Archive for September, 2009

Finally Up

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

I’m up to 6 pages of the final product pencilled, three of them inked, and I have to say that not only is it getting easier to do but I’m starting to get more confident.  Pencils I use non-repro blue, and I’m almost out of the mechanical pencil led (woo, shopping!).  Inks I’m using a hodge-podge, and I’m going to keep going until I can find a scanner and print/shrink down some of the product to see how thick or thin a line I can get away with and have look good.  Yeah, I’m blogging without product… but the anticipation!

That’s one thing that’s a challenge: I’ve scanned stuff at a print shop (which I will not name) and been disappointed by the service.  I’m a low-tech kinda guy for someone with a blog, but I have to learn about printing and other computer-related stuff if I’m going to be serious about all of this.  When I trusted a previous project to some guy behind a counter, he scanned it all in upside-down, in an adobe file (so I couldn’t put it online without massive hassle for me) and I couldn’t even open it on my laptop without turning it upside down every single page.  The print outs were even done two copies, but one copy was on the back of another *and upside down*!!!  So I had glossy pages with the other page on the back showing through.  Awful.

Art-wise, I got a picture of how thin lines I’d done wouldn’t show through, or would vanish when shrunk down.  This means I have to use a thicker line when drawing, or spend some time thickening lines on a computer somehow.  Thicker lines when drawing, however, mean less fine detail, which I enjoy doing.  Maybe I need to suck it up, but I like pens/markers better than the brushes I’ve been using.  I have a lot of respect for artists who can do really fine detail with a brush, and I’ll have to work up to being one of them, I guess!

Another thing I’m working on now is perspective.  Never bothered before, but I’m really loving it now.  By the end of the next few issues, I want to be a literal master of perspective.  Right now I’m taking a few steps and seeing what I can do, and hopefully managing to put out good material while I’m learning.

City shots are another hurdle I’d like to turn into a stepping stone.  Part of it is no experience with inanimate objects in my art (just figures I’d made up, nto even life drawing), but another part is just what the heck would look good in this city shot, building wise.  I don’t want to map out Xenith just yet, until I’ve got some landmarks that have come up in the stories I’ve written.

By the time I’m done I’d like this comic to be my audition piece for Thor or Conan, or one of the major comic companies out there that love that Canadian talent (like American, but with that International touch).  That said, I’ve been working to get my art to be more like the comics I enjoy reading: solid forms, solid anatomy, perspective, shading and inking lines, and technique in general.  No short cuts to be trendy, no talking down to the reader with bad art.  Good art only, and fun art.  I want to laugh while drawing every panel, or be on the edge of my seat in anticipation.  I like getting up in the morning knowing I get to draw today, and I want to make material that people are going to get up and be excited because they’re going to read it.

Post the Second!

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

Blog 2

Having started on the comic I’ve gotten about five pages in with the design work.  I’ve got two pages to ink, and touch-ups on the others, but it’s coming along.  There are currently piles of hick-ups, and I’ll list them here so I can get some feedback and comments from you folks.

1)       Scanning them:  I need an 11×17 scanner for the pages, as they’re 11×17!  I have an 8×11, and that’s, um, not good enough.  Maybe I should start designing pages that are easily divided into two halves, so I can scan one, then the other, then somehow paste them together.  That sounds awful, though.  However, it does explain why so many web comics are only three panels in a row.  Other than the newsprint roots, and that they fit on a screen, I’m sure it’s easier to work on smaller pages of Bristol board with a home scanner.

2)      Word bubbles:  I need to add them to the finished pages.  Yes, I am aware that I could draw them directly on the page, but as a fickle person I want to re-write as I go along.

3)      Script:  NO LONGER A PROBLEM.  Well, sort of.  I got a great freeware program that lets me write up my stuff in any format I want, including comics, and it is a huge timesaver.  Before that I was either just drawing ideas or scribbling in a notebook; edits are a pain if you have to write them by hand.

4)      Drawing board tote:  I want to be able to carry one page with me when I go out.  For days at work or school when I’m taking a break, I want to finish more of my stuff.  I’ve lost a portfolio, so I want something that can fit into my backpack.  I don’t want to risk losing everything, so keeping it to a minimum of one or two pages at a time would be best.  Along with that, and as I need a new backpack in general, I want a pack that can fit both my art-board-with-paper-holding-section, and my laptop (for typing up notes and editing the script).  More productivity!

