Hi, my name is David Revoy and I'm a French artist born in 1981. I'm self-taught and passionate about drawing, painting, cats, computers, Gnu/Linux open-source culture, Internet, old school RPG video-games, old mangas and anime, traditional art, Japanese culture, fantasy…
After more than 10 years of freelance in digital painting, teaching, concept-art, illustrating and art-direction, I decided to start my own project. I finally found a way to mix all my passions together, the result is Pepper&Carrot.
Pepper&Carrot project is only funded by its patrons, from all around the world. Each patron sends a little money for each new episode published and gets a credit at the end of the new episode. Thanks to this system, Pepper&Carrot can stay independent and never have to resort to advertising or any marketing pollution.
All the content I produce about Pepper&Carrot is on this website or on my blog, free(libre) and available to everyone. I respect all of you equally: with or without money. All the goodies I make for my patrons are also posted here. Pepper&Carrot will never ask you to pay anything or to get a subscription to get access to new content.
I want to give people the right to share, use, build and even make money upon the work I've created. All pages, artworks and content were made with Free(Libre) Open-Sources Software on GNU/Linux, and all sources are on this website (Sources and License buttons). Commercial usage, translations, fan-art, prints, movies, video-games, sharing, and reposts are encouraged. You just need to give appropriate credit to the authors (artists, correctors, translators involved in the artwork you want to use), provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the authors endorse you or your use. More information can be read about it here:
Pepper&Carrot is a comedy/humor webcomic suited for everyone, every age. No mature content, no violence. Free(libre) and open-source, Pepper&Carrot is a proud example of how cool free-culture can be. I focus a lot on quality, because free(libre) and open-source doesn't mean bad or amateur. Quite the contrary.
Without intermediary between artist and audience you pay less and I benefit more. You support me directly. No publisher, distributor, marketing team or fashion police can force me to change Pepper&Carrot to fit their vision of 'the market'. Why couldn't a single success 'snowball' to a whole industry in crisis? We'll see…