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Feb 2020

I draw because I like it but it is also an important form of self expression for me. Especially when I am dealing with health problems or heavy emotions it helps for me to draw.

I don't draw then ink then color--I work on my inks and paints simultaneously. When things are going well...my process is pretty transcendent and mystical. I feel both at peace and invigorated. Creating the stuff is fun...posting and trying to figure out marketing and gaining an audience is a drag.

I couldn't agree more with this. But I also feel that if I not suceed in the last part, something will be missing... LOL

That is kind of a good motivational quote LOL

I draw because I need a creative outlet and digital drawing is the easiest one to fit in my bizarre schedule. I have almost no free time 9 to 10 months a year, and the remaining 2-3 months, I travel, so I cannot bring much supplies.

Digital drawing can make use of short (~10 minutes) breaks better than most other creative hobbies, and the required supplies are reasonnably transportable.

It really is my calling and passion. I can't imagine doing anything else. I've tried, but it always comes back to this.

Well, it's true. Time passes one way or another. In 12 hours from now you might've just eaten a bag of chisps and watched 4 1/2 episodes of scary letsplays on youtube before passing out, or maybe instead you buckled down and you made a dedication to yourself to draw. I think that's pretty remarkable, don't you? Takes a whole lot of motivation, especially if you're just starting out as an artist.

In fact, I think the "beginner" artists are some of the most inspiring. For an advanced artist, things are breezy. But for newbies comics can be daunting. Coloring, lighting, shading, panel direction, it's a lot to handle. I appreciate the newbs tackling all of that. Because let's be honest, it's where every great artist ever started.

It's my source of happiness I guess. Also, stress reliever. The real world is just too exhausting for an introvert and a HSP like me. I never felt at home at anything besides drawing. But mostly though, I get commissions from deviantart so I think, that's why my enjoyment amplified because of the small rewards I get.

i do it because it's fun and it's great once the effort is put in and seeing your final peice is real rewarding

The more I ignore the rest of the world, the happier I am. To be an organic farmer somewhere without wifi...this may be my future.

I understand this and agree but if it was just this we wouldn't need to publish. When we publish our stories I'm afraid we are expecting something more than the self rewarding feeling of progress and creation. And if we dont get that kind of approval, then all this effort might be counter productive, specially for those who create out of sadness or as an escape.

I whine all through the rough sketches and lineart and coloring, but when I see the end result I get a big ol' addictive dump of self satisfaction that can carry me for a couple days. I keep doing it for that reward.

Knowing it's a comic and I'll share it with people who might or might not enjoy it too makes it feel a little more productive.

Well your original question was how can we deal with the fact that our work is not recognised for all the effort we put in it. You either continue doing it and enjoy the process and progress and try to become better in this (and hoping to get some following along the way), or stop drawing after finding out no one reads you.

If pleasure in just doing it was good enough for me, I probably won't make a comic at all - it is very hard and it was even harder for me to start it. I could draw flying heads my whole life, it would be much simpler, before drawing the comic I did draw for myself my whole life after all. But here I have this story (well, my husband has) I enjoy and I want other people to enjoy it. I want to make good comics and be like those famous comic makers I love. Because I do love to draw and it is one of the things I know how to do :slight_smile:
So you enjoy the process, because the process definitely won't be counterproductive. At least your art is becoming better, so you can drop this story and start something new.

I originally started drawing because I wanted pictures to go along with the stories I wrote. I kept drawing because it became an amazing outlet for me mentally and emotionally.

Sometimes it's hard making a story and not really getting any interaction. But I remind myself that if I didn't illustrate the ideas that are constantly going on in my head, I would probably go insane because there's no other way for me to tell the story. :tired_face: lol I also do enjoy the process of growth and seeing how far I've come over the last decade.

I have been drawing since I was a baby. So, I draw for myself so I have no problems sitting for hours drawing if I have the time (since I have fun when I do that) (:
Also I like challenges, comic, and stories.
So for me, making a comic is a big challenge that I have taken on myself :stuck_out_tongue:

Doing illustrations, I LOVE. I get to experiment, put in a LOT of effort or no effort at all, draw whatever I want. There's freedom.

As for drawing comics. I'm not sure I love it anymore. I recently finished a long-running comic. It took 5 years. While I'm proud I kept up with the thing and I like how the whole comic turned out overall, I often wonder where I could have been in my creative career had I not sunk in all that time.

Heck I could have written at least 3 novels during that whole time. Which is why I think I'll start migrating to novels more, and produce fewer comics. Age and health are getting to me, I don't have the energy for so many long-haul comics anymore.