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If you're really interested in your word balloons, take some time to find and study some of the best lettering out there. Tom Orzechowski is an old friend and one of the finest letterers in the business. Artists should design their work with space for story and dialogue in the same way that illustrators design space for titles.
Narrative should only be used where imagery can't show the information or the scene properly. Dialog should be easy to follow. Learn how emotions can be displayed by the way the word balloon is drawn. Think about how size of lettering, caps and lower case, italics all contribute to the tenor of what's being said. Don't write out "Whisper" when slightly smaller, italicized lettering will denote a whisper.
http://comicsbulletin.com/classic-interview-tom-orzechowski-part-i-talking-the-comics-business-lettering-inking-and-his-task-force-x/
Pick up some of his work. Good lettering makes the comic book fun to read. Take a good look at the sound effects. I still remember the first time I saw the strong winding blades of a helicopter shown as "Thwok! Thwok! Thwok!" and could actually hear the sound in my head.
There is an art to good lettering. Take time to discover and hone it.
Thanks for the thoughts, Cris Palomino! You're very right about that. I keep forgetting the extra space sometimes, because of what I learned about spaces in renders, in general. It just wants me to zoom in more, or fill up that space, and stuff...
I've begun to re-do my lettering&speech bubbles entirely, and I now have an English and a German speech bubbles set, complete with the different sizes, for the first Division page. I also have begin the lettering inside of ClipStudio rather than Photoshop Elements. ClipStudio isn't quite as cooperative as Photoshop, and for some weird reason, the 18pt font I use is just a third of that size in ClipStudio compared to PS. But I guess it's a matter of practice and learning, as you said.
Your artwork is excellent...
Thanks kindly for the tip and technique...
Wow..enjoying your work BUT this is exceptional... the restaurant/diner part reminds me of a Edward Hopper painting... Love it..
My creative process is really just whatever comes to me. I read things, they enter my subconscious, something happens, ideas then enter my conscious. My only job is to record what I'm given. So, in this case, the covers are what I was given and there's only 3 of the 4 covers because I haven't recieved the 4th cover yet. Once I start working on the series, the 4th cover will show up.
Oh just stop, you. *blush*
Just kidding! Don't ever stop! Thank you! Thank you! Thank you!
EXPOSED: Magicjava's No-Talent Word Balloon Hack!
I figured I'd finish up my discussion on word balloons by showing how I actually make them. It's simple, really. I use a product called Comic Life. In addition to having features like page layout templates and a script editor for your stories, Comic Life has very nice word balloon capabilities. They offer a 30 day free trial, and it's less than $30 to buy. Mac and Windows are both supported.
As you can see from the picture above, the word balloon tails and connectors between balloons can have their curves adjusted so they work with your illustration. This is done with a standard bezier curve control.
The following additional features are supported:
Balloon Kinds
Most popular kinds of word balloons are supported, as you can see in the image above. The way you create a word balloon is by clicking on the kind you want. Yup, just 1 click does it. The option on the far right is to add child word balloon to a selected word balloon. The child will inherit all the properties of its parent by default, but you can change the properties manually if you want to.
Fonts Quick Bar
The above controls let you control a word balloon's font, font style, font size, and font color. There's also controls for setting common font styles with 1 click, and for setting the justification of text within the word balloon.
This bar provides quick access to some of the more common options from the Inspector panel's editor panes.
Balloon Properties Quick Bar
These controls let you set how thick a word balloon's border is, what color it is, what the fill is for the word balloon, and if the balloon should have a drop shadow.
Fills can be colors or gradients. There are many preset options to chose from, or you can use a color picker (which is where I set opacity for my word balloons) or a gradient editor to customize your results.
This bar provides quick access to some of the more common options from the Inspector panel's editor panes.
Form Editor Pane (Yeah, I know, Weird Name, But It's For Editing Balloons)
The form edit pane is available from the Inspector panel. The options are:
Graphic Editor Pane
The graphic edit pane is available from the Inspector panel. Really, too many options here to even discuss. It's worth playing around with. I'll just hit a few highlights.
Text Editor Pane
The text edit pane is available from the Inspector panel. This is where you find your advanced controls for managing your text's appearance, including how much of an inset you want between your border and your text.
Working on a completely non-postwork, shaderless solution for people looking for a cartoony look. This is a work in progress, but it uses the Dzdefault shader from the DS Default directory, and several directional lights.
I'm working to whittle it down into something easily replicable. Keep in mind, no postwork was done to this image at all.
Looks nice....
At what resolution do you guys render at for a comic? Do you start with a large size and then reduce it or do you start smaller?
For serious projects, I always render and compose large. And build the pages in a higher DPI, That way if I want something to publish and print, it's already the right size.
Going from large to small: Yes. Going from small to large: NO!!!
Also, that simple toon solution I was working on, isn't working out so good. Different skintones and the like really look poor with it. That said I'm working on something else.
The "No Budget Toon-torial".
My original art is in large size and I always keep the original. For the pages I reduce size, as the page Iäm uploading to doesn't even accept larger formats. Makinf the pages in large size and only then reduce might be the batter strategy though, but I'm a far cry from ever getting something printed and if so I have to make major rearrangements anyway.
I'm liking your cover design but the super names here are "don't dead open inside" material. Black The Kid and Fury Clown Fury together for another exciting adventure.
I agree with everyone else. Large file sizes are best.
Looks very nice, vrba79. I can't wait to give it a try.
Thank you, and yeah, I think you're right about the names. I also don't like the 3D issue numbers on these covers. I'll see what I can do.
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Just a couple of pages from one of my books.
Thanks, Magicjava. I'm very surprised at how flexible a shader set it is. For years I thought it was just absolute junk, but I never really applied much time into it.
Here's a test render for just the skin. The one on the left is VSS. The one on the right is your method with slightly tweeked values for the colors (I added 10 to each of the RGB elements for each color). Looks pretty good. I'll try the hair and clothes and a little bit of gloss for the skin tomorow.
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EDIT: Also, for agent unawares, there's this:
That is way more readable.
Wow! So far, so good!
Here's pages 3 and 4 from one of my books. Pages 1 and 2 were posted a couple of posts back.
Has anybody done anything with 3D renders and manga-style storytelling? I don’t mean anime-style-art or even the reverse reading order (though from my research that seems partially relevant, at least for panel layout and word balloon presentation) but the way manga tends to be more impressionistic. More closeups, less characters-against-backgrounds. Text placed in different places to guide readers through panels. I’m thinking about doing something with a more manga-like approach but I’m having problems visualizing it with realistic color figures (I always end up imagining American comic panels) and I think even a few pages of somebody else’s efforts in that area could help.
(I have another project I’m perfectly happy with in what my brain insists on referring to as ‘Vertigo style’but for this one I think the story would work better in that more impressionistic style.)
ETA; I guess what I could do is maybe try to create a page from a pre-existing manga using Daz models and see how it looks...
I've thought of doing this too, and the approach I've decided on was what you suggested in your last sentence, reproduce an existing manga panel by panel. However, I've only gotten to the "buy a manga" stage, I haven't started reproducing it yet. :(
That said, there are YouTube videos that give instructions on how to draw manga. Just search for "how to draw manga" and you'll get a ton of them.
EDIT: You have a nice DeviantArt gallery. I like the way you work with light.
My impression about manga was that it's mostly about how you draw your characters but I might out me here as.. ignorant. So I wouldn't even know which label to put on my comic there...
Here's my latest go with the DS Default shaders. The steps I did to produce this image are:
The image below shows the VSS toon on the left, in the middle is the same toon after the dzSkin shader was applied to her skin surfaces, and the one on the right is the same toon after the dzSkin shader was applied to her skin surfaces and Specular Strength set to 15% (from the default of 100%)
EDIT: Here's the same thing, but starting with the defaut Sakura model. No VSS shaders involved.
'How to draw manga' seems to be a lot more about how to draw in big-eyes style. While I subconsciously noticed some of the differences between manga and American-comic style, I didn't really understand what was going on until I read some Scott McCloud talking about it and then did more research. Apparently a lot of the differences are pretty visible to academics in the field but without training (or at least a tutorial) it's definitely hard to see. The major gist I've picked up is that
1.) the panel reading order is different between USA comcis and manga not just in left to right vs right to left, but also the way you follow art and bubbles. A couple quotes from http://www.hoodedutilitarian.com/2010/06/visual-languages-of-manga-and-comics/:
In manga, it's super important to avoid using t-junctions in panel layout, because they're more confusing in manga. That page also talks some about the differences in speech bubble placement.
What Scott McCloud talks about is how manga is generally more focused on portraying how things _feel_ emotionally than the actions themselves-- even in action manga. Like (my example) if somebody is zooming really fast around somebody else, in comics you might see that-- the speedster zooming around the target making a whirlwind, and the whole thing framed against a background. Manga might portray the same event with a closeup on the target having whirly eyes with circular speed lines, showing that the target is really dizzy, with no real background to speak of.
One reason I want to try the manga approach is because I have a suspicion that it will make weaknesses in 3d-comic production less meaningful. I think it's at least worth experimenting to find out. So yeah... I think I'll dig up some manga pages and try to duplicate them.
Yeah. But I did manage to track down an interesting one by searching for "what makes manga different from american comics". There may be others.
Manga VS American Comics: The Main Difference
In that video, manga is compared to cinematography, which is a route I want to go down anyway.
Thanks a lot for the link @dreamfarmer. I learned something new today.
And the last two pages I'll preview from my book, pages 5 and 6. Pages 1-4 are just a few posts previous to this one.
Yeah, I think it’s interesting that comics, which are more ‘big picture’ tend to be _less_ suited to cinematic adaption than manga but it’s something I’ve read too.
is anybody interested in seeing the test pages I produce? If so should I start a new thread (themed on manga) or stick ‘em here? (Or both?)
I'd love to see them, here, or on another thread, whichever you like.