This isn't too dissimilar from what I do, except, as writer/artist, I think it's important to be drawing from the earliest stages. So, f'rinstance, I use index cards, too, but they're for thumbnails more than sentences. Comics are a visual medium, and if you're a visual person, you develop them visually, right?
Monday, April 11, 2011
Comics Plotting Tools
Here's a nice overview of how a writer breaks down a comic: Comix Tribe's Comic Plotting Tools.
![](https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/blogger_img_proxy/AEn0k_tYKHtyv3hDWq3L36dsyqkeS1LpkwItv6dmoZ1NWRNQAhiu4tKrQU8wJ1dE_Y3N1wnFEwUlij9-AeAuTM9ib405MmWyYSdnzBXx2oFsKY-L1wP8xmHTfZh6hMxQNCtA5qFRfjt1VNF2UTrPu0A=s0-d)
This isn't too dissimilar from what I do, except, as writer/artist, I think it's important to be drawing from the earliest stages. So, f'rinstance, I use index cards, too, but they're for thumbnails more than sentences. Comics are a visual medium, and if you're a visual person, you develop them visually, right?
This isn't too dissimilar from what I do, except, as writer/artist, I think it's important to be drawing from the earliest stages. So, f'rinstance, I use index cards, too, but they're for thumbnails more than sentences. Comics are a visual medium, and if you're a visual person, you develop them visually, right?
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment