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Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2011 8:05 am
by RobboAKAscooby
Adorabledesolation wrote:
. . . OH Thank god, for once in my life I'm NORMAL!!!!!
Normal? Us? Here?
Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2011 8:26 am
by Risky
RobboAKAscooby wrote:Adorabledesolation wrote:
. . . OH Thank god, for once in my life I'm NORMAL!!!!!
Normal? Us? Here?
Yeah, consider the source here... that's like going to a mental institution to compare yourself to the inmates to see if you are "just like everyone else".
Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2011 10:15 am
by McDuffies
Adorabledesolation wrote:Only a few of us actually LIKE drawing backgrounds (I'm looking at you, McDuffies)
It's a matter of finding a challenge in it. When I stopped treating it like a neccessity to get over with and started putting the same kind of creativity in it as in the foreground, it became much more interesting. It helps collecting pictures of houses, furniture and that kind of stuff, and if there's some kind of landmark in the place where it's happening, or if the comic is happening in a different epoche, that's a special treat.
Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2011 10:54 am
by VeryCuddlyCornpone
Adorabledesolation wrote:Getting a trend here.
Consistency of art and characters
Backgrounds
Speed
Perspective (which is kind of a consistency problem)
Shading
Textures
Coloring
Inking
Sketching
Panel layouts
Updating
Writing dialogue
Writing plot
Using tools to convey an idea
Breathing
no one enjoys making comics
ffhksdjhfsdilhgfjsdhg
Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2011 1:09 pm
by Cope
I can't understand why anyone would want to make a comic. You'd have to be stupid or something!
Re: ffhksdjhfsdilhgfjsdhg
Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2011 1:57 pm
by VeryCuddlyCornpone
Cope wrote:I can't understand why anyone would want to make a comic. You'd have to be stupid or something!
cope is exempt from his statement because he makes TWO comics.
shifty eyes, activate!
Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2011 3:26 pm
by Cope
Well, technically, I only make one at a time. >.>
Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2011 4:17 pm
by DLM X-13
I like drawing backgrounds.
Well, as long as there are no stairs involved. Falling down stairs is more fun than trying to draw them.
Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Thu Mar 24, 2011 7:15 pm
by Adorabledesolation
VeryCuddlyCornpone wrote:Adorabledesolation wrote:Getting a trend here.
Consistency of art and characters
Backgrounds
Speed
Perspective (which is kind of a consistency problem)
Shading
Textures
Coloring
Inking
Sketching
Panel layouts
Updating
Writing dialogue
Writing plot
Using tools to convey an idea
Breathing
no one enjoys making comics
Well, it seemed like a good idea at the time (I had a herniated disc and was taking LOTS of percocet.)
Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Fri Mar 25, 2011 6:06 pm
by peterabnny
Yeah, I run into that BG consistency problem, too, when I do serials. I have to keep referencing back to earlier strips to see what I have where in a given setting, especially when that setting is the girls' apartment. If I were any smarter I'd make a map of the bloody place so I don't have to keep flipping through my cartoon books.
Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Sun Mar 27, 2011 3:36 pm
by Aerones
You know what else frustrates me? The burnout factor.
I was going along just fine for two years, never missed a deadline due to art (although twice there were delays due to technical problems), and then at Christmas I was all "You know, I need a little break. I'll just pick up again after New Year's." Two weeks, right? No big deal.
I didn't even open photoshop during the entirety of January. The only work I did in February was for Keenlace. And so far in March I've done three pages, but I wanna get a couple of weeks ahead in my queue before I post again, so...
I should probably start drawing.
Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Mon Mar 28, 2011 10:29 am
by Adorabledesolation
Aerones wrote:
I was all "You know, I need a little break. I'll just pick up again after New Year's." Two weeks, right? No big deal.
.
It so easy to just let it slide. I was thinking about my next page. Looked up and three months had passed. oops.

Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Mon Mar 28, 2011 2:53 pm
by VeryCuddlyCornpone
Adorabledesolation wrote:Aerones wrote:
I was all "You know, I need a little break. I'll just pick up again after New Year's." Two weeks, right? No big deal.
.
It so easy to just let it slide. I was thinking about my next page. Looked up and three months had passed. oops.

I've learned my lesson that if I am in the mood to draw or do work, goddammit, I must forgo everything else and use up every last drop of that motivation, because when it's gone, it could be weeks or months before I see it again or before I have time again. Even if I've established a time to not be updating, I should not take a break unless I actually need one.
When my updates resume I really want to make sure I don't forget about this. If I start slacking again it's going to take me far too long to get through plots that should take a month or two maximum to tell. It's not like I have an action or thick plot comic where I can kind of get away with leaving readers hanging for a while. My story moves glacially and I need to keep a fairly well obeyed routine if I intend to hold on to readers.
Re: Things that frustrate you about your own work
Posted: Tue Mar 29, 2011 9:14 am
by peterabnny
I know what you're saying about that getting lazy part, too. When I have all this other stuff going on screaming for my precious limited free time - especially other fun stuff like working on my garage now that the weather's FINALLY starting to turn - drawing looks like a losing proposition. And in my case, since I have no real audience to speak of clamoring for new artwork, it becomes impossible NOT to put drawing on the back burner! It's very easy to get into the mindset that if nobody else gives a shit about my art, why should I?
someone please comment!
Posted: Tue Mar 29, 2011 12:02 pm
by Adorabledesolation
peterabnny wrote: - drawing looks like a losing proposition. And in my case, since I have no real audience to speak of clamoring for new artwork, it becomes impossible NOT to put drawing on the back burner! It's very easy to get into the mindset that if nobody else gives a shit about my art, why should I?
I know the feeling. I crave feedback. Crave it
desperately. On the rare occasions I get a comment, I run through the house squealing. "A comment! Someone commented! They like me! They really like me!" ... then I get suspicious, and accuse my friends of humoring me by posting fake comments.

After I calm down I remind myself I'm making the comic for a select few who get it. It just turns out the select few is very few. And I sense a new topic!