36 / 36
Jul 2019

I use the rectangle tool and ellipse tool from Illustrator most of the time. Now I'm thinking about starting to be more creative with the designs of some of my speech bubbles.

I use Illustrator to do my lettering and word balloons. CSP does have lettering/balloon capabilities, but they're currently not the best- the kerning functions are horrible and it doesnt do well with fonts that have ligatures.

Also Illustrator allows me to create balloons like this:

As for my fonts- I get most of them from Comicraft & Blambot. Comicraft has some SUPERB fonts, but they are pretty expensive UNLESS you catch them on New Year's Day when they have a sale on all of their fonts for the price of the new year(i.e., in 2020, fonts will be on sale for $20.20 each all day on Jan 1). Blambot has great fonts as well- his is cheaper(I can buy his fonts any day of the year coz they usually average about $20-$25); he also has FREE fonts that he allows small indie and webcomic artists to use.

I have page template that already have everything I need for a page - templates of bubbles, texts, effects or colors. I simply delete what I don't need in the current page I'm working on. Bubbles are shape-based.
27

i use the circle tool and manually add the arrow with freehand :blush:

and depending on the tone i increase the outline thickness

I use ComicLife and mostly Blambot fonts, though I might invest in some version of Illustrator in the not too distant future.

The pen tool and vector shapes in Photoshop. Give's me a lot of freedom. I do freehand a bit if I need a special shape that the tools cannot provide.

I don't use apps, they seem to shopped and soulless. here's an example of how I do it for my book. the bubbles are blank on purpose but I started out with the text and colored in the space around it then moved the bubbles accordingly to flow with the page as best as possible. I try to give the dialogue as much symmetry as possible spanning over the entire page, binding the panels together further and making it all one big picture. then of course I trace a line around the shapes when I'm doing the final linework. give it a try!

I might suggest Affinity Designer- from what I can see it's basically Illustrator, at a more affordable price(one time payment of $40). The subscription version of Illustrator is $50 a month(yikes!) unless you can get an older version.

I'm still using my old copy of Manga Studio 5 (which I think is now Clip Studio or something?) so I just use their word balloon tool. I started out with the ellipse balloon, then switched to the curve balloon for a while but went back to the ellipse one because the curve balloons were looking too messy. Maybe one day I'll try to make them myself but it just saves so much time...

I draw them myself lol. It looks weird having clean bubbles with how my comics look, somehow.

yea I just draw mine by hands. it's better that way, I have control over it better that way and it looks more natural. but if you are just really bad at doing it then, use remade bubble.

Former Krita User here.

I don't like it either. I've always wanted the dev team to improve it.

I use the balloon tool from CSP. Not the best, but works for me.

My font is Wild Words Roman, got it for free in a very old forum a long time ago