Monday, May 23
Monday, May 9
MAY JEMS MAGAZINE ILLUSTRATION
Illustration created for this month's Jems magazine regarding Philadelphia private ambulance company fraud.
Wednesday, May 4
HIS JUST REWARDS
The mastermind of 9/11 is dead! And though it will never erase our memory of that horrible day or bring back friends and loved ones, or 343 of FDNY's bravest - it's a small piece of delayed justice. Seventy two virgins in Heaven? I think not!
Tuesday, April 12
Study Paint of Piper
Just finished a new study painting of a Piper in all his pomp and splendor! This piece has taken on new significance since I've been practicing on my chanter and have realized how much skill and dedication pipers have. Kudos to ALL of you!
Monday, April 4
MARCH FIRE ENGINEERING MAG CARTOON

Why is it that some RIT crew members think that a fast and effective operation means emptying every compartment on their rig and carrying it inside to preform a rescue? You've seen these people, the ones in their bright yellow RIT vest standing like statues in a mountain of equipment waiting to leap into a rescue situation. I have even taught in a few departments that insist on taking a chainsaw into a smoke-filled, zero visibility environment as standard first-in practice (WTF?)!
I like to think of RIT as a well organized, trained, and proactive safety team - intervening before an issue arises (e.g., placing ladders, pulling support hand-lines, enforcing fire ground safety, ect...). It's a simple concept; try to stop something bad from happening before something bad happens.
However, in the rare occurrence that something goes wrong, this team needs to be ready, competent, and able to move fast and light with the bare minimum of equipment. Believe me, I could ramble on with a dissertation regarding my thoughts on training and the application of RIT. But for now I'll just say; remember, the "R" in RIT stands for rapid, not restricted.
Sunday, March 27
FDIC WRAP-UP

What an exciting FDIC! This year's event was an incredible experience of meeting new friends, laughing loudly with old ones, autographing prints, and book signings. The popularity of Drawn By Fire continues to skyrocket and it's humbling to see it fly off the shelves - I never would have imagined this success!
However, they real joy of the week was getting to meet new people and catch up with old friends. Those of you who know me understand the impact that both Bobby Halton and Rick Lasky have had on my career, both as a firefighter and as a fire service artist - I honestly would not be standing on the stage that I am without these two men. It is a MUST for me to catch Chief Lasky's class every year and I was honored to be able to get this photo with two of my most valued mentors. Thank you, gentlemen!

My first FDIC was in 1997, and my very first class was John Norman's eight-hour fire ground tactics lecture. So you can imagine my joy of sitting with him signing our books at the same table this past Thursday at the PennWell bookstore. Wow! Not that I'm surprised, but he is the nicest, most down to earth person you'll ever meet. As with most of us, whether big city (FDNY in Chief Norman's case) or small town, career, combination or volunteer, when you get right down to it, we are all just firemen.

