Cover of box
Entire kit
Many many covers of comic books provided inspiration for the scene on the cover of the box. I wanted something dramatic that showed the personality of all the main characters of the comic strip. Brewster was to be doing something noble and brave, but ultimately goofball. He dramatically flies away, but his trail of fire from his jetpack leaves Winky on fire. Winky always ends up being the test dummy for the crew’s many adventures. The Engineer Cliff Clueless is roasting hot dogs from Brewster’s flames. Pam is being the brave woman holding a rifle in hand. Dr. Mel Practice’s satellite serves an area for type treatment on the box. The sketch I sent to Tim.
The artist of Brewster Rockit had some great ideas on how to improve the characters. I was afraid Winky running on fire would be too grusome, and Tim suggested that we have Winky’s butt on fire–perfect! He also put Pam into the arms of one-eyed octopus. Dr. Mel’s satelitte became a much cooler robot! Tim’s drawing:
Sell sheet, front Inside the box is a 8.5 x 11-inch sell sheet. I wanted the design of this to look like those cheesy ads found in the back of classic comic strips.
Sell sheet, back
Set of six magnets. We let Tim Rickard run free with however he decided to depict the characters–as long as he stayed within a square format. I then added the funky little design border to identify both the comic strip and the character’s name along with the character’s title. (a bunch to fit in a 1.75 x 2.25-inch space).
Character Sheet There was also a last minute character sheet. Originally the magnets were going to be used to describe to introduce the characters, but the sales team wanted a character sheet with more information.
Foam Finger Rocket label for Brewster Rockit rocket This is the label that runs on the foam rocket. The sales people can’t get enough of these rockets. We’ve made three repeat runs of these rockets. An excellent way for the comic strip to take off!
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Brewster Rockit kit

This sales kit creates excitement among newspaper editors to buy this comic for their paper.

Normally comic strips will get a nice custom folder to contain the comic samples and character sheet. But for this unique strip, Dave and I knew we HAD to do something different.

We brainstormed many ideas. I went to the library and took out many books on science fiction, toys, and retro culture. We also looked many printouts from the internet of classic movie posters. It baffles me how designers don’t go to the library for ideas on how to design something. It’s such an incredible resource to use.

We settled on doing a toy box to contain:
* Foam Rocket (for Brewster Rockit!)
* Magnets featuring the characters
* Sell sheet
* Character sheet
* Comic samples

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Matt Maldre
Senior Designer Chicago, IL