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Dec 2020

Hey all,

I've been drawing for as long as I can remember, but looking back at my old sketchbooks, I didn't start drawing characters that looked anything remotely like me (fat or black) until I was half way through high school. It got me thinking back to what caused the change. I realized the big shift happened after reading Sophie Campbell's the Abandoned zombie horror comic. I picked it up after being surprised by the cover in the manga aisle of a Books-A-Million. The cover had a chubby black chick with a red mohawk, piercings, and a black eye. I was pretty floored and spent my food money to buy it (Worth it!). That comic changed my creative life and made me thirsty for my content like it.

I read and reread it multiple times and afterwards I tried to find anything else that she had done. I lucked out on her Deviant Art1 page where she had galleries full of character and creature designs with info on other comics she made!

Sophie's art truly opened my mind to new possibilities on the types of characters I could create. I had never seen such a diverse cast of women being the leads of stories that were 100% up my aisle (Fiction, Fantasy, Horror & Sci-fi baby). She drew everyone so diversely from one another it kinda blew my mind. Tall, short, trans, skinny, fat, buck teeth, sunken eyes, disabled bodies, muscular, different races, and sexual orientations all represented and everything felt natural and just right. I was mad thirsty for more, but unfortunately there really wasn't anything else like her at the time in my fields of interest that I could find.

After being down about not finding anyone else doing what Sophie was doing, I started to look to my own work. Yeah I know right! The power was in my hands all along, but Imma be real... the thought never occurred to me. I learned to draw from copying various cartoons and anime that I saw on tv (mainly dbz). If it didn't exist in those shows, I didn't have a frame of reference for it. After viewing my old sketchbooks I found I had 2 body types. Muscular and skinny bones lol. Then I took a look in the mirror and started drawing myself. Then I looked to my family and friends. Before I knew it, I was drawing all kinds of characters and started world building on my comic MagicalMashup8!

It's wild that I can pinpoint the exact catalyst that prompted the change to what I create now, but it was such a big eye opener that proved to me how important representation was for my developing creativity. If I hadn't found Sophie's work, I probably would have developed quite differently as an artist and that's cray to think about. It makes me wonder about others and if there are those with similar stories, or not?

TLDR: Through creating stories featuring women of all shapes, colors, and walks of life, Sophie Campbell's work helped me see that It was ok to create characters that looked like me and those around me (who most definitely don't look like the average comic characters). This solidified to me that representation matters. Did you have a catalyst that got you thinking about what you were creating and why? In what ways has it impacted what you make now?

Feel free to use links to your works or examples of your catalyst too.

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    Dec '20
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    Dec '20
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Velma Dinkley. My series is a novel and I grew up loving sci-fi, mystery, superheroes (which were a very "boy" thing to like when I was a kid), and so much more. My biggest driver is to make the female main character I needed as a little girl. I was the nerdy girl that did really well in school. I was generally well-liked but didn't have many "real" friends. When you're a kid, you're always comparing yourself to characters. The only character I had was Velma Dinkley.

The other girl characters on the screen were either the creepy "nice" girls, goth girls, mean preppies, and the "normal" girl who thinks she is plain but is really stunning. The girls with my body type weren't on the screen. If they were, they never stood a chance with the "dreamy" love interest because they weren't conventionally "attractive". It didn't matter if they had chemistry or common interests. Other characters that I loved, like Belle from Beauty and the Beast, were claimed by other girls so I couldn't like or relate to them without causing drama.

All I had was Velma. Over the years, she has become a more developed character so I like the connection now. But during my childhood, she was the homely girl who had no chance of getting a boyfriend and no personality aside from spilling facts. A lot of female "genius" characters nowadays are portrayed as mean and cold with model body-types. Abby Sciuto was the first genius female character that I had ever seen who had a fully developed personality and was genuinely a nice person

I drew on these connections when I created the female characters for my series. I wanted my MC to be a genuinely nice person who enjoys cuddles, has weird hobbies, and finds love with someone who sincerely likes her and not just for her outwards appearance. Another of my female characters enjoys "traditionally masculine" things that girls aren't often allowed to enjoy. She also gets to be the comic relief, which for female characters is rare.

