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Nov 2023

hello! i'm jaime the creator of "i'm in love with a magical girl"8 I share the account with my partner who makes "cross"1 It got so much engagement when i first started out and even now I have a very dedicated audience who i love so much. But i've been taking really long breaks in-between uploads because of how burnt out i've been from the launch last year. i got so excited but i couldnt really enjoy it because of outside sources. Now i'm ready to seriously work on magical girl and another comic of mine i want to launch but i don't know how to go about it in a way that wouldn't have me dying on the floor lol. whats a way to makes the comic process easier for someone who gets burnt out easily?
pleaseeeeeeeee help
me rn asking for yall's help

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    Nov '23
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    Nov '23
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Break down your process in managable steps.
Set yourself a fixed workschedule and try to take at least a 15 minute break after maximum 2 hours of work.
Take at least a day off during the week from working on the project.

Dang, that's a tough one since we're all burnt out by different things.

I hate to say it, but If you're burning out on one comic, splitting your attention on to two is probably going to hurt (maybe a lot). I tried my hand at having two comics going simultaneously and despite having a large buffer on the original commit, the second one just felt like a chore (in spite of the joy I originally had around the idea).

But maybe a second comic will be more of a refreshing side-project- and if it's exactly what you need to stay motivated and rejuvenated then it's worth a try.

For my personal anti-burn-out methods-

1) Deeply love the work you're making (you know, we all have our own personal art critiques, but enjoying the process really helps even if you're trying to do better).
2) When you're not enjoying the process, take breaks (physical activity/music/an instrument can all be ways of letting your body/mind/soul reset).
3) Take time out to appreciate others' work and feed your inspiration hole
4) Take time to appreciate others' struggles (and help when possible) and feed your community hole. Cheerleading can be so refreshing.
5) Deeply analyze how you spend your time and see what you can cut in order to maximize productivity (but don't forget about the first four points).

Everyone's different so just take care of yourself.

Also, that's outstanding that you've found so much success. Enjoy this moment at the very least.

Thank you lots! you went into a lot of detail. thats super helpful, i'll pair it with the other advice given to me. <3

Always draw in designs and storylines you like, and don't base too much on what other people like is something I learned very recently!
Your art is so cute, let's keep going together! :yellow_heart:

Easy.
Draw multiple comics and stories in rotation. So when one gets you feeling burned out, move onto the next, and the next, and the next, then come back full circle to the first comic, refreshed and with new energy. No sweat. Worked for me for twenty years plus.

The best advice I got in therapy for this very thing was, "allow yourself to take a break."
Don't just take a break and feel guilty about it, but actually tell yourself, "this is my time. I am allowed to stop."

I've heard breaking your work into semesters like school can help.
Like set a goal of a current storyline then take a break.
Haven't tried it myself yet, but I'm planning on taking Christmas off hopefully after meeting my current goal.

The other approach to working on a different project in the same medium is working on the same project in a different medium :stuck_out_tongue: I went and learnt about composing and made a few songs for my comic; and now I'm humming them in my head and everything which is a great way to stay hyped :smiley:

Getting burnt out is always due to something unexamined about yourself and your headspace. Comics, like war, never changes.

This is not a bad thing as it takes a fair bit of delusion to want to make comics in the first place and we change as time goes on. Perhaps you simply no longer think comics are something for you to spend as much time on as you do. Perhaps you want to become a lumberjack. Perhaps the demands of late stage capitalism are sucking the joy out of it. Perhaps you only just liked the medium and making comics was your attempt to capture some of that fire for yourself. Perhaps you simply got better shit to do with your Saturdays and can't justify spending your free time on drawing.

The motivation left for a reason, try to figure out what that was.

USING ALLCAPS I WILL STRONGLY ADVISE YOU TO NOT START A SECOND COMIC. Don't start a second comic. I've done that. It's like getting a haircut after a bad breakup. It doesn't actually solve anything as the underlying problems are still there.

There's only one way to make the comic process faster and less tedious: lower the detail of the art, skip the redundant details. Seriously, whatever is not needed, simply dont draw it, it's a matter of efficiency.
For example: a city bird view panel. You can spend a month drawing the entire city, or some hours drawing only the closer objects in detail and far away objects in simple shapes.

There are other techniques to make comic art faster: for example background patterns, instead of penciling the pattern one by one, use a stamp brush and you only need to draw the pattern once.

There other countless techniques to make art faster. You could use those breaks of yours to research them.

Now, let's see, you said you're taking breaks more often? Professional artists don't have that luxury. mostly pro artists draw until they die, so, you got lucky you're not one, dont you think? :wink: