UPDATE #4: Reflections and growth

Once I realized it’s been over a year since I updated this blog, I decided I’d dust it off and catch up everything since then. As this blog started as a New Years Resolution, I’ve been thinking about how those relate to my current resolutions and goals, and how much I’ve grown since I started this blog. This particular post is long, with a lot of musing in that direction, as well as some creative work and personal updates.

LIFE UPDATES AND Reflecting on 2023

At the end of 2022, I began this blog as a New Year’s resolution to myself. I originally planned to update this blog monthly, when I was really stuck as an artist post grad and having hard burnout. Rereading my blog posts is really interesting to see the mindset I was in; I felt so bogged down by the idea of making art as “content,” feeding algorithms, staying relevant. A lot of the times, it feels like you must do these things as an artist (And many other creators and professions) these days. You must monetize your hobbies, generate your content, generate content of you making content, get that hustle, etc etc. Rereading my old posts, these thoughts were at the forefront of my mind.

I mentioned how I felt bogged down by all the work I COULD be doing but I hadn’t, and how uncomfortable that made me. I do remember feeling this way, but… I’m not sure when I stopped feeling that way. As I get older and further away from the feverish haze that was college, the less I feel inclined to even notice such things. I’m less worried about trying to churn out new work to feed algorithms, though i do still feel those ways sometimes. It’s funny though how little I’ve always “fed” these algorithms anyway, but it was always something I thought about, even if I wasn’t posting. It felt drilled into me, that to make it these days as an artist you needed a dedicated social media, even better, every social media, dedicated, you needed to be seen by as many people as possible to even get the chance of a job, much less your dream job.

Its also a little funny in retrospect, how a lot of social media platforms have honestly died in the last year.

Between Elongated Muskrat’s effects on twitter, to the rise of generative AI, I really don’t feel that guilt to post work and put myself out there as much anymore. Maybe its because my twitter and Instagram are absolutely dead and empty of artists and community I used to have, or maybe I’ve just grown past that weird sense of guilt, but my worry about those things are gone nonetheless.

Last year when I started this blog, I was worried about missing my “chance” to get a good job (read: a full time, benefited art related job using my degree I went into debt for) out of college. The longer I was out of college, the further and further away it felt, and I tried desperately to keep up that feverish grind of my college days. But the thing is… college was hard! (In my case, at least. I’m still looking to get an ADHD diagnosis.) For me, It was art boot camp, and it’s unrealistic to try to keep that pace up your whole life. When you do, you crash and burn. And school I burned out HARD. After I graduated I barely drew at all for the rest of the year, which most definitely enhanced my feelings of not being enough, needing to make more art, work on my portfolio and apply for jobs, etc etc. But everyone needs a rest. Its sucks knowing these things in theory, but your brain tells you that everyone BESIDES YOU should be extended grace, compassion and empathy. I’ve heard similar sentiments before, so I don’t think I’m alone in that feeling, at least.

And its even more anxiety inducing when your whole family also wants you to put that degree into work instantly in a nine-to-five. (Sorry, Dolly.) On top of that, I don’t personally subscribe to the notion that college is just there to help you get a job. Even if I never did anything professionally related to art, I would still highly value my time I spent in school and the things I learned, and how it helped me grow as a person. Unfortunately, school is so, so expensive in the states that it’s hard to just be a student for learning sake. You can’t go just for the sake of learning and enhancing your skills, it has to amount to something akin to a direct salary boost, enough that you’re willing to go into debt over it. I’m not saying I didn’t go into school with that same notion– that I needed to use my degree and make a great career– but now I can appreciate that it did a lot more for me than only giving me more job prospects.

There’s also something to be said about how its just really difficult in general to be able to support yourself 100% on art, especially how the industries are right now in particular. Its hard to be a comic artist, animator, concept artist or anything right now. You can do everything right but that doesn’t make openings appear out of thin air. So many animator I know of have been laid off and from what I’ve heard, Cartoon Network is practically dead. It’s just a dreary outlook at the moment.

That’s not even factoring the overall economy and job market. It’s hard to search for jobs in general these days- So many are fake listings or bots, and the ones that are real use algorithms to sift through resumes, so you have to churn out application after application to even get a chance. There’s hundreds of applicants, and even if you’re lucky enough to get an interview, there’s still no guarantee! Even if you hit it off, if they get any bad vibes, or don’t hear you say the magic buzzwords, then you’re out. You have to be perfect. And it’s exhausting.

