OH MY GOD YES
HANNAH YOU ARE GIVING LIFE šš
quick Kate warmup from this morning
how do i learn how to storyboard comics
1. set the panels
the first version is the easier but also boring for the eye, the sequence rectangular-square-square and repetitive, try to use diagonal cut, open space and vertical cut to help the movement of the story and action.2. use movement to tell the story
3. Pose, Perspective and Line density
4. Framing and Silhouettebeing the file too big itās a linkĀ format
In my opinion, those are the main rules to make a good storyboard. If you need more help ask awayMOD.gif
In the conclusion for now, some things Iād really recommend doing if youāre seriously considering making a webcomic (or really a comic in general). Some of these donāt really apply to strips or gag-a-day type of comics, but Iām not talking about those here.
1. Write down ideas\sketch stuff, LEGIBLY. āIām gonna remember it laterā NEVER works. And if you scribble it somewhere on a piece of paper, youād better scan it or retype in one doc later, because tiny notes always get lost among other doodles in my skethbooks.
(i know itās hard to keep everything clean and organized, but this mess is just not productive)
If your project is a collaboration, save your conversations. If youāre working alone, make a blog for your ramblings. You have no clue what tears of relief I cry when I open that blog and rememeber I donāt have to painstakingly look through my heaps of sketchbooks and folders for a tiny idea Iām not even sure I wrote down a few months ago.
2. Inspiration folders, or even better, inspo blog with tags also help with collecting and remembering ideas. Color schemes, landscapes, style inspirations, atmospheric stuff, maybe some photo references, all those neat things.
3. Basic tier: character design sheets. Top tier: common poses, expressions. God tier: outfits they wear throughout the comic. Holy cow tier: turnaround sheets for all those outfits.
(Iād die trying to find good pages for references without these)
4. If you havenāt finished detailing the plot, donāt even think about moving on to drawing the comic. Youāre gonna regret it when you come up with a really cool plot element that canāt be incorporated anymore because youāve already drawn all the parts you couldāve tweaked.
5. Donāt just define the plot, make a script. Writing down the lines and the brief description of the actions serves me fine:
(notice that I approximately divided the pages & the text thatād go to each panel on a page)
6. Hard mode: make thumbnails for all the pages, if possible. At least whenever a new chapter starts.Ā
7. If your story involves some convoluted chronology shenanigans, youād better write down the events of your timeline in the chronological order.
8. Backgrounds. You canāt avoid them, bro. Like half of the comics are backgrounds, especially if your story involves a lot of adventuring and looking around. I know it hurts, but youāll have to become friends with them. Read some tutorials, practice on photos, go out and sketch some streets, use 3d programs (like Google Sketch) to understand the perspective, use sites like houseplans to visualize your buildings better, I donāt know. Just be prepared for their imminent evil. Ā
9. If youāre drawing digitally, pick a brush size for the lines and stick with it. You donāt want your lines and detail levels to look all wonky and inconsistent in different panels. And I donāt mean the cool stylistic varying lines, I mean this:
Also, things on the background should have thinner and/or lighter lines to avoid distraction. Usually less details too, unless youāre making a busy background with a simple foreground to help it pop out. Or wanna draw the attention to an object on the bg.
10. Readable fonts. Even if you chose to ignore people with poor sight or dyslexia, the majority of your readers arenāt gonna be excited about struggling to decypher this:
Also, as much as I love my black speech bubbles, colorful text on black still kinda hurts the eyes. I wouldnāt recommend doing that for all the characters. Black speech bubbles are usually used for creepy, inhuman voices. And yes, having a colorful outline in this case helps.
11. Probably newsflash, but did you know that panels have their place, order and functions? They do! My favourite thing ever is how I used panels when I was like 12:
(comics aināt rocket science, but this one is)
The composition of the panels and word balloons always serve for a better reading experience. They guide your eyes over the page, so that you never feel lost or confused. The images in the comic equal frames in a movie, so itās pretty damn important in what order you look at things and how quickly you can understand whatās going on!
