet of copy paper overlayed on the first drawing, I drew the mouse & bow. These were assembled in Photoshop where I dropped in some vector silhouettes of pine trees as background.
The digitally assembled pencil layout was printed out and taped to the back of a sheet of Strathmore Bristol and placed on a light pad. With the light shining up, I was able to see through the bristol surface to the printout to use as a guide as I ink the artwork. I used Copic Multiliner SP pens to do the inking (the 0.7 nib mostly)The inking focus was on the kestrel's feather pattern and on all those pine needle clusters. Originally my plan was to use the bird & mouse as a tee shirt design and to drop the pine branches away for the shirt, but ink them in so the original art looked more finished. I opted to not use this as a shirt (mouse was too small).
With the inks scanned, the color flatting (painting areas of flat color to establish all the color areas) started. The kestrel colors were referenced from the photo, but I certainly made hue, value, and saturation decisions with the base colors. The mouse colors were to echo the orange and grey-blue of the kestrel's head.
It's also at this stage that I established color holds (areas where I wanted the lineart to be a color other than black) for the feather patterns, bow string, and the pine branches.
The last step was to render the colors with dodge and burn tools and a stock textured brush. Dodge and Burn are tools based on photography terms (and from when Photoshop was a photo retouching program) having to do with purposely over or under exposing areas––or in other words darkening or lightening them.
I use these tools to create shadows and highlights to my base colors while giving a bit of a pebbly texture with that stock brush. I also shifted colors a bit here or there either with a soft paintbrush or a feathered lasso and the color balance tool.
This illustration, along with many more, is in the sketchbook 'Past Whereabouts'
which is available in my online store: https://mouseguard.bigcartel.com/
Tuesday, April 7, 2026
Grain Cart Model Video
In the video below, I show and talk about every step in making it 20 years after I drew the scene in the first issue of Mouse Guard to mark it's anniversary with a print in 2025 as well as wandering the woods with it taking photos at tree bases until the right reference photo leaps out as the one to use.
Direct YouTube Link:
Tuesday, March 31, 2026
Barkstone Approach
Sketchbook illustrations are often a chance to explore corners of Mouse Guard that I haven't gotten to yet. Whether it's certain locations, characters, or just ideas or thematic tones. For this illustration it's Saxon, Kenzie and Lieam approaching Barkstone. In this post I'll break down the steps to creating the illustration
One of the 'Past Whereabouts' I wanted to journey back to was that walkway up to the gates of Barkstone from Fall 1152. The location was based on a real tree behind the antique store I worked for when I started Mouse Guard. I still had reference photos to look at as I drew the tree and rotted root walkway. On another sheet of copy paper I drew the characters, and then in Photoshop assembled them all with some light color blocking while adding in a photo of the door reference from Fall as well as a stained glass window with references to 'strength' and 'home' I felt was appropriate for thiscity on the western edge of the mouse territories.
The digitally assembled layout was printed out and taped to the back of a sheet of Strathmore Bristol and placed on a light pad. With the light shining up, I was able to see through the bristol surface to the printout to use as a guide as I ink the artwork. I used Copic Multiliner SP pens to do the inking (the 0.7 nib mostly)
The inking focus was on all that texture of the tree bark and fallen ground cover and debris. I tried to keep some of the tree bits open as well as to not flood the characters with too much line density so the eye has somewhere to rest.
With the inks scanned, the color flatting (painting areas of flat color to establish all the color areas) started. The colors were based on the colors from Fall, but darkened and muted down a bit. The door is much more red than it was in the Fall book––I wanted it to have a bit more identity and not just blend in as another shade of brown.At this stage I also established color holds (areas where I wanted the lineart to be a color other than black) flag/banner design.
I use these tools to create shadows and highlights to my base colors while giving a bit of a pebbly texture with that stock brush.
This illustration, along with many more, is in my NEW sketchbook 'Past Whereabouts' available in my online store: https://mouseguard.bigcartel.com/
Tuesday, March 24, 2026
Darkheather Weasel & Bat
Sketchbook illustrations are often a chance to explore corners of Mouse Guard that I haven't gotten to yet. Whether it's certain locations, characters, or just ideas or thematic tones. For this illustration it's A weasel in Darkheather with a bat companion. In this post I'll break down the steps to creating the illustration
In the epilogue for Winter 1152, I included a few panels showing a weasel in a boat in the distance with a candle on their head and a bat hanging from their arm like an upside-down falcon on a falconer's arm. I think I had a clever idea of what that was going to be some day for a future story––but for the life of me I can't remember what it was. No worries, I can still go back to it whenever I have a clever idea of how to tie it in.
The weasel, bat, and room were all drawn separately on sheets of copy paper and then digitally assembled. I was looking at reference for the bat, and certainly am referencing a photo of a Moorish tunnel room for the location (though I flooded it and added a boat)
The digitally assembled layout was printed out and taped to the back of a sheet of Strathmore Bristol and placed on a light pad. With the light shining up, I was able to see through the bristol surface to the printout to use as a guide as I ink the artwork. I used Copic Multiliner SP pens to do the inking (the 0.7 nib mostly)
The inking focus was on the stippling of the stone bricks so the candle offered a bit of halo glow, but also so the tone of the background pushed the more open figures forward.
With the inks scanned, the color flatting (painting areas of flat color to establish all the color areas) started. I went with a very purple base (much like the Darkheather pages in Winter 1152) and shifted base colors of the weasel and bat in that direction too.I use these tools to create shadows and highlights to my base colors while giving a bit of a pebbly texture with that stock brush. There was a lot of adjustment to color balance wherever the candle light would hit that had to be selected using a lasso tool with a soft feather.
This illustration, along with many more, is in my NEW sketchbook 'Past Whereabouts' available in my online store: https://mouseguard.bigcartel.com/
Tuesday, March 17, 2026
2026 Bookplate
I hoarded image examples of medieval embroidery and tapestry before beginning, and narrowed it down to these two as my main inspirations. I liked the dark background with light/metallic figures (Opus Anglicanum) like the Chasuble in the lower right, but I also really likes seeing the individual stitches and that border pattern on the German embroideries with Allegorical Scenes on the top. It reminded me of a Norwegian snow motif I used on the 2019 Teasel print.
To fill the space I digitally drew in some teasel silhouettes and blocked in color ideas going more for a cream colored embroidery thread rather than the metallic silver I'd originally assumed I'd use. I have to say that at this point, I still wasn't sure HOW I wanted to execute this––pencil rendering, ink, digital painting, traditional paining?...
This first step of coloring is called 'fatting' because it's just about dropping in flat color with no shading or texture just to establish the color choices and placement. I also added color holds (areas where I wanted the inklines to be a color other than black) to everything except the outer boarder.
That's when the hand inked stitch texture pattern came in handy. I lightened it a great deal and set it to layer mode 'multiply' to get it over everything (I had to tile it several times over since I made it small to save on it's tedious creation). That also made a great guide for me to go in and shade individual areas between the texture lines to highlight as stitches standing proud or with a slightly lighter thread. In the end I also added some subtle gradients to the top and bottom to shade and highlight it to look more like a photograph of a real object instead of a drawing of one.
The bookplate will be available at all my convention appearances this year and also in my online store
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
Marigold Print
This year the piece is titled 'Marigold'. Below I'll show the step-by-step of creating the art.
These were assembled in Photoshop and I did a fast color blocking to help me visualize the final as well as see the different shapes clearer in the next step.
Line weight in the marigold petals and her robes plated a big part in making the inks work and offsetting the areas where I did more fill-in or texture like on her hood, sleeves, cloak, and the rocks. I'd originally envisioned her hood being ringmail, but then decided to ink it more like it's a coarse knit or crochet texture. But in the end, I think it's still ambiguous.
The Marigold signed and numbered print debut at ECCC and is
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
Magic the Gathering: Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Magic players of all skill levels team up with the TMNT to fight bad guys in this exciting new co-operative strategy format for up to four players! Equip awesome ninja gear, play with your favorite of the four pre-built 60-card hero decks, then crack open the four included Play Boosters for even more ways to get the drop on the pre-built enemies deck featuring Shredder and his cronies!
For the artwork I was asked to include all four turtles as well as Shredder, Rocksteady, Bebop, Baxter, Splinter and Krang all in Dimension X by the Technodrome. Each character was on a separate layer so that depending on packaging variations they could remove certain characters or background elements to suit their needs (seen in two variations below)
But I was able to get permission from Wizards of the Coast to share the full approved art I sent them with all the characters and background:
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
FACTS print
The organizers asked me to do a piece of artwork for the convention that could be used as VIP badge art, a print, and perhaps as part of a banner behind my signing table.
Here you can see the final image, and in this post I'll go through the steps to create it.
I drew Bardrick on copy paper and used reference to draw the castle and ribbon banner...these were all scanned into Photoshop and assembled into this layout. Each drawing was tinted a bit differently to help me see the lines and then I blocked in some color on Bardrick to also help me see his overall form.The layout was printed out at about 12" x 12" and taped to the back of a sheet of Strathmore bristol. On my Huion lightpad I was able to see through the surface of the bristol down to the printout to use as a guide as I inked.
The inking was all done with a Copic Multiliner SP 0.7 nib pen. While inking Bardrick was fairly straight forward, I did have to think about the density of texture and detail on the castle so it didn't become too busy and overbearing. I also looked back at how Gabriel Rodriguez drew the axe itself in Dawn of the Black Axe so I could emulate his inkwork on the weapon for some continuity.
It is also at this step where I establish color holds (areas where I want the lineart to be a color other than black) and I did that for the castle, the banner's details, and the text.The last step was to render the color adding light, shadow, and texture. I do this mostly using the dodge (lighten) and burn (darken) tools in Photoshop with a stock textured brush––though I did some painting with a brush to get the sky transition more natural.
The final image was sent off to FACTS where it will become a VIP badge and print. Id you will be attending FACTS in Ghent Belgium April 11-12, I look forward to seeing you there!
https://www.facts.be/en/
Also of note––if you are attending FACTS, I have a commission pre-orders open in my online store: https://mouseguard.bigcartel.com/product/facts-brush-pen-commission




















































