Intro to Comic-Craft Or, all the stuff you need to know to make
some manga
So lets make some comics! Lets start out with the tools of the
trade...
Paper You mean there's more than one kind? & copy paper
(20lb, 24lb, 28lb, 32lb also in sizes of letter, legal, a4) &
thicker papers (cardstock/presentation paper) & manga papers
(deleter, maxon, copic) & bristol board (canson, strathmore)
& other media/illustration boards (for wet media/paints)
pencils & Graphite pencils mechanical, wooden,
drafting/lead holders & Varying lead hardness gives you
different values
Non-photo blue pencils & nonphoto blue pencils are a
favorite of comic artists because they can be easily dropped from
art & great for working out perspective, anatomy, etc before
committing to a line with pencil or ink & jetpens.com sells
nonphoto blue (soft blue) mechanical leads & other colors can
be used use hue/saturation/lightness in photoshop to drop that
color
Inking tools & tech pens: copic, pitt, micron, rapidograph
& brushes: watercolor/sable brushes are great & brush pens:
felt tip or synthetic bristle & nib & ink (dip pens) &
fountain pens
Other tools & ruler/t-square/triangle/straight edge &
french curves & circle and ellipse templates & eraser
(vynl, plastic, kneaded)
Computer programs & adobe photoshop considered the standard
& adobe illustrator difficult to learn & corel painter
better for illustration & manga studio offers a lot of
templates, screentones, used by many professionals & paint tool
sai cheaper alternative, also good for coloring & free
alternatives such as gimp, open canvas
That's a lot of stuff! Relax! You don't need all of those
things Start simple. Find what works best for you. It isn't the
same for everyone!
Now we have stuff, so lets make some comics! Where do we
start?
Everyone has a story to tell & short stories are usually
best to start with & many artists do autobio comics about
events that happen to them & gag cartoons/comic strips are also
good first comics & try to avoid your 2000-page epic as your
first comic
Starting with a script & a script will keep you on track
with your story & a script can be very simple such as bullet
points and actions, or very complex & scripts are also much
easier to revise than art
thumbnails & thumbnails are your first draft they help you
visualize what you want on the page without committing too much
time/effort & thumbnails can be very simple (stick figures)
& making multiple thumbnails using different camera angles can
help you create more visually interesting pages
roughs & a tight rough is usually page size & refining
what you worked out in your thumbnails & this is the place to
work on things like perspective
Pencils and inks & some artists will make another pass at
the pencils before inking & if you mess up, you can use white
paint or a white gel pen to erase mistakes. & or
photoshop.
screentones & screen tones are often used in manga &
tones can be bought and pasted on original art, or applied
digitally & other ways to make grey values include
hatching/cross hatching, dry brush, watercolor/ink wash, and copic
markers
Colored comics & various techniques to make colored comics
digital media, markers, paints, colored pencil, mixed media &
its your comic, do what makes you happy!
So what's the secret to being an awesome comic artist?
Practice. A lot. Read comics. A lot of them. A huge variety of
them.