(Eric Shanower & Scottie Youngās Wizard of Oz)
12. One update a week is fine for testing waters. Donāt overestimate yourself, especially if you have a pretty busy life outside it. A stable comic that updates slowly, but regularly is better than an unpredictable erratic one. You can always pick up the pace later, if you feel confident enough.
13. Try to always have a buffer - a couple of pages in reserve. If youāre making the pages much faster than youāre updating, this shouldnāt be a problem. But if those paces are equally the same, itās goddamn HARD. But on the other hand, if something happens and you skip an update, those come in handy.
If youāre looking at this list and thinking āwow thatās a LOT of workā, youāre totally right. And itās okay to be intimidated at first! But thatās why itās important to start with something small. Once you get the formula down, these things will be natural to you.
I'm going to have to talk about Webtoons(company) at one point, and its... impact on the webcomic sphere too. Trying to find the most eloquent way to say that these companies aren't your friends, and that I am seeing more and more creators getting chewed up and spit out when these places are done with them. I'm legit worried for how The Content Creator model is going to hurt so many more people, who have been led to believe that this is the only way to get their work out there.
a lil comic I did on timeout for a past assignment :3
Why is Jakub giving VOGUE in the third panel? Like damn you do NOT need to look so gold while he's on he phone.
And oh my who could he be talking to~?
Yay! A new page of TGS!
Click here to read the latest page!
If youād like to support me and my work, please consider buying the print edition of The Glass Scientists! Itās the best way to support debut authors like myself and features exclusive bonus content! If not, reblogs are always appreciated! :)
CLICK HERE to buy The Glass Scientists Volume I!
Click here to read the webcomic from the beginning!
You can also follow theĀ Glass Scientists tumblrĀ orĀ ask me TGS questions!
This is like my favorite webcomic right now! All the characters are so sarcastic and the art is gorgeous!
Click here to read the latest page!
If youād like to support me and my work, please consider pre-ordering the print edition of The Glass Scientists! Itās the best way to support debut authors like myself and features exclusive bonus content! If not, reblogs are always appreciated! :)
CLICK HERE to buy The Glass Scientists Volume I!
Click here to read the webcomic from the beginning!
You can also follow theĀ Glass Scientists tumblrĀ orĀ ask me TGS questions!
New GODSLAVE ā”ļø New pageā”ļø Today: Trespass in Hathor's temple, deal with her bloodthirsty sister
GODSLAVE is a comic about a girl tricked into working for an Egyptian God, and kicks off a pantheon-wide family feud.
š Read GODSLAVEĀ from the beginning š Read spoilers onĀ Patreon āļø Get theĀ newsletter ā”ļøGet theĀ books
New GODSLAVEā”ļøNew pageā”ļøā”ļø Today: Set is forced to spill the beans
GODSLAVE is an Egyptian mythology, urban-fantasy comic about a young girl tricked into working for a god.Ā
š Read the comicĀ from the beginning
šĀ Read Spoilers on theĀ Patreon š½Ā Follow theĀ newsletter
GODSLAVE is LIVE on ā”ļøā”ļø WEBTOON and TAPAS today!ā”ļøā”ļø Let me know how you like reading the comic as a vertical scroll! It was a super interesting challenge breaking up the panels this way, I hope the pages still read well!
I drew a little something for the Hiveworks micro comic summer~
āØļøLich & Mushroom for everrrš
Why is thinking of ideas for projects so easier than going through with them @-@ I literally have 5 webcomic projects and haven't started one @-@ Magicis Puella Requiem Grimm Streets Jester's Jest Chosen One, Chosen None Hands on Deck And I'll probably end up with more before finishing one chapter of MagiReq @-@
I'm opening some šØšØšØ spots for a few of my "one and done" editorial services to fund an emergency move
Email: blubatart[at]gmail[dot]com
But if you'd like to donate, first thank you, second you can do that here:
Weāve got more guest art! And this is by my good friend @monstrous-verbosity! Iām so happy Verb drew my boooy! And honored too!Ā
You have to check out his work because itās awesome and he deserves the support! And thanks so much again for this illustration!
