Read the Difference!
Latest Comics
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#151. Thunder #2 Page 20
24 18927 Feb 04, 2016
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#152. Thunder #2 Page 21
30 18781 Feb 04, 2016
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#153. Thunder #2 Page 22
30 19072 Feb 04, 2016
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#154. Thunder #2 Page 23
26 18884 Feb 04, 2016
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#155. Thunder #2 Page 24
27 19032 Feb 04, 2016
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#156. In Case of Fire, Shake Ass
32 18844 Feb 07, 2016
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#157. Gloaming 1-15
21 19110 Feb 08, 2016
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#158. TDA 0-15
25 18667 Feb 10, 2016
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#159. Misconductive
33 19076 Feb 14, 2016
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#160. Gloaming 1-16
30 18822 Feb 15, 2016
How To Make Your Comic Better – 1
I want to start sharing some of the stuff I’ve picked up along this journey of creating comics. I’m no master, and so I must eagerly recommend you check out such amazing resources as Words for Pictures by Brian M. Bendis and Understanding Comics by Scott McCloud and basically every resource you can get your hands on– always read, always learn, always strive to improve!– but even so, I think it might be of some worth to share some real, on-the-ground indie comics experience with my readers.
At the Panel One convention this year, I was privileged to have a table beside Steve Colle, who among other things is an editor for comics. He had a great set-up on his table with laminated, published comic pages and a grease pencil- and invited folks to circle what they thought was wrong with the comics pages. It was a great game designed to help us see the page better, to really understand what we were looking at. I felt like I learned more listening to Steve in one day than I had absorbed in a year!
As a writer, I have to plan a page in my mind, see the flow of action and ensure that what I write is going to make sense visually. However, I don’t control the outcome as such: that’s the artist’s purview, and hopefully they and I have reached that magical telepathy that lets us each understand what the other meant. In a best-case scenario, the page I get back is a wonderful fusion of what I intended blended with the artist’s unique flavour and vision.
Sometimes though, it needs tweaking. I need to stress that this is not a failure on anyone’s part– it’s a progression. It’s step three of the process: Write, Draw, Edit. If you don’t think your work could benefit from editing, you’re fooling yourself.
Page 2
Happy Pride!
GLOAMING #3 Script COMPLETE!
First draft of issue #3 of Gloaming completed today; very exciting day for this writer! Now it’s off to Kyle Burles for his read-through and then we hammer out errors, critiques, and begin the refining process. It’s Miller Time! Or, in my house, time for another Starbucks!