My materials are slowly coming together.  I’ve got a non-repro blue mechanical pencil, which is pure win.  I’ve got some nice pens, and an old calligraphy set from the Mrs, which I’m playing around with.  I’ve got an old drawing board, also good, and a smaller one from my old roommate that is helpful.  I’ve also got my collection of art books, which are so good.  I realize now that reading them is even more helpful than simply owning them, which now that I think about it also applies to school.

Artistically the pages that I’ve done so far are some of the best I’ve ever drawn, but I know I need work on anatomy, perspective, and I’m sure composition.  The inking is also a concern: do I start with the forms like pencilling, or should I start with shadow areas and then do details?  When to hatch and when to fill in with a swatch of black ink?   I am a little worried only about whether I need to use thicker lines when inking: will my work show up when photocopied and shrunk down?  If I use thicker lines, I’m worried that finer details will be lost.  Do I have to use thicker lines and ignore details like facial features?  I hope not.

I’ve been doing these exercises with ink technique, which was the inspiration for page 1, sort of “elements coming together” and breaking the 4th wall.  Fun stuff.  I’ll try to keep posting more boxes, as a regular thing, to make sure I keep my hand in.  If you think of any other drawing exercises I can do, email me here!

Post the first!

Tuesday, September 29th, 2009

Fire in the Dust

Hello and welcome to my comic blog about Shattered World.  I’ve been invited by Pages ‘N’ Pages to create a comic book and post the pages on the site for you folks: my legions of fans (hello legions!).

The comic I’m talking about is called Shattered World, a setting where the world has been broken apart with only floating motes of land floating in a seemingly endless sky.  The world itself is called Skye, and its people are a medley of fantastic races and creatures from the world that was, living in cities and settlements on rocks from as small as a house to as large as a continent.

Now, a world filled with monsters and magic needs heroes, and powerful ones at that.   In more modern comic books, superheroes defend the people.  For this setting, while being fantastic, heroes fill much the same niche: Epic heroes, with mythological powers, in fantastic cities or defending the wilderness are this world’s heroes.  Villains include an array of bizarre foes, from dark sorcerers and vampire hordes, to beings of cosmic energy from the great beyond.

I’m a big fan of fantasy and comic books, as well as roleplaying games.  In doing a comic book, it really is natural for me to do something that bridges the gap between superheroes and fantasy heroes.  Artistically, I like the option of special effects and strange terrains, but also the classic superhero tropes like characters with effectively super-powers.

So far I’ve been hashing out the page and story ideas, as I’ve had some of them for a while now.  I’ve got several pages finished for the script, and I’ve got some of the rough sketches of the final comic done.  I did an earlier comic, set in the same setting but less fantastic in scope.  It was ok, but I learned a lot about art from it.  And the need for a script, direction, and someone to talk to about all of this.

Thanks to my brother-in-law, Andrew Burns of Biffbampop! (dot com), I’ve drawn up some outlines for the first few stories.  That was hard, in that I had to shut up all the ideas in my head and write a concept in one sentence for each issue.  Focus, something I think everyone who’s creative likely has to learn, was strange but fun, and I pumped out a bunch of good ones.  We did this exercise for another comic idea that came up, a vampire detective story, but my art style development I’d like to work on with Shattered World rather than go dark right away (I might do it a little later, though).  The story for that one came right out in one sitting, but I wasn’t up for drawing modern *yet*.

One thing that almost stopped the project was my finishing the first page… and losing it.  Yeah, my whole portfolio, and some Thor comics, gone; someone grabbed them, and hasn’t sent them to the address on it.  Really nice page.  I won’t be carting around a portfolio again, let me tell you.  Nope, from now on I’m staying put with the art, from my home base, and uploading everything I get online asap.  …another good reason for posting it all on a website!

My plan with this blog is to document the process and development of it.  I’ll be doing the script, story, art, and even things like lettering and coloring when the whole thing comes together.  I’ll be getting software for coloring and lettering, and when that’s done… well, this’ll be one heck of a comic!

In the meantime, this is a journal to note my progress as an artist.  If you see something you like or don’t like, or if you as an artist have an opinion (especially if you can cite stuff you’re talking about so I can look further), please post a comment!