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Aug 2018

One page twice a week. Not a problem for me until I'm too busy and run out of buffer. Hope that never happens

Do you find that updating novels is vastly different? I imagine it being easier in some respects, but harder in others. For example, rather than spending time making sure the artwork has the correct anatomy, color theory, no tangent lines, etc, you instead need to focus on descriptive writing, proofreading multiple times, and writing way more.

Different from making comics? Certainly. I can't imagine the tedious work artists have to go through to get everything just right because people

In terms of time I suppose that would depend on the writer. I'm faster some days than others. There are days when I'm trying to write a certain scene or express emotion that I just can't find the right words for. Artists gave to literally show that emotion. Or I spend extra time editing cause my typing skills are terrible. So two different beasts in a lot of ways.

Once a week with at least 1.3k words because all the books I post here are completed. uvu

By the moment, every two days. However, I will update once a week soon.

With my comic(when its running) I upload once a week. When I'm not working on my comic, I upload whenever I can or feel I need to.

I do once a week in the summers, Monthly on months without long term breaks and Bi-Weekly December and march, this way I can big chunks instead of just one page a week so I can get somewhere with my story. I don't want to be stuck in story-line limbo so I try to stay consistent. I can do around 5 pages a week in summer, 8-10 pages bi-weekly months and around 15-25 pages a month for regular months, so I can do one chapter in about a month.

Side Note: By story-line limbo, I mean being stuck in the same arc for years because of small amounts when it comes to updates. It's a big problem for me and the reason I don't really color.

Once a week, on Wednesdays.
42 weeks in and everything is still running (somewhat) smoothly.

2-4 updates a week, each update with 1-3 pages... But sometimes, a break happens for like 1-2 weeks...

I update 3 days a week on M-W-F with the occasional bonus day. I've been doing this for almost three years now. I've got a buffer of about a month right now, so I'm on schedule, but that can change if I have to work double shifts at work over multiple days. Can't draw a straight line when I'm exhausted ^_^;; If for some reason my buffer gets eaten up, I still am usually able to keep two pages ahead if I push myself. Working digitally and learning how be more efficient has helped a lot.

I update when I have content (I'm very busy working on to much at once).
Generally when I have a good portion of the Volume done I post it and then get around to the remaining bit a bit later.

i update once a week, two pages in an update.

when on top of my game, i work in weekly batches of five pages, meaning i grow a backlog while updating regularly. maybe when i get enough backlog ill start updating more often, but id rather update the same and slow my production rate to take time for other projects

I have two comics one is weekly, and in a manga style, the other is a comic strip biweekly but the way I make it I can do it pretty fast.

I upload one a week but after 3 weeks of consecutive updates I take a break, whether I need it or not. Helps me keep my sanity while working on the comic lol.

I have a new webcomic and I try and update every thursday, it been working pretty well for me. Hopefully itll become a set in stone schedule after a bit.

I also make my comic in my sparetime, and don't earn a dime (In the two years I've been on Tapas I've earned 4 dollars in total, ads and tips combined). I would also like to upload every week, but as it is now I can't. I'
ll have to do with every other week, which is still up from my previous schedule of once a month.

It depends. For me, since I'm close to finishing my novel, I update everyday until I can get another series finished so I can do the whole 2 stories a week thing

For Project SHaDe, one story beat per week - and a 2-4 week break between chapters.
It sounded difficult to do at first, but it helps when you make a massive buffer of content beforehand - in truth, the majority of the work that is available right now was drawn at the end of last year.