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Sep 2017

Bless this post, I've started using Celtx for my scripts now and it's been really helpful.
THANK YOU

Interesting read, will definitely be a boost to my work1 and also for my future and upcoming comics books!

I'd say so, yeah
it takes a little while to get used to the system, but after a while it should be easy ^_^

Interesting, I already use a lot of this that I came up with by experience. I have so little time available every day that I need to make it very efficient.

One thing that is currently taking more time that I wish is that I'm drawing on watercolor papers so I can watercolor, but then I need to manually draw my grid panels on every page. (I don't think I'll be able to print on this kind of paper), so not sure how to fix that. Will give some thought.

I use some of the suggestions here...but I still cant get my pages out under 3 hours. Gah. I think its my drawing technique. I often find that I end up 'sculpting' my lines to get them clean and even. Sigh.

Some of this stuff is actually stuff I figured out how to do myself...
I've been making comics for almost a year and this is honestly the best way to make them.
I tend to make my word bubbles before I've even done my inking (I do everything digitally so this is possible) so that I can cram all the art out without having to break my streak.
I remember when I could only make one page per update because I was using sluggish techniques.

A couple more tips though, particularly for more graphic-novel style comics:

Get a small sketchbook - I mean like A6 size or something. Use it to map out your sketches before you even sketch the actual pages. This way you can speed up the otherwise slow process of working out your panel shapes. It's also easier to notice when your panels are getting boring.
Turn it on its side so it is landscape to make it more economical - you can do two pages per side.

When converting from script to sketch, if you haven't split it into pages yet you can just do it by highlighting - use two colours, and highlight everything that goes on one page. This way you can also do it as you go along if you prefer a more spontaneous approach. It's just a really quick and simple way of breaking a script up without ruining the reading flow.
This is even better on the computer because you can adjust the highlight at any point. In google docs, you don't even need two colours - just use the "comment" feature, highlight the content and write the page number in the "comment".

If this helps anyone let me know! This is just what I do.

I usually do this before even getting on my PC to make the panels or bubbles, make sit easier to decide what I want and can show the reader

celtx actually has and option in the comic book scripting for you to divide the script as you are writing it, from pages to panels you can be as detailed as possible, though I prefer the screen play option which divides the pages by scene with a grey highlight, each scene is a page and the action the description of what I want the page to make (like the author of the article)

celtx is a bit quicker than google docs in that regards (atleast for me ) also it has the option for comments and notes on the side

...oh my goodness me this is INSANE! I love it! I have tried bits and snips of this every once in awhile but never sat down and read through a clean description of the entire process of making a comic efficient. I already have the tools, I just didn't have the organization.

I love this man, thank you so much for sharing.

While I typed this I just figured I could try something and last night I made drawing the grid a 1 minute process now, so this was very helpful.

My solution was to simply cut-out the basic grid squares out of a paper of the same size, and then use that as a ruler after clipping both papers together firmly. I then trace the edges I want only, no erasing lines later.

I do most of this and it still takes me a while to finish,
Mostly because I start and stop and start ans stop.

I agree that the "fill" tool in Photoshop is a joke.
Do people use that?