Digital Chameleon

Digital Chameleon was a comic book coloring and inking studio based in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada. They have countless credits for a variety of publishers, and are attributed with being the first studio to make the use of the computer software program Adobe Photoshop widespread in the comics industry.[1] In addition to their work in the comics field, Digital Chameleon also coloured animation, CD covers, posters, magazines, and advertisements.

Digital Chameleon
Comics studio
Founded1991
Founder
  • Lovern Kindzierski
  • Chris Chuckry
Defunct2003
Headquarters,
Key people

Digital Chameleon closed its doors in 2003.

History

The company was formed in 1991, by Christopher Chuckry (president), and Lovern Kindzierski (vice-president, creative director), with partners Ed Beddome, Tim Riddoch and Dick Thomas. Colorists at Digital Chameleon included Kindzierski, Laurie E. Smith, George Freeman, Bernie Mireault, and Carla Feeney.[2] Partner Beddome left the company in 1993, and co-founder Chuckry left the company in 1996. After Chuckry's departure, Kindzierski acted as president[3] and Freeman as art director.[4] After Freeman left, Igor Kordey was the studio's art director.

Awards

Digital Chameleon was recognized for its work with nominations for the Comics Buyer's Guide Favorite Colorist Award in 1997 and 1998 (both with Kindzierski), and again in 1999, 2000, 2001, and 2003.

gollark: For "fast" I'd probably just use TypeScript.
gollark: I mean, it's good in its domain, writing low level stuff, but it causes exciting problems elsewhere.
gollark: Well, Rust has an interesting design there, and GCs are nice.
gollark: > You can say "but the developer should just be betterer and notice all problems", but part of the job of a good programming language is to make being correct easier.
gollark: See, I predicted that.

References

  1. Hollingsworth, Matt. "Color Guides," MattHollingsworth.net. Archived 2008-10-08 at the Wayback Machine Accessed Apr. 6, 2009.
  2. Sierra, Jerry A. "Digital Chameleon Colors The Vertigo Universe - Sidebar," Archived 2008-11-14 at the Wayback Machine Publish (July 1994). Accessed Apr. 6, 2009.
  3. Kindzierski profile at LinkedIn. Accessed Apr. 6, 2009.
  4. Sierra, Jerry A. "Digital Chameleon Colors The Vertigo Universe - Part One," Publish (July 1994). Accessed Apr. 6, 2009.


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