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Mar 2014

hey guys I'm new to this website and all. Nice to meet you guys!
I'm a 16 year old girl still in high school and drawing digitally is a new hobby of mine. Its hard to find time to draw since I have other things that need my attention but oh well right?
I usually draw anime and things like that. Main focus would be drawing through traditional media. Drop by my Deviantart too! blush The link > http://moondrop1xd.deviantart.com18

I'm also the creator of Just-One-Panel-gags. The link > http://tapastic.com/series/Just-One-panel-gags40
But I'm not really good with ideas so if you guys have any idea that I can illustrate easily please feel free to tell me. Its Appreciated a lot! smiley
btw Just so you know I'm also new with the Wacom so make sure its small and easy to illustrate.
That is all. Have a great day or night where ever you are! smile

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    Mar '14
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    Apr '14
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well, making a single-panel-gag is quite similar to making a flash fiction, but in a comedic way. But the main part there is the punchline, that is usually expressed as a cliffhanger that leaves the readers to imagine some possible reasons to make them laugh. [that's what I have observed tho]

[oh, hi]

The best piece of advice I can give for making one-panel gags is to keep your ideas simple. Trying to condense a really long joke into one panel is just confusing and disorienting. Base your ideas off whatever you're comfortable with - real life events, conversations, interactions, random thoughts, etc. Keep a pen nearby to write down ideas as they come to you, and make sure you offer enough writing down so you can -remember- what it was supposed to be about. (I suggest pen because at least if you don't have any paper you can write on your arm or something lol). Honestly, I have a Notepad file with most of my comic ideas, but sometimes I only write like, one word per idea so there are a few comics already I've completely forgotten the premise of because I didn't elaborate a bit more than "Dalek" or "pizza" xDDDD

But yeah, that's the best piece of advice I can give - keep it short, simple, and to the point. If you must have a long joke, either make it more than one panel or make each panel on its own and each episode in parts (I've seen lots of one panel comics do the latter just to stay consistent with their style and make it less of a workload for them).

As for suggestions, I can't give you any that I wouldn't end up using haha so all I'm gonna do is leave you with that advice and wish you luck! <33

My comics a typically multi-panel, but I think this advice still applies. I bring a little sketchpad with me wherever I go, so if an idea strikes me (ideally) I put it down in the sketchbook. Like Uzuki mentions, make sure you write down enough so that when you go back, you can remember your idea. I will sometimes thumbnail out the comic (super rough) and dialog/captions. Sometimes I just write down words.

It's pretty amazing how many thoughts, incidents, and whatnot occurs in life that is good material. I also try and find the humor in pretty much everything like my life is one big sitcom... a

Anyhow, the point is... write stuff down throughout the day. If you just sit down in your allotted time to make the comic and try and come up with something, ideas tend to be sparse.

hahah yeah I know smiley thats exactly why I love one panel gags smile

But I'm not good at coming up with funny stories! frowning
( hi! smiley )

whoa dude! that actually helps!
yeah I'll do that every single time I come up with an idea for the comic blush
thank you! I really appreciate it grin

smile Well, I am a professional artist (illustration & graphic design), but I'm pretty far from "broken in" to comics...

The ideas will come. You see life with life with a different perspective, use that, build upon that, it's what will drive awesomeness. The more you out your brain to it, the more it will make coming up with ideas a priority. Write them down, always, no matter how simple, you can always improve it later.

For gag a day, you've got to start in the middle (of the idea, story). The punch has to happen almost immediately. Simple random ideas work great. Take a normal situation and imagine it in a different way.

Read books on comedy writing, it will help strengthen the material, give some more perspectives and ways to punch it up. Watch and read as much comedy as you can. Total immersion..

well thats nice grin
tbh I think Funny is a very vague topic I mean it could be almost anything you want!
My type of funny might not be your type of funny, I guess that makes funny a hard thing to tell through pictures and words. I don't know. Thats what I think
But I guess as long as you can make it relatable you're good to go right?

yeah okay fine.
Thats really nice I guess blush
did you ever publish any comic? ( well not online as in hard copy)

Yeah, I self published my comic Mastorism3. Did six issues, and then later collected in a trade. Then did an 80 page one shot after that. I've also contributed to some anthologies, and published comics with a friend for a while before I decided to quit that biz because I was spending so much time on other peoples books, I didn't have time for my own.

Since then I've lettered, inked, and done some production here an there for friends. Some published, some waiting to be published.

Frankly, I'm focused on just web publishing for the moment. It's less expensive and seems to reach more people.

This... is probably way off topic at this point!

that is SAHHH cool! smile
Making comics is really interesting and very time consuming I made one too ( never published it tho)

hahah yeah agreed

1 month later

Hello, I've only really started comics myself, most of them are only one panel.
Sometimes it can help thinking of a really funny joke or situation, then see if it still works without the setup.
Or even without the punchline
or any words...

Craig

http://tapastic.com/series/Intense-Procrastination7

Thats my stuff,