I feel you there. Velma was my fav of the Scooby crew for the reasons you listed. I also loved that she wore an oversized sweater and had huge glasses while carrying Scoob and the gang on her back through each episode. I know she has had a couple different iterations through the years and I haven't kept up, but I'm glad to see she has gotten more attention to her development.

I'm loving it, break them norms and make your world! Creating the stories and characters you wished were around when you were young can be some great creative fuel. If you'd like to share a link to your story, please feel free to do so :D!

When I saw a Russian figure skater, Dmitrii Kozlovskii, a young man, standing on the podium after pulling all three teams on the top step with him and his teammate, belting out the anthem, it helped me a lot. While I know that stories with the Russian leads are not going to hit it out of the park, I wrote one for myself.

I'm happy to share a link. The biggest thing about the newer versions of Scooby-Doo that I like is the whole crew has more defined and developed personalities. Fred gets to explore his engineering side with his love of traps and is more than happy to step aside to let Daphne shine on cases. Daphne gets to have fun hobbies and channel her inner warrior princess. Daphne and Velma fully support each other and Daphne is right there where Velma breaks down and needs help. Scooby and Shaggy keep the others levelheaded and centered. It's awesome growth.

Oh, this thread is coool.

When I was really little, all I really did was read. I mean, of course I enjoyed shows and movies, but my parents wouldn't let us watch too much, so books were always my go-to. I loved fantasy and post apocalyptic themes, and learned that I hated romance. Even in my most favorite books (Harry Potter, the Inheritance Cycle, and The Hunger Games which all of them I read several times before the end of elementary school) I'd always skip over chapters with a lot of romance. I almost always ended up relating to the guys, but I was actually pretty fine with it; I never needed to look like a character to relate to their personality.

Actually, I discovered webcomics pretty recently. About maybe a year ago I read Ingress Adventuring Company (on their website, I was actually very surprised to find out that they were on Tapas). Like the books I like, I reread it over and over again, and from then I just binged webcomics (mainly on their websites). Like, I ditched books for webcomics. Since I never went onto massive websites, I never did come across a lot of the stereotypical romance ones that are all over other websites, and I found tons of webcomics without much romance that I loved. I think that though Ingress was the first I read, the comic that actually got me to do it was Stand Still Stay Silent (not on tapas, sadly). It's extremely gorgeous, extremely long, without romance and focused on fantasy and post apocalypse themes. The writer discussed how she did her comic, and on one video she talked about how to start a comic. She talked about how if you're unsure, just start it. Just start. And so on November I decided, screw it, let's go.

I decided to make the main cast mostly a blend of ethnicities. It made sense in the story, and though I don't have many personal reasons for it, I figured it couldn't hurt the world to have more minority representation. The top two characters, Alume and Marcy, I relate to a lot, especially with Marcy and her Ace/aro thing. I wanted to make a girl who wasn't some perfect untouchable being, but also not one who's entire personality wasn't a romantic pushover. I also wanted a guy character who felt comfortable sharing emotions with people, who wasn't constantly trying to show how mentally strong they were -- because no one is.

So uhhh yeah that's a lot,, oops but um, yeah

Wow, that sounds pretty dang awesome and makes me think I should check out the new gang supporting each other and really working together to solve cases.

<3

Man this is such an interesting question. It’s gotta be Cyborg from Teen Titans 2003 for me.

He was my favorite Titan. I never thought about why as a kid besides “strong funny robot man who looks like me”, but now I get it. He’s very human, despite his abilities.
I remember that episode where he fights Atlas and is only able to defeat him when he uses his human side to push past the limits of his cyborg parts. He put in everything he had. He had the drive to save his friends because they believed in him and cheered him on. He isn’t a hero because of his powers, but in spite of them.

