How many panels/slides do you like to do per chapter?
I do one page per episode, and my pages usually have between 4-6 panels each. Sometimes it's more, sometimes it's less, but I never go above 9 or less than 3.
If you do 1 page per chapter, what's the advantage to that?
I do one page per episode, because I grew up on traditionally-formatted comics and classic webcomics that were formatted as individual pages, rather than scrolling formats, and that's what I like drawing. I like doing it this way because it makes my comic feel more like a comic, it means I can turn out pages fairly quickly, and I can update multiple times a week for increased visibility. An actual chapter of my comic is usually about 40 pages.
If you do more than one page per chapter, what do you feel is best about that?
N/A
How long does it take to make one full page?
From thumbnail to colors, it probably takes me about 8 or 9 hours per page. Thumbnailing usually takes me about 15 minutes to half an hour, penciling is maybe an hour or two, inking is probably an hour or two, and then coloring can be about two to three hours, depending on how complex it is. Some pages take less time if they're less complicated, some pages take more.
How long does it take to do a full chapter?
So in this case, a chapter for me is about 40 pages. When I sit and work on my comic in earnest, I usually complete about ten pages a week, so a 40-page chapter would take me about four weeks to finish.
Do you have different people to help with different things?
I have an editor who will look over my story and my thumbnails to help make sure my visual storytelling is the best it can be, but that's it. Everything else is all me.
Which process takes the longest?
Coloring for sure, though now that I'm using Clip Studio more, that is going a lot faster than it used to.
How did you come to settle on one idea?
I have so many different ideas for comics floating around in my brain and in various notebooks and sketchpads and Google Docs, that I found myself just going back and forth between everything and never committing to anything. Finally I just told myself, "I am going to do a webcomic. I'm just going to do the next idea that pops in my head and do that, no questions asked." So I did!
Have you ever jumped through ideas until you found one you like?
Yup! See above answer. I have a ton of half-developed story ideas. I'll get really into one for a while, then hop to another one for a few weeks, then back to a different one for a while.
What inspiration has made you settle on one comic?
It wasn't really a matter of inspiration making me settle on one, as it was discipline and determination. I knew I wanted to do a webcomic to help me practice my skills, and I knew that if I just relied on inspiration to strike, I would waffle about it forever. So rather than rely on my inspiration, I forced myself to make a decision and commit to something and stick with it.