Gary Ham, Julie West and Scott Tolleson shared a booth for Comic-Con. Ham released his Japanese vinyl Wooper Loopers (previously) in the figure’s premiere painted and unpainted colorways
The Sucklord continued to out several historically homoerotic characters in the form of bootleg action figures (as detailed here) during Comic-Con. Licorice Leslie was quick to sell out, no doubt
Luke Chueh was all around Comic-Con, with book signings at Giant Robot (above), toy signings at Munky King (below) and fanboy motivations (just like the rest of us). The
It’s not a Fashion Police “Bitch Stole My Look” moment if Kuso Vinyl‘s Jonathan Ma and Jesse Hernandez are both rocking the same shirt, right? Kuso hosted a
Huck Gee has the right attitude about Comic-Con: fly in, fly out. (That’s why he’s grinning in this picture and hardly looks hung over at all.) Huck dropped
Portland’s Grass Hut collective and the Gargamel Japan crew united (as usual, see last year) for Comic-Con with an array of colorful and eclectic sofubi. Their soft vinyl toys included
Camilla d’Errico debuted her new statue, No Ordinary Love, at her Comic-Con booth. Based on her painting, d’Errico’s explains that the statue is the “visual interpretation and expression of her feelings”
Complexity art fans and sofubi collectors will meet somewhere in the middle with Figment, Brendan Monroe‘s first vinyl toy since 2005′s Sours. After breaking the news, DKE’s Sarah Jo went on
Everyone’s favorite toy-designer-cum-reality-TV-persona, The Sucklord, is extending last month’s gay pride festivities to Comic-Con. During the SUCKtalk days, when The Sucklord was appearing on Bravo’s Work of Art,
What kind of a madman would release a new toy right in the midst of Comic-Con mayhem? Sergey Safonov (visual for the crazy face), that’s who! Moon Mouse