In my search, I had resigned from my day job last August. I had a number of interviews for places that looked good in my hometown. I was really excited and hopeful for the future, but as more time went by with no replies, my hope faded. Trying to get professional advice was also disheartening, and felt like a failure for a long time. All the resources my school told me about were so much more grandiose in my head, but the people behind the wizard’s curtain were still just people, trying to get through their own work day. I felt like there was nothing I could do; With the headspace I was in, job searching was a stressful and fruitless task.

After having some interviews I was excited for go nowhere, I pretty quickly caved and went back to my old job, but less hours. There’s been some ebbs and flows, but I’ve more or less been working less than full time there since then, with time and emphasis to put on my other hobbies, and most importantly, my art. And it feels much better. Who knew having free time that wasn’t dedicated to just sleeping, eating and working would make your mental health better? Hah. But for real, I am very lucky I happened to find a place where I can work less hours without an hourly wage decrease; I have a good pay rate for my area and I’m able to support myself on it. Without it, I’d never have time for more art.

I knew I didn’t want to look for a different day job for the rest of the year, mostly for the ease on my taxes since it was already almost September. Since I wasn’t sure how my future would look at the time, I just pumped the breaks and stayed content where I was. Honestly, one big thing that kept me going through 2023 and this year was getting back into gaming pretty hard. A lot of Genshin Impact. I focused a lot on Genshin last year– I never spent money, just tried to maximize what I could without it. That’s where the fun is for me. Along with that, my ever revolving obsession with Minecraft and Stardew Valley came back, and even my love for Binding of Isaac came back for a little bit.

At the beginning of the year, there was also House Flipper, VR with my friends, and more Stardew when the 1.6 update came out. I also finally got into learning my bass guitar more, using Rocksmith (A Harmonix, Guitar Hero-esque game specifically for learning guitar or bass), and it’s such a blast. I want to do it more still; every time I walk into my room and I see my bass and want to play. Its nice to have a hobby I’m content with being mediocre at– It’s weirdly freeing, leveling up your skills, but knowing its not going to go anywhere. It’s just pure fun, no “monetize your hobbies” in that. Getting more into my other hobbies, I found that I stopped worrying about working the “right” job and realized as long as I had enough to support myself, that didn’t matter as much. The right things would come eventually.

I focused a lot on art shows throughout the year. I tried to have new work for each show, but more often I tried to have better ways to display it. Being surrounded by other creatives for those has been nice, and not trying to push myself too much has been nice as well. I have personal stuff I’ve been working on here and there, but nothing I’m forcing myself to do, nothing I’m stressing about. I stress enough at my day job– no need to put extra pressure on myself outside of that.

I’ve been very content in being a freelance artist with a day job. I’ve stopped holding self shame for working food service alongside my art, in spite of the popular stereotype. There’s SO MANY WAYS to be an artist, moreover a person, and conventional aesthetics don’t mean as much as I once thought they did. I’ve also just never thought of certain jobs as “lower,” so it’s silly that I held myself to a higher standard. I’ve quelled the anxiety of trying to get a “real” job at this point in time, no matter what family members or society think I should be doing. Work is work, a job is a job, and I pride myself in trying my hardest, no matter what field I’m in.

It’s interesting to look back at how I thought about these same topics just a year ago, and how much I’ve grown since then. Overall, I think I wanted to make this blog to hold myself accountable. I never actually posted monthly, but I think it did what I needed it to at the time. I felt super stuck, and making that comic process guide and my other updates felt like a beam of light shining through a caved-in mine shaft. I wanted those things to help me out of the rut I was in, and I think it served its purpose. That isn’t to say I’m abandoning this blog; quite the contrary! But I won’t restrict myself to specific time frames. This blog is mostly for fun, and for myself, and if I’m stressing about it, it’s not fun.

NEW YEARS RESOLUTIONS

It only feels right to also mention some of the ones I had at the beginning of 2024. It’s a little ironic, since we’re already well into summer, but nevertheless.

I had a few small new years resolutions for the year, which I’m tentatively half way done with, but not going to push myself too hard. I made them pretty easy on purpose, so I could feel like I did something, I guess.

My Main 3:

  1. Make Comic Pages. Doesn’t matter what.
  2. Make a zine or two. Doesn’t have to be high effort.
  3. For the love of God switch off of Chrome and start using Firefox.

