Getting to the point with cartoons

As someone considered ‘hopeless at art’ (by herself and others) I’m always amazed by the talent of people who can illustrate their writing, or combine the power of pictures and words to create a cartoon (And that’s not just any old words – effective cartoon captions are always concise and to the point…)

One of the outstanding new bloggers I came across yesterday is Lis, who writes About Every Little Thing.

She illustrates her writing with stick men cartoons, like this one – part of a day in the life series, highlighting how exciting her life is.

“Now it’s 1p.m. and it’s way too exciting to leave my desk (300 emails down, 701 more to go) so I’m eating my exciting McDonalds lunch here.”

Thanks Lis for making me smile – and reminding me of some of the worst office excesses that I have now thankfully escaped from.


I discovered recently that one of our regular readers here, Brad Shorr, is a dab hand at writing cartoons (now that’s word power for you).

Here’s one that he’s created with illustrator Mark Hill (click to see it at full size).

Another great resource for cartoons is We Blog Cartoons.  Here’s their Facebook cartoon – you might have seen it before but it’s a classic (and reflects some of my current frustrations as I try to fathom my way into the world of social networks…)
cartoon from www.weblogcartoons.com

Some of you might be wondering how this can be considered getting to the point – if it isn’t a distraction from my stated blogging
purpose… well I guess it is, but I wanted to highlight some of this great material…

Maybe it’s also a way of reminding myself of the discipline that will be needed to get to and stay on the point!


Facebook cartoon by Dave Walker. Find more cartoons you can freely re-use on your blog at We Blog Cartoons.

Transparency cartoon from Word Sell Inc