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Back to Making "A Wish for Wings."
Evolution
of the Story
Developing the Characters
The Cadre of Angels and the Shadow Society
Original Outlines
Making the Comic
Table of
Contents
Click-O-Rama
Closetspace
Day of Remembrance
DeviantART
Gallery
DreamJournal
LiveJournal
Photo Gallery
Production Blog
SFJenn
Wishworld
EMail
Links
Dolari.net

Material, HTML and text contained on pages originating from
DOLARI.NET and DOLARI.ORG are written by
Jenn Dolari. Copyright 1992-2008 Jennifer Dolari. All Rights Reserved. All other
materials are copyright by their respective owners.
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Normally, what I do is draw on an 8 1/2 sheet of typing paper or scrap paper.
I have tons of the stuff from my Kinko's days, when a corporate customer gave us
several reams of paper a competitor had printed with the wrong logo on it (you
can just BARELY make out the logo in the picture to the left). Using a really sharp #2
pencil, I try to draw what I see straight onto paper, but occasionally you'll see me use the "Ball and cylinder" method of
drawing.
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After that, I scan the image
as a greyscale image at 300 DPI. A
regular sheet of paper will scan in at about 3500x2500 pixels. Once all
the penciling is done for an episode, I'll ink it using a threshold filter
in Paint Shop Pro. The "X"s you see mean
two things. If it's an X without an arrow, it usually means "This
area will be black." If it's an X with an arrow, it usually means
"delete a piece of detail here." |
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Once it's scanned in, I'll clean
up any stray pencil marks that made it through the threshold filter, to get a nice
pure B&W image.
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The "SFX" portion of
the scan is where I do any editing I need to do such as moving an eye,
shaving a line down, recompositing a face. In this case, I tilted
Michael's head up, so he looks like he's staring at the area that a map
would be. Thank goodness for digital imaging. The main reason
stories like Closetspace never made it to print in the 90s and why
Polychronicon wasn't on your comic book shelves in the late 80's was my
horrible habit of finding things wrong many hours after I drew them.
Now, after I clean things up, and begin noticing a mismatched eye, or a
badly drawn mouth, it gets moved, redrawn or pulled in from another comic.
Another thing done at this stage
is effects. Any places that need to be black are colored in, filters
and effects are done (there is a Gaussian blur applied to background door
to make it look brighter than it already is). I'll also layer stuff
in like the map you see here, or more intricate backgrounds (The gazebo
for Closetspace #13 is
one example). |
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After it's all composited, I'll
draw in the color/grayscale using Wacom Graphire 2 tablet, lovingly
donated by a fan, |
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Finally, the 3500x2500 image gets
cut down to a 2500x2500 square for inserting into the comic template. |
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This poor template, it's been so
twisted and turned and morphed. Originally, it was created in
Pagemaker, then converted to Quark Xpress, and now one half of it still
exists as an inDesign template. |
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I assemble the comic in inDesign, pasting in the individual images, and creating text boxes.
Once it's all done, it gets saved at a massively huge size (which you can
see here),
then sized down to 750x525 and posted up for you all to throw tomatoes at.
:) |
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