The last one I did in December, and honestly, can’t say I like a browser more. I’ve been aware for awhile how bad Chrome is: it takes up a lot of RAM, its probably stealing your data is many ways more than they even tell us, and it makes up a large, large percentage of internet browser usage, to the point of approaching monopoly. Firefox, though, is more independent, has tons of extensions, and values privacy more than others, especially alternatives that still run on some version of Chromium. I’ve seen Tumblr posts about switching for years, and I always went, “Yes, I should switch to Firefox… but I’ll do it later.” That’s why I decided to make it a resolution, even if its a super small one that’s easy to fulfill. Sometimes we need those little check-marks to feel like we’re making progress, and after putting it off for so long, I don’t know why I did. It’s great! It easily transfers all of your stuff, there’s pop out picture in YouTube, tons of other little features that I enjoy. Most of all, I love that if there’s some tiny things from Chrome that I like better? Extensions, baby. I didn’t like how I couldn’t save images the same way on mobile Firefox as on mobile chrome, and I looked it up and low and behold, I fixed it with a single extension. Any niche problem you have, Firefox can (probably) fix it. That stuff’s awesome, and if there’s anyone else on the fence about switching, I wholly recommend it. Its pretty fast and easy. And the logo is adorable. I love foxes. (Not sponsored… but would. Hah.)

I start with that as it’s the least art focused resolution. As for the other things, I’ve already made a decent amount of pages, and I’ll be making a lot more with this project I’ve been working on! I’ll be discussing it more later on, but it feels awesome to see pages done– to see all my work finished and not just half finished ideas on word document.

Besides that, I still haven’t made any zines, womp womp womp. I have a few ideas that might be fun whenever I get to them, but if I don’t, I’m not gonna sweat it. I’m really trying to not beat myself up over those type of things, and its not FUN to work on art only because you feel like you should. Not for pay, not for fun or rewarding, just… Because my brain said I should. That’s no way to work on things.

That’s a lot of an update on my general thoughts from the last year, but what kind of work have I been up to lately?

ART From last summer/fall

On the art show side of things, I did a lot of piece of work or fixes to old ones as I did a table in August and also October. In this post I show my original inside cover for Field Research, but I didn’t like how it turned out and every time I saw it… it bothered me. I changed them out, adding a little doodle and some more pirate elements, as well as texturing the plain colors. In the following photos, the new one is on the bottom.

I also made some sticker packs for my Genshin Impact stickers, and sold them as a little bundle. I made a small print of the original Cypher’s Creek page, where Blake and Chuck do hockey-pizza box Ouija board. I made a Cypher’s Creek post card, trying to emulate those big bold city or state ones. I’m honestly not too crazy about the post card, and sort of want to redo it. I’m not sure if it’s the design, the colors, or both that I dislike. They’re pretty hard to print out though, so we’ll see. Those might be fun to experiment with lino or letter print for.

Speaking of, I got some supplies to do lino prints, but I haven’t made anything substantial to actually sell yet. It’s something I would like to get into at some point– I love the look and I feel like hand made prints are perfect for this kind of show. I also got some new storage for my stickers and prints for next time, so I’m excited for that. One of these is a block print I did in school, while the other is one I used to test out some carving. I’m not really good at printing them yet, so when I devote more time to this, I plan on getting a printing baren to help me.

Slightly related, mostly because I used it as an example while lino cutting, but my table-mate/roommate/best friend Crow and I designed some Lemon Rat Press logos to have at shows. Lemon Rat Press is our joke company name for the two of us, and I think it’s rather cute. We gave out little stickers of them for free– my only mistake was putting them on too glossy of a paper, so people thought they were temporary tattoos. But now that’s an idea for the future, ha.

For the October show, I motivated myself enough to make a lot of Halloween themed work. I love Halloween. If I could make my entire aesthetic Halloween all year round, I would be happy. Crow agreed with this, so we decided we’d try tabling with two tables for this show. I enjoyed it a lot. I previously worried I didn’t have enough work to fill out a full table, but now I’m thinking we were just cramped before.

This is from my last show, in February. Since then we decided to mostly take a break on art shows. We like doing them, but they’re a lot of work. I’m excited to have time someday to really put my all into them one day and create a lot of work just for them, whenever I get the chance.

But here are my Halloween pieces I made– I made them in such a fervor, as fast as I could last September and October. They were so much fun. I’ve started sketching digitally and printing on to Bristol to inks, and I enjoy it a lot. Its so hard to get the grit and feeling of a brush pen digitally, and its easier to control, weirdly enough, when there’s no undo. Besides that, I just enjoy how traditionally inking feels, and I’ve never had any issues with the blue line. I specifically print them pretty light, so that could be why. I feel like I really leveled up in terms of digital coloring effects for these pieces, especially the Baphomet one. Despite being mostly monotone I think i was able to pull it off with a nice effect. Return of the Campires was a fun one as well; I tried to emulate those old pulpy, campy horror movie posters, and it was so fun laughing at the little puns and experimenting with the colors.

Another funny or weird thing related to art, and social media believe it or not… last fall I posted fan art of a Minecraft Youtuber I enjoy on Tumblr. I was aware the fandom on Tumblr was pretty big, but I received way more attention for what was mostly a shit post than I expected.

Just with basic tagging, I didn’t go to crazy. And hey, it’s still not like, crazy or anything, but it really was for me. Compared to getting 4-5 likes on a tweet, or a dozen or two on a instagram post, I got over a thousand notes in less than two days. It blew me away. Tumblr is everything an art platform should be: Organic discovery and organic following of artists. It has other issues, but it’s somehow one of the better platforms for artists these days. I’d like to make posting on there more of a habit; It’s a platform I’m much more comfortable with anyway, as I’ve been on it for over a decade. I’ve never been much of a poster, mostly a reblogger. But I’m trying! That’s more than any other platform, huh?

At my last table, I designed a new business card which I honestly forget about until much later. I still haven’t finished it, but I think its fun and looks cooler than what I have now, so maybe I’ll get those new ones done before the next show. I already drew myself as a vampire, so I wanted to go for a werewolf. Considering how much I look like one in real life, it was a no brainer. Here’s that, and a few other miscellaneous character drawings and doodles I’ve done since my last update.

Since I’ve discussed it on this blog… My printers been giving my nonstop issues for weeks. Even if I made more artwork to sell for shows, I’m not sure I would even be able to print them at home anyway. it’ll have clogs in the nozzles, even after just printing, and getting brand new ink, it just splats black ink all over the pages! I’ve been mostly printing blue line for comic pages, and if its small I’ll just white it out. But sometimes its just not salvageable, like yesterday. Not only were the black splotches out of control, it didn’t even print anywhere near the right color.

Here’s some photos of my messed up prints. Next to it is a correct one (the coffee one), to compare the colors. Hard to see with the photos, but it’s a lot more washed out, has streaks, and of course the splotches.

I have some new dream printers I want. I initially loved this one for the low price and the large flatbed scanner, as well as it being an EcoTank. (I mentioned my printer and Brother die-cutter here.) However, I didn’t realize when I bought it, how expensive the ink was, oh my god. I know that’s how they make a lot of money with printers, but holy crap. It probably shouldn’t even be called an EcoTank (Or for Brother, an “INK-vestment” machine) when they’re basically overpriced cartridges anyway, just some more ink. I’ve been looking into some actual EcoTanks, such as Epson’s line. I know a lot of printer fanatics wouldn’t like that, but Epson makes good machines, and I wouldn’t mind getting one instead, even if the ink isn’t wholly archival.

The one thing I liked the most about my printer was the full A3+ scanner. For awhile, it was awesome, now it seems there’s some sort of issue with that too, where it scans much slower than it used to, and moves the scanner back and forth over the same spot of the page over and over. It’s just really difficult to find a nice, not dinosaur, A3 sized flat bed scanner. Maybe there’s other non-flat beds that would be good, but I’m not sure. If there’s any one reading that scans artwork that has any sort of advice on that, let me know. I honestly would’ve probably gotten rid of this printer by now if I didn’t want the scanner so bad.

As another process/craft update, I finally bit the bullet and got one of those rolling craft storage cart. My drawing desk just doesn’t have enough room to comfortably hold inking supplies, as most of it lifts— It only about 6 inches on the sides for flat storage. The pen holder on top is also something I recently got for that purpose. It’s technically for markers, but brush pens work just the same. So far, both have helped my process a lot, and I like that the cart is low profile and on wheels for convenience. It’s such a simple little thing, but It’s really helped streamline my work flow.

At the beginning of the year, I didn’t draw for the first month or so, and it gave me a similar sense of dread as the not drawing for the second half of 2022. I tried to remind myself that my skills weren’t gone, and sometimes you just need a break from art. Eventually I broke through with this drawing. I’ve been redesigning some old characters from around 2015 or earlier, and It’s fun to see how they’ve changed, both in the drawing and as characters.

