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Jan 2016

I feel like I'm advocating blood sacrifices on here a lot lately but...

seriously just keep going, make content only you can deliver and always look to improve. I do think an artist does needs to decide when to change or drop a project if it isn't getting across the message they want. (sometimes we come up with amazing ideas and no one appreciates it, grrr.) I think bouncing around different things you like and not thinking of every project as the "one" is healthy for a comic artist. There is no telling what people will latch on to or what will take off, trends and people are very fickle.

Do what you love, but don't love it to the point you don't experiment. Art is half expression and half presentation.

I would also advise making a more eyecatching icon for your comic. I for one have a tendency to look at comics that have an eye catching icon:)

A combination of "Improve/ Post your comic consistently" and "Be more active and interacts with others online". Because of how saturated the internet is with webcomics, it would be hard to get exposure if you neglect one of it. There are a lot of wonderful advice that's given by others so I won't echo it, but most importantly, don't stressed yourself out! I wish you good luck in getting more subscribers because "Luck" is also another factor when it comes to exposure albeit an uncontrollable one.

A combination of updates, keeping in contact with readers and other people posting comics on Tapastic, some self-promotion, and just a litttlllleeee dash of black magic from your good pal Satan.

Actually if you have a twitter I suggest participating in either #WebComicChat22 or #ComicTalk11. They happen on midday Sunday so you have to wake up early (which is something I haven't been able to do on account of being sick).

that sounds like a good idea...i'll have to get on that one....

colour?
or just more bold?
or both?

i'll send you a link and see what you think when i come up with something...thank you for the reply and notes/constructive critisizm

Everyone's got some great advice, but I also want to add: please oh please make your text legible!

Too many times have I given up on a series just because I find the text too sloppy to read.

If you're writing the text, be sure the width of the pen/brush you're writing with is not too big nor small.
If you're typing, choose a font that is not too stylized and give letters, words, and lines space to breathe.

Sorry but as a former graphic design major I am very picky with text.

If you want to accumulate a ton of subscribers you'll need to strategically market yourself. There are lots of different methods you can find online to see what sort of promotion works best for you. The best advice I can give is to figure out what type of audience your comic attracts and where you can find similar groups of people. Most often you can find these groups in similar comics. Then it's a matter of how to attract more readers through advertisement and self-promotion -there are tone of resources on this topic alone. Outside of advertising, you can also collab with other artists and participate in those groups. It's a really slow process regardless, but eventually it'll pick up. Good luck c:

Oh boy. That's a tough question.
Unfortunately there's no exact science behind this and it sometime it's just plain luck.

Mass appeal.
If you want readers, your art needs to have mass appeal, whether to the general public or a specific group. If your art doesn't draw people in, they won't hang around to read your comic.

Get noticed.
This one is out of your control. You can advertise and market your comic, but if you don't catch the eye of the right people, it will not help.
However, you maximise your chances of getting noticed if you become active in forums and such.

Consistency.
It is extremely important that people know that if they come back next week, they'll see a new comic. There's no bigger turn-off than trying to follow something with sporadic updates.
Also, keep the art and theme consistent. Don't suddenly jump the shark and change the comic's direction.

Stick to it.
This one is hard. Sometimes you just have to stick to it to make it work.
I'm the worst at this (there are even a few entries in TV Tropes where I'm placed as an example of someone that can't stick to the one comic), but try not to despair and give up too quickly before giving people the chance to warm up to your work.

thank you so much for all the advice...
this really is a good example on why Tapastic is so great...

thank you all,

dylpdx

yeah i wish i had the answer to that one, i read all the replies to your question and for the most part, they're all the same things anyone can really tell you "be active in the community and upload consistently" which like i said is really the only advice to give. but then again i see a random comics pop up with 3 or 4 pages, that in the first 2 days get 15K views and 2.5K subscribers....and i really have to wonder how it happens so often, you dont just meet and become friends with 2.5k+ followers like that, i do tend to wonder if there is something to all of this i'm not being told. haha ok ok.. well anyways my advice to you would be to do what everyone keeps saying i guess, be active and keep uploading and keep your chin up and all of that.....

Sometimes, the people behind those comics already have a huge following on a different website (or the comic's own website) prior to uploading the comic to Tapastic! I know that that was the case with GaMERCaT, for a specific example. There's also another comic that was uploaded to tapastic who got like 200+ subs on the day the artist uploaded it, but that was because they have a sizeable following on tumblr who was interested & waiting for them to upload their comic : p

But yeah, patience is a virtue - especially in the webcomic world.

yeah that would make a lot of sense, i had also considered that, i guess the thought of having that many followers just boggles my brain, but then again everyone must have felt that way at one point

i'm going to work on maybe re-lettering and/or finding/making a good font...i'm not very good with typography and i prefer to "draw" my lettering....the bad thing, digital drawing distorts my normally descent handwriting....it's not beautiful by any stretch, but using a stylus on a digital drawing tablet sure leaves a lot to be desired....yuk...
working on it....any advise on what fonts are decent? i'm no good with picking fonts...i just went and found a ton of them....hopefully i picked a couple good ones....

thanks for the advice and criticizm....i'm working to make my stories into realities....

I hand-letter digitally, and I have to zoom WAY in to get clean lettering. Like 600-700% zoom!

But as far as good fonts, I second the Blambot recommendation --- I'm particularly fond of Ashcan4, which is mixed case and seems like it might be a good fit for your indie-ish style!

here's what it looks like on one of your pages:

i actually just re-lettered that one last night....slightly different font....
i'll post it for you later on

thanks for the kind words/advise