12 / 31
May 2022

These people always swear they're going to be an original I swear!

I've had people come up to me and ask me to make them comic cover illustrations and whole comics and I'm like woah buddy, I'm going to need you to sit down and reconsider. Never once have they mentioned payment!

I think confidence is good- but the fact they have absolutely no experience and think they're going to become famous is so delusional. And the fact they're gonna be putting the least amount of work in and get half of the profit just leaves a sour taste in my mouth

Exactly, they are too overconfident and self absorbed, like they don't care at all that in the meantime that we're working we need to eat, pay taxes, pay internet, pay services and even our roof and most of the time we're the ones doing all the heavy work!

Tho, I genuinelly believe that their confidence is just superficial, because they get extremely defensive and start insulting when you begin to tackle down all the holes and all the vague aspects of their proposal but you know what is the cherry on top about all this? There were times that I felt like messing around with them because I was really tired of all this bluffing and I've cornered a few, I let them speak, I let them be as delusional as they wanted, I've let them rise their hopes about finally getting an artist that wanted to do their stuff but oh, when I demanded the script for the first chapter, not some novel/narrative/draft document/text, a proper comic script.

They didn't had sh*t

Some even said "yeah, yeah I'll provide it to you during next week!" and they never came back.
Want someone with "professional-like" style? (I hardly believe I'm a professional) Then work, behave and provide like a professional! :joy:

You ever notice how many of these guys ask that the artist be ok with staying long-term? No clear sense of how long, mind you- just a long time. "I can't believe no one wants to work for me for an indefinite amount of time????"

Yeah, this is the issue. They love the idea of being the creator of a popular series, but they don't actually like writing.

All of the professional artists and writers I know are serious nerds about art, writing, comics or all of the above. They can natter on for hours and hours about this stuff, and if you need recommendations for books or tutorials on a specific aspect of those things, they'll be like "Oh! You have GOT to read this book! Ooh, and this blog is amazing! Plus this youtube channel!" They also love to read other novels and comics and analyse them.

Then you get these wannabes who often don't even really read other webcomics. They just read like... one manga or one really popular Korean webtoon and went, "I want to be a famous mangaka/webtoon creator!" They don't read books on narrative, or even watch youtube channels about it, they've never even read a Scott McCloud book... It's like... if you're gonna make comics that make money, like you seriously want to make a career of it, you need to be really devoted to comics, because they're a mega-complex medium to learn, and the audience is spoiled for choice when it comes to seriously excellent titles.

Just boggles my mind when we're on a website with NOVELS on it but I guess they don't want to write one of those? Like you write, go...go write stuff. No one is stopping you. Saying this as someone who has posted both a comic and a novel to this site, it is so much freakin faster to post an entire novel than to draw an entire novel.

Snarfed my coffee XD what a great turn of phrase.

@ar-ninetysix this one is the real kicker - if you have this big project that you're going to pour effort into (supposedly), (edit: even if you don't care about paying people for work) you should really want to give the other party an incentive to stick around. I'd be extremely nervous to start a big collab with someone I wasn't paying (and paying well) even if I did magically find a person who thought they were up for working for free.

I have flashes of inspiration from time to time.

I think the main thing here is a lot of writers are very young and inexperienced. They don't simply understand the concept of how much time goes into sketching, linear, flats, shading, text, etc. I won't lie, I was like that too. But I've changed.

I think if a writer and artist are willing to collaborate, with each understanding that this will not be easy, then I understand.

However, when we see writers who come along with very little experience, no finished works, and gives legit no description of a story ... it's hard to be sympathetic.

Also, please, writers gave to realize there should legit be no deadlines. Don't expect artists to work as if it is a full time job. This is a hobby. A side project. Something they do in their free time.

Again, if an artist and writer come together and know what is to happen and the amount of work it takes to produce a comic, even a short one, then that's fine.

For example, I'm saving funds to produce a longer comic, maybe 25-30 full episodes being 50 ish panels. It's not long compared to many other comics, but it certainly isn't something I would post to ask for a collaboration. I've learned from that. And unless an artist is truly looking for a project like that, it is inappropriate to ask that of an artist.

Idk, just my thoughts on it.

Hi, I am MochasDead barista from the underworld, keeper of secrets, and other things that are various and unnecessary to tell you. I am also Prince Latte but we don't mention that.

What about the people that show their work? The people like me that tells the full concept and shows the work they are trying to put toward it, admits there is a dream here and is not trying to guilt trip you or make you feel like your getting something out of it.
There is a large group of people who claim to be writers, so when I post something it gets washed to sea. I show scripts detailed summary's of what I want to work on. How the story will be paced even documents of how I plan on communicating on character deign and the reason why they wear these clothes or look the way they do.

It really shows as well, I'll get the I'm surprised you have this much info there, but no one will be willing to do this work for few (be that very few). That is completely understandable, I don't have the simple romance story with a twist, or the "oh shit I'm in another world now, ain't that whacky?", I created a complex story that's too ambitious to get for charity work.

Just please don't look down on the people who try, the people that post their links to there work https://forums.tapas.io/t/shonen-manga-artist-collab/688064 for example does this seem like I'm doing what was said here ("provide an example of your scripting work which can show your skills in creating scenes, character acting and dialogue? Just saying your idea won't show the quality of your work- people need to see the execution.")

There is a large amount of people who claim they have a story it even annoys me, but they barely put in the work to create the world, characters, power system, clothes, time period, weapons, relationships, sub plots, emotions. They won't put in that much work, [I know because I'm the guy they get to help build it up]. I'm ranting to a bit it seems but, sometimes not everyone can pay and wants to fulfil a passion. Working their hardest and still learning to do better and get to their goal.

Edit: Yes, I know I can make it into a book. I choose not too I have other books being worked on about stories I want into a book. I want certain things to be visual, artist vision, if you know.

THIS. So my best friend is a somewhat popular artist. The amount of people who comes at him asking for free work and the phrase "You'll get exposure if you help me" is ridiculous. It honestly makes me cringe.

Yeah I get the sense that a lot of posters asking to collab are young teens (just a guess) with no idea how much effort longform comics take to produce, and no idea how art careers work. That's not a dig; I remember being young and oblivious, but I learned a lot by doing. The ideal collab for these writers would probably be another young artist with lots to learn and no bills to pay.

When a writer rolls up asking for free work and they're clearly an adult who should know better, that's when I judge them lol.

As for myself, I'm haggard old professional artist, so while I don't mind doing a free sketch here and there, I'm absolutely not interested in picking up a long-term unpaid job working for a faceless stranger, no matter how great their idea is.

I think it's ludacris for people to have deadlines when someone is doing it because they wanted to help you.

If both sides understand the work then, I see no problem but when half the "kids" I use this world lightly. Run around ramped not even knowing what character sheets are and how many panels should go a page, without even having at least a draft comic script. Go back to square 1 and at least learn to see if you are still interested in doing this.

I always assume theyre kids and have never written anything or worked with comics before
so they don't know how draining and time-consuming it can be and how much work goes into not just creating the art but scripting as well.
the people who ask for free art, I assume are just going off an idea, their characters aren't developed yet and neither is their world or plot.

My advice to them would be to learn how to draw. because if their story is good people will typically look past the art. and making comics is really the fastest way to develop your art.

Not to mention if its your FIRST comic, its just not gonna be good by default, so their writings probably not that good to begin with


I do wonder why there isnt some kind of rule against asking for free work though.

I would hesitate to assume most of them are kids, TBH. Some definitely are, and some state that upfront, in which case I will laugh a little but I won't judge them too harshly. But I'm reasonably confident that A LOT of people going around looking for artists are people who have jobs or are in college (many even state as much), in which case they should absolutely understand the value of time. In fact the WORST offenders when it comes to entitlement and general butthurt were definitely all adults, at least by legal definitions (kinda hard to take someone seriously as an adult when they're throwing childish tantrums about not getting free labour).

My advice to any writer looking to partner with a "good" artist but absolutely cannot afford one - get published in prose first. No they're not the exact same skill set, but IMO (as someone who writes both prose and comics) writing prose is more difficult since you actually have to do the artistic side of the writing and not just the technical. You can always learn how to adapt your writing to comics, but it's much harder to go from comics to prose. So go and demonstrate that you do know how to write. Write a novel. Sell it. Show that you are indeed a professional writer. Set a few hundred dollars aside from your advance/royalties to pay for sample pages. I guarantee you will have a MUCH easier time finding both an artist and an audience for your work.

"But wait!" you say. "Getting published is actually really really hard!"

Yes. But so is learning how to draw at a professional level. :slight_smile:

I wanted to say something about this for a while but i never did because i'm not artist so i thought it isn't my place to speak, but i do see wayyyyyyyyyyyyyy more "ideas" that need artist than i see artists wanting story idea ( i saw i think one or two, but they wanted to practice and said so)