I actually do LOVE sketching! Though I only like sketching single art, what I don't like is the layout part of the comic and especially paneling because I'm not sure of what I'm doing yet and what angle I should draw my characters in so they don't look repetitive T_T but that is true haha! Personally as much as I enjoy coloring, I would love if I can find a helping hand in someone who can do the flatcoloring process for me, it usually takes up the most time in my process haha
Hi. I think most "western" comic and "webcomic" I found is usually coloured. Perhaps this "trend" (if it is a trend) made some of us think that if we don't use colour it will be "lifeless" or "lack of something".
Do you read Japanese comics (manga)? Most of them are black and white with grays or screentones. I think these black and white mangas could speak louder and bolder even without colours. I even would not have it any other way.
Regarding me, if I need to do colour, I just do it (it's nor least favourite or most favourite). This might be a subjective preference but I do really enjoy doing black and white and trying my best to "speak" with only with them. And my upcoming comic will mostly be in black and white.
It ultimately depends on what you want to tell. If you think adding colours is only making it a tedium, then don't.
It's certainly time-consuming - I spent ages today shading tiled roofs and drawing intricate designs on people's armour - but my comic gets a lot of its atmosphere from the colours, so I find it necessary.
It's also kind of relaxing, in a way? I put on an episode of a podcast (or two or three, depending on length of episode and how much I'm colouring) and kinda zone out while I paint.
I think my least favourite part is convincing my clean sketches to cooperate with the rules of perspective, and inking very repetitive things - like bamboo forests and the aforementioned tiled roofs. If I don't pay attention, that kind of thing wears on my wrist.
Actually given the art style, I could dig black & white webcomics as well. The only thing I notice is that when some webcomic artists use color they pull back on the amount of linework/line quality they put on a page. I'm a little guilty of this myself, but for the most part I try to continue to keep my linework in sync with the color.
I think it's great that you want to get better at coloring. I have to admit, I HATED it at first, but after a couple of months I started noticing that I was getting the effect that I wanted, so I kept at it. Coloring is never really something I dread anymore coz I've now gotten into a zone where I have a pattern of how I do the work. The only area I wanna get better at is producing better pages due to understanding color/theory(which is where my color weakness is).
This is not always a bad thing. You don't want to add anything (including colors) to a picture that's already complete and does not need anything else to it. You want to add colors to a picture waiting to be colored.
Now, this doesn't mean more detailed = less suitable for colors. The amount of detail is just one factor. It's just worth asking: would this picture actually benefit from coloring?
I wouldnt say it's bad either...I usually follow the credo that I'm using the colors to make the lineart stand out, and sometimes vice versa. Now in certain areas like some backgrounds, yeah I will pull back on the amount of detail/lines(depending on certain factors).
The point I was making is when some artists pull back on the amount of linework and try to use the color to compensate for it. Depending on the style and the skill level, it doesnt always work.
I completely agree with you. I often see pretty colors on top of a rather sketchy line art and that kinda kills it for me. I guess my point is, splashing line art with colors seems kinda sloppy to me. I believe that readers notice sloppiness in all their forms, so it seems counterproductive to me. I love shortcuts that work, by the way: it's just... this is not a shortcut I personally feel comfortable with, and it turns me off both as a creator and as a reader.
omg I totally agree with this, colouring for me is the most fun part out of making my comic! I actually sometimes feel like my colouring is a bigger part of my style than anything else (idk if that makes sense) I don't even 'lineart' like my lines are sketchy pencil lines which I feel like matches the colouring but they take ages because I'm much more distracted while working on the lines than when I'm colouring.
Even tho I read b/w comics I doubt I could ever make one because I would get bored from working on it.
So I originally was going to make my comic b/w with some toning but at one point, I realized that I had to shade it.
This was the page where I realized that it was important. It allowed me to have a scene which was easier to tell what was going on as well as have variation in skin and hair tones.
I know it is tedious but I think it makes my comic look a whole lot better and makes it pop. But I know it would better in color but I am not 100% confident in my coloring skills plus grey-shading is so much faster to do.
I feel kinda lucky since I enjoy coloring process. I was really lazy to color any of my work before and wanted to learn watercolors, so I figured that the best way to learn was to commit to them for years. I agree that there are many comics that work just fine without colors, but I feel they give mine a special mood that couldn't be there if it was black and white.
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