I really like writing characters who are somewhat out of the norm or really strong, but they learn to not rely on their powers for everything, or have problems that their powers can’t solve. That’s definitely because I grew up watching Cyborg do the same.

Even though Teen Titans Go is weird, I always enjoyed that Cyborg and Beast Boy had a genuine friendship. They aren't perfect but they never judged each other.

My catalyst was Disney's Moana. I'd always been influences by Disney in my art style, and my friend even got me drawing books of my favorite Disney movies. But it wasn't until I saw Moana that I decided diversity and self representation was going to be a big part of my art.
It's strange because Moana doesn't actually reflect my culture, it reflected (some what, seeing as it's a fantasy mash up) the culture of my wife and her niece who I went to watch the movie with. I remember the most important thing was when my wife said "Maui looks like my brother." And he did, he really did, and Moana had the same hair texture as her niece and I (both of us mixed Black). The amount of effort that they put into animating Moana's beautiful curly hair was amazing to us.
Not only was it the excitement that I saw in two people I loved dearly feeling seen, that triggered my shift, but also the over all feeling of the movie. At the time I had recently changed my major from Art to Psychology and gotten a job at a clinic. The song Moana sang about never being able to get away from the water, was how I felt about art. Because even though I was working at an inpatient Adult stress center, the only time I really had an impact on people's lives was when I was facilitating art therapy, or when I would draw a patient and handed them the piece. It didn't matter that I was studying psychology and working in the field, art was still calling me, and I decided that I would see how far I could go.

I feel you there. I grew up pretty "Tom-boyish" and my interest aligned with it though I did tend to get crushes on fiction characters often haha. For me I don't have to relate or look like a character to enjoy them, but it's nice to feel seen in the media I consume sometimes :).

That's what's up! I flippan LOVE webcomics. It's so dang swanky that folks can just create whatever tickles their comic fancy and post them online for folks to find them with ease. I love comic book shops, but the selection can be rather limited if you don't like superheroes (I do by the way, BUT I like so much more haha). Ingress Adventure Co is so gorgeous! I started it a while back, but haven't really had a chance to catch up in a while. Stand Still Stay Silent is another one I need to catch up on!! Thanks for all the reminders of awesomeness fyi haha!

Yas I love it get it!! One of my fav quotes I first heard from the creator of The Less than Epic Adventures of Tj and Amal (story is 18+ fyi) was "How do you eat a whale? One bite at a time." I know she isn't the originator of that quote, but hearing her say it really resonated with me and gives me motivation when I'm feeling overwhelmed at the journey I've taken up in webcomics, and in life when I'm procrastinating to be honest haha.

Also, feel free to plug that comic here!!

That's pretty dang beautiful. I remember that watching that ep and thinking how heartfelt that moment was. Even though Titans Go gets a lot of flak they did carry that over in another episode with cyborg through like this epic rock ballad and he was able to save the Titans once they encouraged him by singing his epic theme song. Silly I know, but the heart was there.

That's some grade A character development and well roundedness right their!

Ahhh that's what's up! That's so dang beautiful I got a few tears in my eyes and I'm here for it! Moana is such a beautiful film and I'm happy that it brought such joy to your hearts and inspired you!

You can change the artist job, but the artist soul still thrives haha! Also, feel free to link your work!

Thanks! Also, that is like, the best way I have ever heard heard webcomics described!

Uhh, my comic's here, it's the first one I've ever made so the first four pages are pretty rough but I'm starting to get more into the groove. I'm definitely gonna check out yours, (after the math google meet I'm a bit late to oops) and thanks!

I still love Moana to this day, my other niece always nags her mom to put on Moana when she knows I'm coming over, lol.

I have two fantasy webcomics, both focus a lot on nature, diversity, and queer relationships, all things that are important to me.

Hehe <3

Ah looking good though and hey, we are gonna look back at these early pages and go "Dang we've come a long way!" haha. I love seeing the change a webcomic creator goes through from start to finish (especially in first timers bc the growth is just neat to watch).

It's our artist journey serialized and I'm here for the ride!