While youāre waiting, you can re-read Cursed Flowers from the beginning or you can keep up with updates on my other social media or support if youād like!
Art Blog / Twitter / Tapas / Ko-Fi /
GOMEN THIS IS PRETTY SKETCHY BUT MERRY CHRISTMAS qvq
I LAUGHED REALLY HARD BABY PLEASE THIS IS PERFECT OH MYG OD
auditory processing issues
So uhh, I wanna try making a short story in a (pseudo?) webcomic format.
I just have no clue what or how just that I wanna get philosophical on the nature of clone &/or vampires. also clone angst? And subverting clone angst? Simultaneously?
Any ideas?
Iāve been looking for an opportunity to recommend a shit-ton of webcomics.
Every webcomic on this list is ongoing, SFW, and has its own website with an RSS feed (categorized list under the cut).
Cassiopeia Quinn: space opera kind of deal (somewhat spicy costume design. despite that, the story told isnāt actually horny).
Leaving the Cradle: comparatively hard sci-fi about humanityās first encounter with aliens.
Astral Sounds: a researcher helps a test subject escape and they explore the stars together.
Derideal: dark/dystopian sci-fi about genetically modified sapient animals created in a lab and used in secret missions by the corporate government.
Freefall: long-running comic strip about a kleptomaniac alien, a genetically engineered wolf engineer, and a lot of robots.
Key to the Futureās Fate: a boy is kidnapped to the future where he learns that he was a very important man.
Lancer: a squad of starfighter pilots is displaced in time after a mission gone wrong.
Space Pawdyssey: a mix of characters with different backgrounds come together to crew a ship. Adventures happen.
Bethellium: story about a secret city of mages, and a dark family history
Bloodline: characters must deal with the fallout of their father being a demon.
Journey to the Skyline: a young girl is exiled from her floating island home and meets a grumpy shark. Shenanigans ensue.
Norembridge: takes place in an old-fashioned psychological hospital with a protagonist we know little about.
Slightly Damned: a revived murder victim who escaped from hell, a young demon, and a nervous angel. Thereās some romance and also an impending war.
Supercell: a child soldier at a school that secretly trains them has to protect the school from conspiracy, all while normal school is still happening.
VÔpnthjófr Saga: based on Nordic folklore, a group of women are sent on a mission against their will.
Bittersweet Candy Bowl: long webcomic about kids going through middle/high school and the drama that comes with it.
Friends you Are Stuck With: a group of friends living together in an office-building-turned-apartment.
I Think I Like You: very gay (the RSS feed is a bit weird on this one. I do get fairly regular notifications, but not for new chapters. I just check for new chapters whenever a get a notification, which works but isnāt optimal).
Savestate: siblings who grew up playing video games together. Also thereās a demon.
Summer Vacation: high school friends deal with family and another, missing friend during their last summer before going to college.
Cashmere Sky: anachronistic sci-fi-ish/slice-of-life-ish story. I dunno how to describe it but I really like it.
Hello from Halo Head: kind of slice-of-life, but like, metaphysical. Described by the author as a ātraumedyā
Stormwolves: superhero story where a pair of cousins protect the city
Tukk and Rol: high school, drama, and government conspiracies
hey webcomic fans, i need your best recommendations
basically looking for anything that fits following criteria:
1. is ongoing right now (the most immutable criteria, i want to follow along)
2. not webtoon (preferably on it's own site)
3. fantasy/sci-fi
already read kill six billion demons, reading unsounded rn, open to anything
Harumi my baby, my gender envy, I have you on a notebook now.