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Jan 2017

Good topic!

For Interface, which features giant crabs, googling pictures was simply not enough. So I bought a crab, cooked it and saved the shell as a reference. It was tremendously helpful in doing an accurate representation.

I'm working on a new comic now and I've made little models of the heads of my characters. It takes a while but it's really good to accurately represent shadows or weird angles. (I posted pictures in my Instagram feed)

As you improve and become better and better, it becomes less necessary to use reference but even pros like James Gurney or Dan Dos Santos use them.

It doesn't feel like I've done any research, but thinking on it I have to say that it has been more a matter of research accumulating over the years and just sort of... compiling into this one creation. I love science and SciFi, but I love Fantasy too. So what you get is an interesting mixture of concepts. I research not strictly for the comic but just because I like to know things. I'm always reading stuff and watching documentaries and shows on how stuff is made. That's just ME.

I do next to zero.
My comic isn't about anything serious in the least. In the latest episode, I introduce a bear mask that a character wears for the remainder of the series....until she becomes a full-on bear.

It's uh....fun. Also has anyone seen the russian movie trailer for Guardians with the bear-man?

MURDER MYSTERY HERE!

I was doing a lot of research for another comic before The Pale. Luckly, that wasn't time wasted and the information I had stored/read helped inspire certain elements for the characters and story.

We did what we could via google but we eventually planned a trip out to the "location" of where the story takes place. During our trip we spoke to the locales--- got a taste for how they talked and what life was like for them. Had a nice chance to talk to a cop, teacher, Navajo Tour Guide, hotel owners--- We write down conversations we've heard to be used later in the comic... I think it helps give The Pale the personality it has. We plan to take another trip to view another location we have for the characters as we want to reflect the culture of these areas but also make them more rounded-- these characters are more than the stereotype.

Because the story is in a small towns-- we wanted to get details as accurate as possible. ie, the size of a small town needed to have its own football team, population to law enforcement ratio, the time and distance to travel to the next town, our location is set in a fictional town based on real geographical locations-- so we also have/working on a small map so we know where the key locations are.

There some (will be more) foreign languages in the comic and I make it a point to make sure it is translated properly and not through google translate so I have some friends who I know can translate fluently and ask for their help.

Any props, clothing, tech I stumble across, I save links and photos in my reference folders for The Pale. (when my harddrive crashed -- the thought of loosing all that research was the thing that hit me the hardest- luckily I had my art file saved somehow).

So... um, yeah we do a lot of research!

Since my comic does revolve around mythologies & gods, I try to do as much research as I can. Also basing the hero's residence in a real life town, I've been doing as much research on that particular area as well. My comic isnt going to be hardcore 'by the book" factual laden, but some research makes for a good foundation.

My comic takes place in a generic ass place within a modern time period, so there's not that much to research when it comes to world building. I do however get anal about the characters' interests and whatnot, for example, I spent around five hours last week reading up on different maples and looking up their leaf shapes and nativity and whatever for a few lines of dialogue from a character who has an interest in botany.

I'm not a comic person, I'm just a writer. But I put a TON of research into my books, although that's not always the path for everyone! I study whatever settings I need for the story or if I'm writing a specific genre, I study the types of work that were classics in that genre and what made those great, while trying to emulate those strategies.

My comic is a fantasy adventure so I don't have to be completely accurate if I don't want to, but I still do take time to research things to help add realism.

For instance I did research Medieval costumes, saddles, weaponry, social systems. I also researched mythology and magic in order to build my world appropriately. I have books about mythical and magical creatures so I don't get stuck with just elves and dwarves.

I like to take the approach that if I am going to add fantastical elements I should add some mundane and realistic details. So that includes researching when forks were invented and the origin and spread of coffee and tobacco. I am also the type of person who enjoys learning new things and often have to get myself back on task after a research binge.

Quite a bit. What's nice is when the research forces me to change a plot-point/joke in the story to something better.

For example, I was going to have my titular character 'phase' into solid objects, but after doing research, I noticed physicists would rather have a sharp stick in the eye than use the terms 'phase' or 'phasing' to describe what amounts to quantum-tunneling. Even there, they balk at the idea of using quantum-tunneling to describe sci-fi 'phasing' because q-t, as postulated, would simply snap off whatever limb that went through someone/something, as opposed to sharing space with it.

So, I changed how my character's powers worked, which limited her abilities (a good thing) and led to a nice repartee (though a bit dry, as written) between her and the MC who was convinced 'phasing' was a thing.

Go, go research! LOL

Not enough, actually.

I just have a background in researching human psychology. My comics normally centers on human relationships made from past experience so it feels more personal. But, if I do have a character whose interests are out of my field of interest then I'll do my research.

Observation + experience = my comics

Yes! Slang and dialect is important o.o Especially if it's set back in time or in a different location than the one you're used to. It subtly displays what's been going on in that certain place. I believe that's called a paradigm. Not sure though smiley

Yesss it feels as if you're actually experiencing what the town, city or even country (or world) you've made up has gone through. And I bet it takes a looong time at first...however it usually gets easier as you start learning more general theory. 'Cause then you'll be able to decide quite easily what fits and what doesn't ^^

yeah I research the procedures on forensic and I also research on folklore and urban legends to my story and including medieval medicines and also researching on monarchies and psychology and witchcraft including the Salem witch trial , the story set in modern period with a hint of the past.

I find myself researching mostly either mental health stuff like how other people deal with anxiety or depression, or really weird factoids like what the scientific classification for a llama is, bioluminesence, goblin sharks, etc.

(You can find how these fit together in the Outer Spaces.)

(Semi) Super1 is a sort of Sci-Fi fantasy, playing off of our perception of what creatures of lore are, so I did have to do a bit of research on creatures of lore as well as history to try and make my story fit in a believable, somewhat accurate timeline without changing it up too much.

Other than that, I went with a sci-fi/ fantasy genre so that I can make my own rules, so not too much research required so much as keeping track of what has happened in the universe I've created. As far as the writing process, I sort of just let it flow and run with it, shaping it to the flow of the story as I go.

We tried getting in touch with the FBI... but that sorta led to no where (they did respond to us, but I think because we're so green, and the division we wanted to talk to was busy, they said it couldn't happen). We're much closer to another FBI office that seems more accessible, we'll try contacting them again soon.

** I accidentally deleted the above mesg, it's the same as this one, sorry! **

Slice of Life writer, most of my investigation comes from my own experiences and personal thoughts. How I view things ethically or how perceive day to day actions in a moderately humorous and over exaggerated way. I'm a college student and I work part time so most of my material often revolves around lessons that stick to me or things that happen that are absurd to believe.

However if there's a particular subject I wish to delve more deeply in I'll put in the research to learn more about it, like the time I wanted to make a strip about fan fiction... Kind of regretted doing that research though... But sometimes research is very necessary as I don't want to say something and look like an idiot afterwards.

Well my dad works in the forensic agency of my city and he tells me a lot of stuff but you my friend do a research like a journalist ,I'm gonna check your webcomic right now !!!