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Feb 2019

Hi everyone,

I know I've been absent from the forums for a while. Life things have been complicated. There seem to be new faces here all the time, so I thought I might re-introduce myself by sharing a post I recently made detailing my process of creating comic pages, with pictures at each stage. Link here (it's hosted on my portfolio website): http://www.yozhikisblue.com/blog/2019/2/12/february-2019-anatomy-of-a-comic-page26

Perhaps it might prove interesting, and even, dare I say- informative?

But more to the point- I'm also really interested in seeing other people's process work. If anyone else has "here's my personal comic page making process" posts hanging around on personal blogs or social media, or else want to make one here in response to my topic- I'd love to see it <3

There are so many different styles and approaches on Tapas alone. I have a feeling we could all learn a lot from each other!

-Nicholai

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    Feb '19
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    Feb '19
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Hey!

That's really cool thanks for sharing. Was a great read.

Likewise, we (myself Jon and my friend Kris) embarked on a similar journey a few weeks back creating a behind the scenes section of our website for our comic Super Massive. We focused a lot more on the general ideation, synopsis, script writing and how we feed that into the visuals...oh and how much whisky we drink during :smiley:

https://www.supermassivecomics.com/behind-the-scenes6

That's awesome! I admire all the work you put into custom lettering and speech bubbles. There's definitely an aspect of comic making I feel I need to experiment with a lot more.

I find your shading process really interesting. Especially since I've never really done cel shading, and it seems like your work leans more in that direction. It leaves the final product- I guess for lack of a better word- looking very clean? It's giving me some ideas on how to potentially speed up my own workflow ^^

Aah! I love stuff like this! You're process post is so freaken detailed, it's great! :heart:

I do post wip stuff, but not as in depth. Back in the day I used to do scans of my sketch and inks for Patreon.


Also a couple years ago I was requested to do a post on my coloring process on SpiderForest3... back when I talked to people more. Anymore I just post really bad phone photos of pages as I work on them, then post the pics to Instagram and Twitter lmao! Guess I should do something formal sometime, a lot of people ask me how my process works, and it would only be respectful to make a proper thing.

Those perspective lines are terrifying x') I'm going to be honest here- I fudge perspective a lot to save on drawing time, or at least devote more of of that time to stylizing furniture and other details readers may never notice...your devotion to accuracy really shows there, and it's impressive!

The link to your colouring work is cool too. I'm sure you've heard this many times, but it's a very distinctive style.

I like both soft shading and cell style, but I think cell style looks a bit more professional in a comic, though soft shading still has it's place in certain sceneries. Tnks :slight_smile:

Pff I used to be really fudgey with my perspective too, then realized I won't get fast or good at it unless I just sit my ass down and do it. Although I've gotten to a point where I kinda fudge it on panels where it won't matter, and leave the proper stuff for establishing shots and when I decide to draw something at a weird angle. But those lines! I can see how they'd be daunting, sometimes I still get a little overwhelmed with them. (especially on 3-4 point perspective shots)

Lol a few times? Thank you! It's always nice to hear, though, since people are able to pick it out of a crowd. Recently I've learned the coloring is very "impressionist", and I didn't even realize I was doing it.

Yeah, that's pretty much where I'm at- I try to avoid working through the perspective unless it's an odd "cinematic" angle or an establishing shot meant to look especially pretty x') I feel like I've done enough work that I can do this now, although I certainly would have set down more perspective lines in the past, even dealing with simple backgrounds. I guess I never thought about this much, but considering it now, it's probably one of the more visible ways I've improved my skills over the years?

Sorry about the late reply!

I'm sure it contributed quite a bit. Getting the hang of that basic stuff trains your eyes later on to have an easier time winging it, and also helps you know how stuff/people can look at certain angles. With my old comic I laid down perspective lines and all the works for every. single. panel. Even ones where the character took up almost the entire shot, but that excessiveness helped in the long run despite how extremely annoying it was.

OMG! Your art is incredible and I love your style!
drools
Here is mine if you want to look at it:

It mainly shows the tools of the trade that I use, but if you scroll down, you can see the storyboard and sketches that I use for character design. I am not a very organized person and my handwriting sucks, but I try. I try really hard.

This was a while back when I started my comic. I have now gotten a portfolio for the final pages and keep all my notes in a manila folder.

I hope you have a great day and thanks for sharing!