Do you have any advice for someone aspiring to start their own webcomic?

mynameismad:

1. Know how it ends before you begin

2. Make an update schedule that you can reliably stick to, even if it’s one page every two weeks. 

3. Anticipate and accept that your story and art style will change drastically over the lifetime of the comic and that’s not a bad thing.

4. Don’t wait to start it until you think your art and the story are perfect, you’ll figure a lot out as you go and people won’t become seriously invested in your comic until you’re at least 50-100 pages in, so you have to get those out of the way in order to really get to the meat of your story and the character/plot development that will keep people interested and coming back to read it. (this is of course assuming you’re interested in a long-format webcomic, which is the type I’m doing and the only kind I can really speak to.)

5. Start posting to a communal art site like Tumblr or Smackjeeves, which have a built-in audience of webcomic readers.

6. If this is your first webcomic, approach the task like it’s practice for your next project, rather than the best and only thing you will ever create. This takes a lot of pressure off of you and allows you to try new things and become a better artist as you go. 

7. Your next project will be better than this one, but you can’t get to it until this one is finished. 

Do you have any advice for someone aspiring to start their own webcomic?

mynameismad:

1. Know how it ends before you begin

2. Make an update schedule that you can reliably stick to, even if it’s one page every two weeks. 

3. Anticipate and accept that your story and art style will change drastically over the lifetime of the comic and that’s not a bad thing.

4. Don’t wait to start it until you think your art and the story are perfect, you’ll figure a lot out as you go and people won’t become seriously invested in your comic until you’re at least 50-100 pages in, so you have to get those out of the way in order to really get to the meat of your story and the character/plot development that will keep people interested and coming back to read it. (this is of course assuming you’re interested in a long-format webcomic, which is the type I’m doing and the only kind I can really speak to.)

5. Start posting to a communal art site like Tumblr or Smackjeeves, which have a built-in audience of webcomic readers.

6. If this is your first webcomic, approach the task like it’s practice for your next project, rather than the best and only thing you will ever create. This takes a lot of pressure off of you and allows you to try new things and become a better artist as you go. 

7. Your next project will be better than this one, but you can’t get to it until this one is finished. 

kaylapocalypse:

Actually

The question I get the most is how I write characters that feel like real people. 

Generally when I’m designing a human being, I deconstruct them into 7 major categories:

1. Primary Drive
2. Fear: Major and Secondary
3. Physical Desires
4. Style of self expression
5. How they express affection
6. What controls them (what they are weak for)
7. What part of them will change.

1. Primary Drive: This is generally related to the plot. What are their plot related goals? How are they pulling the plot forward? how do they make decisions? What do they think they’re doing and how do they justify doing it.

2. Fear: First, what is their deep fear? Abandonment? being consumed by power? etc. Second: tiny fears. Spiders. someone licking their neck. Small things that bother them. At least 4.

3. Physical desires. How they feel about touch. What is their perceived sexual/romantic orientation. Do their physical desires match up with their psychological desires.

4. Style of self expression: How they talk. Are they shy? Do they like to joke around and if so, how? Are they anxious or confident internally and how do they express that externally. What do words mean to them? More or less than actions? Does their socioeconomic background affect the way they present themselves socially? 

5.

How they express affection: Do they express affection through actions or words. Is expressing affection easy for them or not. How quickly do they open up to someone they like. Does their affection match up with their physical desires. how does the way they show their friends that they love them differ from how they show a potential love interest that they love them. is affection something they struggle with?

6. What controls them (what they are weak for): what are they almost entirely helpless against. What is something that influences them regardless of their own moral code. What– if driven to the end of the wire— would they reject sacrificing. What/who would they cut off their own finger for.  What would they kill for, if pushed. What makes them want to curl up and never go outside again from pain. What makes them sink to their knees from weakness or relief. What would make them weep tears of joy regardless where they were and who they were in front of. 

7. WHAT PART OF THEM WILL CHANGE: people develop over time. At least two of the above six categories will be altered by the storyline–either to an extreme or whittled down to nothing. When a person experiences trauma, their primary fear may change, or how they express affection may change, etc. By the time your book is over, they should have developed. And its important to decide which parts of them will be the ones that slowly get altered so you can work on monitoring it as you write. making it congruent with the plot instead of just a reaction to the plot. 

That’s it.

But most of all, you have to treat this like you’re developing a human being. Not a “character” a living breathing person. When you talk, you use their voice. If you want them to say something and it doesn’t seem like (based on the seven characteristics above) that they would say it, what would they say instead?

If they must do something that’s forced by the plot, that they wouldn’t do based on their seven options, they can still do the thing, but how would they feel internally about doing it?

How do their seven characteristics meet/ meld with someone else’s seven and how will they change each other?

Once you can come up with all the answers to all of these questions, you begin to know your character like you’d know one of your friends. When you can place them in any AU and know how they would react.

They start to breathe.

things that make me feel better about myself that I think a lot of people forget

jewlsies:

those little things on ur nose aren’t blackheads, don’t try and get rid of them they’re sebaceous filaments and they’re permanent and literally everyone has them

every girl has that little pouch of fat on her lower tummy, despite what magazines try n show u, you have important organs there that need to be protected don’t try and get rid of ur pouch

ur body is smarter than u think and it knows what to do when u eat more than normal. one bad day, or even week, of eating poorly isn’t gonna ruin anything at all I pinky promise

if u think u look good up until u try taking a selfie, it’s not ur fault – our faces are asymmetrical and when u see ur face flipped it will look unnatural to u, since u don’t see it that way when u look in the mirror. to everyone else it looks perfectly fine

no one’s stomach looks the same at 8pm as it does at 8am. no one has a chiseled six pack after a day of eating, not even the super fit people u see on tumblr, because ur stomach naturally expands after eating and expecting to have a flat tummy before bed is very unrealistic

no one notices if the bags under ur eyes are bad today. no one pays attention to the bump in ur nose or the zit on ur chin or the piece of hair that u missed when u were straightening. literally no one notices these things except you so stop worrying about it ur gonna be fine

sometimes u just gotta get over urself