The week finished up with my signing the limited edition, 2011 FDIC print at Lucas Oil stadium Friday morning. Again, fun time meeting people from all corners of the fire service landscape. Two hours and 250 prints later, I skipped lunch and headed over for my last book signing appearance.
Thanks to everyone who took time out of their busy conference to stop by and say "hello", get a print, or buy my book - I truly appreciate it and I look forward to seeing you next year! April 16-21, 2012, get it on your calendar now:)
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Saturday, March 19
FDIC SPECIAL EDITION PRINT
Well, it's that time of year again and I can't wait - packing up today and heading to Indianapolis for FDIC! This will be my tenth trip and it just keeps getting bigger and better. Though my roll has changed from firefighter attendee to Fire Engineering staff, I still take in as many classes as possible and soak up as much knowledge as I can in one short week. It truly is a special place!
I am also honored to be signing a special edition FDIC only print again this year. I will be at the Special Events Stage in Lucas Oil Stadium Friday morning (there will be maps and an event schedule posted). Please stop on over and pick up your free copy - I'd love to meet you! I will also be at the PennWell books booth signing my book Drawn By Fire and meeting folks Wednesday, Thursday and Friday afternoons.
It's almost time to hit the road and I'm excited about seeing good friends, making new ones, having some of Indy's excellent cuisine, and getting shivers to the drone of bagpipes. The cartoon above says it all - the experience is priceless every year! Hope to see you there.
Thursday, March 17
Wednesday, March 2
Friday, February 25
WORTH THE FIGHT!
You would have to be living in a very deep hole not to have noticed the vicious pro vs anti-union rhetoric being slung by everyone from politicians to the old lady walking her dog down the block.This is a nasty and dirty line being drawn in the sand, and one that my state of Ohio will face shortly (if not already with SB-5).
I am not a union member, but watched for many years as my father worked for union and non-union coal mines in Kentucky. I have witnessed first hand what ownership will do without a union holding them accountable for egregious cuts, safety violations, and worker's rights. Unions, be they IAFF or any other are not without fault, but these latest attacks on union rights and the ability to organize, negotiate, maintain current benefits, and secure a safe future for their workers is inexplicably wrong - and I will use the point of my pen to voice this message as loud as I can. There will be more!
I will leave you with this quote from our seventh President, Andrew Jackson. Sadly, it holds as true today (be it Local, State or Federal Gov't) as it did 150 years ago.
"I weep for the liberty of my country when I see at this early day of its successful experiment that corruption has been imputed to many members of the House of Representatives, and the rights of the people have been bartered for promises of office." - President Andrew Jackson
Tuesday, February 15
Monday, January 31
FIRE ENGINEERING EDITORIAL CARTOON
Nothing like a little freelancing to muck-up the best intended plans and strategies. It's bad enough when these individuals circumvent the chain of command to "help" where they please, but their blatant disregard for accountability and the safety of others is simply inexcusable!
Friday, January 28
Sketch
A recent sketch at our local café, Seasons - ah, I'm a slave to their mocha! Anyway, this character was ALL about attitude and little on being convincingly tough. Imagine a nerd with a "gangstah" complex - which is really humorous considering he was white, overweight, in his mid-thirties, and drove a VW Beetle (I notice such things). Naturally, he made my choice of sketchbook victims an easy one:)
Tuesday, January 25
Sunday, January 23
FIRE ENGINEERING EDITORIAL CARTOON
January's magazine editorial cartoon speaks to any department which relies on volunteers or paid-on-call personnel to protect their district. Quality local jobs are dwindling and people have become less interested in helping their communities to concentrate on second careers, soccer games, and a myriad other distractions. In most cases, they no longer work and live in the same community, as was the case just 10 or 15 years ago. What's more, the crop of young replacements are leaving for the promise of brighter futures in larger cities where their service as volunteers is not needed - and who can blame them. It's a very scary situation with no immediate answers. Aggressive recruitment and retention is not enough - if the people aren't there, they aren't there!
The volunteer or combination fire department will not go extinct, but they will look dramatically different in the decades to come. Creative solutions by smart and dedicated people will navigate through this crisis - they always have! Fires will go out, people will be saved, and emergencies responded to - it's just a question of how far you can stretch what you have and how innovative you will be with the future.
Tuesday, December 28
THANKS FOR THE EDUCATION!
I like to share this editorial cartoon every college bowl season. Sportsmanship, tradition, pageantry, and wholesome competition are just pipe dreams when compared to the real motivation for bowl games. Belly-up to the platter boys (Universities, that is), these kids make you a fortune!
Saturday, December 18
JEMS Magazine Illo
Monday, December 13
Weekly Work
Working on a spot illustration for Inside Business magazine today and tomorrow - will share as soon as possible. Also, finishing up on my first illo for FireIce this week and will post first of January. Busy, busy, busy...
In the mean time, here's a sample of a large two-page illo I'm working on. I love pipers!!
Wednesday, December 8
SCROOGED!
As I was reading Dickens' A Christmas Carol last week, it came to me that the lessons learned in this classic tale apply to many facets of life - especially in the fire service. And just as the three ghost that haunted Ebeneezer Scrooge that Christmas Eve opened his eyes to what was, is, and will be, so could they warn us of the perils of recording and posting crash-scene photo/videos. Though a few creative liberties were taken on my part, the message remains the same - we are chained to what we do in the past, must be accountable for the present outcome of our actions, and suffer the future consequences.
With alarming regularity, incident scenes and video taken by firefighters are popping up everywhere on the internet. Most are harmless; well-intended movies of responding units showing what we do and experience. However, in recent months reports of disturbing photos and videos recorded by firefighters are making headlines. Whether for morbid curiosity or deranged pleasure, these images were leaked to the public, and what's worse, to the victim's family. I can't imagine their horror and heart-break! In an age where nearly everyone carries technology that is capable of taking photos or recording video, we must stop and think about our actions. Because once shared, they can never be retrieved - and that permanent chain is forever linked to you! And just as my Jacob Marley/Ghost of Christmas Past character portrays, you will dredge that chain for the rest of your life.
Cell phones have NO business on the fire ground or crash-scenes, so keep the damn things in your pocket!!
With alarming regularity, incident scenes and video taken by firefighters are popping up everywhere on the internet. Most are harmless; well-intended movies of responding units showing what we do and experience. However, in recent months reports of disturbing photos and videos recorded by firefighters are making headlines. Whether for morbid curiosity or deranged pleasure, these images were leaked to the public, and what's worse, to the victim's family. I can't imagine their horror and heart-break! In an age where nearly everyone carries technology that is capable of taking photos or recording video, we must stop and think about our actions. Because once shared, they can never be retrieved - and that permanent chain is forever linked to you! And just as my Jacob Marley/Ghost of Christmas Past character portrays, you will dredge that chain for the rest of your life.
Cell phones have NO business on the fire ground or crash-scenes, so keep the damn things in your pocket!!
Monday, November 22
Friday, November 5
FIRE ENGINEERING EDITORIAL CARTOON
I LOVE Fall!! I love everything about it, except for the allergies, of course - but even they're tolerable with the incredible beauty of a Great Lakes Autumn!!
However, seeing multi-colored leaves carpeting the ground also brings to mind the ever increasing mounds of paperwork and documentation that accompany our jobs as firefighters - whether career or volunteer. This commentary came to me while out on a country run. I saw a couple raking their leaves and they were literally up to their waist in fallen foliage. It was comical - and made for a great metaphor (always looking for a great metaphor) about the ever-present pile of paper that weighs down the firehouse desks - especially chief, inspection, and training officers.
Enjoy Fall, everyone - it goes by too quickly!!
Monday, October 18
A HUNTING WE WILL GO...
It's deer season here in NW Ohio and the hunters are out in force. Generally a good and jolly bunch, but there are always a few that get the "fever" and take things overboard. Couldn't resist having a little fun at their expense:)
Tuesday, October 5
TESTIMONIALS
Thought I'd post a few comments that I've received about my book Drawn By Fire - the response has been terrific. Thanks to all!!
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Just had to say, "Great work!"
Those training and leadership observations were so on-target they hurt.
Well done.
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AWESOME! I just received a copy of ‘Drawn by Fire’ and print # 99/100. As a gift for being selected Fire Training Instructor of the Year by my department, my Battalion Chief blessed me with a copy. He’s heard me talk about your illustrations so much and seen the samples I have in my office that he was compelled to honor me with a copy.
I try not to contact you every time I am inspired by your cartoons, but I had to email you again. ‘Preventable LODD’ is my all time favorite. I’m the physical training instructor and I teach a LODD class. Needless to say, all of our recruits have seen that illustration.
I compliment and encourage you to continue to share the sentiment of the fire department through your incredible gift.
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Paul, I've looked through the book Bro, outstanding work! It's another training tool I can add to my toolbox thanks to you. It looks great, my 21 year old daughter, big on drawing, not big on fire stuff, was looking through it and liked and understood the work my friend. To me, that speaks volumes of the way this book turned out!
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INCREDIBLE!!! I've seen your work for years - but to see it in such detail brings it all to life. The leadership cartoons are spot-on! Great Job Brother!
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Hey Paul, I got my book and Print, and I can't put it down, Amazing and is an awesome book...I didn't realize I had missed so many, I got #37/100. You truly have a way of capturing the thoughts, pride and tradition of our job.....Great Job Brother can't wait for the next one…
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You did it again - I have used your work in classes for years and can honestly say they teach our lessons very well. you make us smile and laugh - and cry and get angry. Thanks for the gift of your cartoons brother!
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Ouch! These editorial cartoons sting - and thank you for doing them. We can all learn something from your work. BTW - I received a print too - AWESOME!
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Friday, September 24
CHARACTER STUDY
Just finished a character study for my next book project. He (Smokey Joe) is a combination of drawing and painting to create the gritty high-contrast style. Firefighting is a dirty job, and I want the viewer to experience the smells, grit, and sweat through my art - I'm pleased with the results here (kind'a). I have a ...few tweaks here and there, but for the most part this project is ready to launch. More teasing to come later...:)
Thursday, September 23
PRINT SIGNING TODAY
Signing the first of 100 L/E prints that will accompany my book Drawn By Fire - which ships next week. Very exciting time around the Combs home - our cat even got an extra tummy rub - she was very happy about that!!
Wednesday, September 22
EMAIL-BLAST FLIER
Wednesday, September 1
NEW BOOK AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 30th

http://pennwellbooks.com/drawnbyfire.html
And, there's more.... the first 100 pre-ordered books will ship with a L/E hand signed and numbered 15x9" print by me. Orders are starting to mount, so my guess is these will not gather any dust. I've attached a sample of the promotional print below.

Friday, August 20
The Beacon
Tuesday, August 10
NY CITY STREET SINGER

From quick NY City sketch, to finished illustration. Watching this guy dance around in Brooklyn was a blast. He had such a passion for singing that he was totally oblivious to the world around him - including the delivery truck that almost creamed him as he danced across a street.
Had a lot of fun pushing the contrast with this piece - not to mention painting the crazy brick patterns.

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