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Feb 2020

So I have comic experience and "old school" webcomic experience, and have typically hired freelance artists for projects on a per page payment basis.

I'm currently working on a project for webtoon format and am slowly learning the differences between a traditional comic and a webtoon, both formatting wise and practice wise.

I have an artist, and originally my plan was to just have him draw it like a regular comic, then I'd go back and cut it up in photoshop for webtoon format, that way I could have ez print format for printing later down the line.

But my artist made a point of saying that would be difficult, especially formatting comic-page establishing shots for webtoon format.

Ultimately I decided between future print options and going all in on Webtoon format, I chose the latter. But now a tricky situation arises: How does one handle payment for an artist for webtoon content?

Like what would the standard "per strip" in this case be? IS there a standard for it like a regular "per page" comic?

Webtoon is a new field for me in more ways than one, and would appreciate any advice so I make sure I'm fairly paying my artist while not blowing my own finances using an outdated model paying him.

Thanks for any advice.

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    Feb '20
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    Feb '20
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If a client commissions me for a webtoon I start charging per panel. I base my page rate on a comic page with 8 panels, I just take that amount, divide it by 8 and then multiply it by the number of panels of the webtoon. :slight_smile:

out of curiosity how much do you charge per panel? I know that's going to be a subjective # from freelancer to freelancer (and I have the special caveat of this project being an action-heavy webtoon to factor in) but it would be great to get an idea of what to fairly ask him to work for. ^^

With basic coloring I charge $10 USD per panel, but this is a pretty cheap rate.

This video may be of interest to you, it walks through how one can convert pages to vertical scroll, & the sorts of tricks you can use to convert even a large panel to a narrow canvas:

As a test run it may be worth taking some pages that you've had done in the past and trying this out to see if you're satisfied with the results. If so it may be a good idea to make the new comic in post format after all, as it's generally harder to convert scroll into a nice looking page than the other way around. Or if it's not going well or worth the effort, proceed with just commissioning a vertical scroll style comic :slight_smile: