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May 2016

My comic Voidchild (www.tapastic.com/series/Voidchild/)is featured here on Tapastic with what I consider a nice user interface and easy-to-use tools for uploading and following.

Now, that's not the problem for me. I've also got my own domain and website for Voidchild at www.thevoidchildproject.com7. But to be fair it's a bit of a bummer compared to most other comic sites I've seen. I've little to no experience when. It comes to making websites, design or code-wise. I'd love for TheVoidchildPeoject to be a place you can come to, follow the comic and get extra content that I'm unable to present on Tapastic or other similar sites. But I lack the time to sit down, learn the tools and get a a good website going. And I'd rather just focus on creating content such as pages and extras which in itself is time-consuming.

My question is this, has anyone used a service or received help in designing their own pages? I can't imagine that all other comic creators but me are also skilled website designers (or rather, id like to believe otherwise).

If so, what reliable services have you used? And reliability is key here since I assume that any service or help would need access to my account at the domain to do their job. While I don't have much time I do work full time and would be happy to contribute modest payment for such a service. In fact I'm assuming I can't get around this without doing so.

Any experiences or advice would make me super happy-pappy.

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    May '16
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    May '16
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Hi!

There was a similar discussion back in January - not too many people participated, but a few helpful tips were shared: http://forums.tapastic.com/t/make-your-own-website-tips/96216

To quickly sum up: @Kaykedrawsthings uses the comicpress theme on Wordpress for her comic Creep2. The design and layout is very user-friendly, and you can add pages for characters and extras. I personally don't know how easy it is to use since I don't have Wordpress myself, but I hear a lot of people find it very simple and user-friendly, and the Creep website looks very good!

I've used Weebly for my online portfolio, and I basically know nothing about coding. You can choose from different themes and make quite a few changes to them if you like. If I figured it out, I think you can too!

And then there's probably the easiest option, Tumblr's Simple Webcomic Theme. There are of course more options out there, but it's a start blush

That seems to be one of my issues as well. I just closed my account with GoDaddy after having it a whole year and didnt even create a website. I really hate the 'site templates' for most "put together a website" sites because there is NOTHING that fits. I have to admit I'm also still in the process of trying to figure out a format/site design. I'm not trying to go all out, but at the same time I want a simple, decent looking site that doesnt look like it's made by "templates or us". I wouldnt mind using something like Comicpress- IF it's simple to use. I left all my HTML coding days behind...I dont want to be racking my head on this.

@ingunn thanks for all the advice, I'm gonna check out tumblr as well. I do have my own domain at one.com, but it's like @Shanny8's problem in that I've not got the time to learn all the tools and html to make a functional site. Unfortunately I'm not friends with anyone who has those skills either, since what I'd like is to get someone's help with the actual design and implementation.

What's so nice about having your own website to me is that I should have full control of layout and what goes on there. But atm, I'm stumbling with that as well since I'm not proficient enough with the tools. stuck_out_tongue

A lot of designers/artists use SquareSpace for their portfolios, it could be worth checking out if they have any nice templates for publications or comics. I haven't used it personally so I'm not sure what the pricing is like.