Hey there! It’s question and answer time!
A few weeks ago I put out an open call for questions about the comics industry. A penance maybe, for having so many unanswered emails on these kinds of topics. I’m sorry! My email is terrible.
Anyway: I said I would answer the most frequently asked questions, to the best of my ability. This isn’t a book on how to make comics, I can only speak from my own experience (in some places this will be painfully obvious), so keep that in mind. Questions came from all over the spectrum of artists, so if you are, say, a teenager and read an answer that seems crazy inapplicable, I possibly had another type of person in mind when I typed the answer.
This is part one, part two will have the big two questions that I got asked most of all- “how do I get people to read my comic” and “how do I generate an income.” Anyway I’m still talking, as usual, too much of that, let’s get going.
(hope you like my meandering answers, I love meandering like babies love their mommas)
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the dogzine pdf is up on gumroad!
in case you missed the posts a while back, this is a little 18 page book of dog art that -
excuse me young man i’m going to have to see some identificatio-BWWWAAAAAAAAAAAAH*
(*inception noise)
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sometimes i really wanna do autobio comics but then i think about it and it’d only be panels of this or me picking zits at work
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Meeting Launchers! Illustration for the New York Times article “Engineering Serendipity.” Thanks to lovely AD Aviva Michaelov.
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I am going to destroy all of my cameras because this is clearly the greatest photo of me that will ever exist.
all other grad...
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Group exhibition of works by:
Lauren Hall, Jennifer Rose Sciarrino,and Leisure (Meredith Carruthers & Susannah Wesley)
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I did some portraits for a Forbes app recently, and I was allowed to draw a lot of people I know. This is the initial sketch of Chris.