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May 2018

When I started planning one of my comics I created a whole new art style I had never used before for it. I have two comics planned in that style. I'm now planning another comic and i made another style. Is this a weird thing to do? Do people normally just draw how they normally draw and what do you do if you have multiple comics? Do you have different styles for each or the same?

Normal style- (tbh it changes alot but its enough to see the very obvious difference

Cartoon- (this is kinda old its changed a bit)

and I dont have any of the other style yet

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    May '18
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    May '18
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i only have on series right now, although im working on the pilot for another potential series (might be stillborn, might happen, depends on what life throws at me) that has a very different style. largely because the pilot is screenprinting and linocut, which requires a very different style.

its nice to switch up styles to keep things fresh, and suited to the tone of the story. my main comic, TWAW, is pretty high effort with a very pencilly and painterly look with lots of shading and glowy bits, whereas this pilot is gonna be far inkier and sketchier in the lines, and use only three flat shades of colour (in screenprint, the linocuts are a swirly gradient of blues purples and greens but with no real shading, just binary colour or white)

some examples from twaw2:

some examples from the pilot:

This is the art style I use for works which I authored myself, including Pandora's Scar1 and Ti Amo.

When I do commissioned works based on content authored by someone else, the art tends to look like this:

I didn't set out intentionally to make a "own works" vs "commission" styles, it just happens that the first style is a better fit for the stories I've come up with so far. But I do enjoy drawing in the second style as well, and as far as my local public goes, it's relatively free from the baggage of certain preconceptions people have about anime/manga influenced art styles, so it tends to get put up when I pitch for commissions :sweat_smile:

My main series, Aegis, has a very serious story, so I've been trying to go for a serious style: semi-realistic anatomy, realistic shading, and all that. I'm also trying to sell the whole immersive-world thing, so yeah.


There is a different series I've been (lazily) working on, which I don't even upload to Tapas. The story has a serious angle, but the main character is very sarcastic, with a heavy dose of deadpan humor. I wanted to make something kinda funny (whether it's actually funny is questionable) so I kept it light and much more cartoon-esque than Aegis.

Looks gorgeous!!! I think that using different styles is overall a good idea because each one communicates the idea differently. Hyper realistic comic look awkward when they are based on gag humor. I have 3 styles. Here in Tapas I use manga, but later I would like to make a horror book. Though I heard some artists say that is good to have a recognizable style to build a name. I would love to see your comic when you publish it! <3


Oh my gosh, one of my favourite things to do is draw comics in different styles! One of my comic shorts I did in school was faaar different than the style of the comic Time Travelling Sherlock and Hipster Watson I do on Tapas.

This is a page from the other example:

I went rubber hose-y for my Tapas comic, as it's on the goofy end, and I went more with more grungy realism with the above, as it was a heavier topic. Whereas this is the style I usually gravitate toward is different than both those:

Like @punkarsenic said, the style really depends on the tone of the story, which is great as it gives people a chance to experiment and play around. I do run into the issue though, where my variety of styles gets in the way of attracting a specific niche, and can cause confusion for clients. I find that to be more of an issue with illustrations though, as you are marketing toward different clients all the time and it's nice to have a style so they know what to expect. On the other hand, comics may have more flexibility as you are targeting a reader base, who hopefully appreciate you as a storyteller as well and look forward to anything you create. I can't say for sure though, as I'm not an experienced comic artist :slight_smile: