Tuesday, 2 January 2007 05:36 pm
(no subject)
For possibly the first time ever, I have a New Year's resolution: I will start and maintain a webcomic of my own. The first episode will appear this month, after I find a good site to host it.
But while I've long known the basic themes and many of the jokes to come, I still have many details to sort out -- including the title. I was coming up with character names even as I drew the following introduction:

As you can see, I'm deviating from my past, er, deviations by using pens, markers, white-out, and tracing paper I got for Christmas. (I also got and am using plain paper for the sketches, so no more unintended texturing or smudging the table beneath.) It still doesn't look quite professional -- I even overestimated the margins of the scanner. But sometimes I like a little amateurity. When I accidentally made a discrepancy in Aspen's stripes, I thought, Oh well, I liked "Ren and Stimpy." Besides, she's supposed to be mysterious.
Some viewers elsewhere sound intrigued. The better to speed along my endeavor.
But while I've long known the basic themes and many of the jokes to come, I still have many details to sort out -- including the title. I was coming up with character names even as I drew the following introduction:

As you can see, I'm deviating from my past, er, deviations by using pens, markers, white-out, and tracing paper I got for Christmas. (I also got and am using plain paper for the sketches, so no more unintended texturing or smudging the table beneath.) It still doesn't look quite professional -- I even overestimated the margins of the scanner. But sometimes I like a little amateurity. When I accidentally made a discrepancy in Aspen's stripes, I thought, Oh well, I liked "Ren and Stimpy." Besides, she's supposed to be mysterious.
Some viewers elsewhere sound intrigued. The better to speed along my endeavor.
no subject
I've heard of people post-editing web comics with vector image editor programs, or even Adobe Flash. I've actually heard that Flash works real well when you open up the comic as a Still Frame, it's one of the best commercial vector editors out there.
no subject
no subject
However, you also may want to try The GIMP. I recomend installing a lightweight Linux environment in VM if you have a full VM capable PC. (Intel Core Duo / Pentium 4 Duo, AMD Opteron or AMD Dual Core Athlon varieties. Some older Opterons predate the capability, and thus don't have it. They were the first to be hardware VM.
Hardware VM works well for graphics so long as you don't try to do too much 3D work. You need special drivers to either socket 3D or use shared hardware resources, as emulated 3D drivers are slow.