BIGGER PROJECTS

In May we had a Kick Starter for Gay Mormon Dad, a graphic memoir I’ve been illustrating with author, therapist, and comic book nerd Chad Anderson. Last year we did preview pages and tested the waters for publisher support, but ultimately decided to fund the creation through Kick Starter. It was successful! It came down to the wire more than I expected, after an outpouring of support initially, then it slowed down until the month was almost over, before a flood to get it across the finish line. Even though I was aware that’s how a lot of Kick Starters are funded (more support near the very beginning and very end of a campaign) it was still a nail biter! It was amazing seeing so many people come together to support our project.

As for how the work itself is going, I’m doing pretty well keeping up with it. Last month my biggest problem was wrist/elbow pain, but I’ve managed to (mostly) mitigate that this month by adding some more stretches into my warm up routine. (For fellow artists: Remember to stretch! Oh my god! Simply stretching and doing warm ups have helped me SO MUCH.)

In my own comic work I write, I rarely have outside factors to motivate me, besides maybe occasional art shows or anthology deadlines. In 2022, when I was really burnt out, I tried and tried to get myself to write a good story for an anthology, and I stressed myself out about it enough that I ended up submitted a half-assed product just to get something out there. Don’t get me wrong, sometimes those motivations are good! But sometimes they just drag on you more, and add to the burden and guilt of not creating.

So in that light, I have a lot of external motivation for this. I’ve pushed past all senses of “dread of creating,” or maybe blank page syndrome, and I’ve been sailing full steam ahead. It sounds so silly, but after years of schooling being my only motivator to finish things, having sleepless nights and stressing myself out, it feels really good to get work done without that context. I still have outside motivators, self and otherwise imposed deadlines, but lately it really feels like I’m a real freelancer and I can actually get things done. This is very loosely paraphrased, because I don’t have the source: I recently read something about people being happier when we have at least one pursuit with instant gratification, and one with delayed gratification. Instant for that quick dopamine hit, like playing a game you like, and delayed for that sense of accomplishment when it’s finished. Both things are crucial to have, and working on this has given me that delayed gratification to an extent. Its fun to work on comics for a full month, and then look back at handful of finished pages, which always gets me excited to get started on the next batch.

it’s also so helpful to not have the burden of the entire comic on your shoulders, art and writing and all. I love writing my own work, but its so easy to get into my head about it. So having a writer with an awesome written story, that’s no problem, it’s not even a factor. I can just do what the script says, and go within my own limitations to make that as good as I physically can. Its more like a puzzle: I know what each panel is trying to express, so how can I make it work in the best way possible? How can I follow the 180 rule while characters talk; how can I display a scene change without confusing people, or crossing bubble tails, or diversifying my shot distance and language to make a good over all composition? Comics are full of little puzzles like this.

Thumbnailing my own scripts (And I usually don’t even fully script my work)… I often get overwhelmed with decision paralysis. I know in the back of my head that I can just change around the thumbnails, the conversations and the speech bubbles, and the panel layout if I need to, which can be helpful… Until it’s not. Until I’m reworking the same sequence over and over again fruitlessly, overwhelmed by all the possible iterations I could have. Constraints are where creativity and problem solving shine, and they’re so important for comics and art in general.

As I’m getting into the flow of working on this big project, I’ve decided to break up every month into a certain number of pages that I complete in batches. I’ve tried to wrangle myself into working better and harder with a ton of spreadsheets. It makes it like a game to me, similar to the constraints, and I feel like these type of “gamification” are really important to keeping me motivated and read to work. I’m recording my working hours on each section (Layouts, Pencils, Lettering, Inks, Coloring, etc…), averaging every section, totaling every page, comparing them to each other, comparing each section to how long I THOUGHT things would take, etc etc… It honestly might be a little overkill, but its important to me and helps me work, so I’m not going to question that. I estimated the percentage each section should take me (i.e. Pencils take me about a third of the time) and I’m using those as well. In summary, the numbers give me dopamine, and it’s easier to track my speed or progress that way.

I’m ever expanding it, and it’s another puzzle for me as well. I think I like spreadsheets in the same way I like coding: it’s fun to know what I want it to do, and try to figure out the solution for how to do it. Finding specific formulas or shortcut keys to make it do what I want is awesome. I’ll get more into how it factors into my process when I write my next post.

THE FUTURE OF THIS BLOG?

I’m planning on making another “Comic Process” post, as I realized that the first one only discusses brainstorming and thumbnailing a comic, and I literally ended it with “Then draw the dang thing.” Which, is true in some sense, but not so helpful in practice. It’s only everything until I first start penciling. So, my next post will be a continuation, my way of “drawing the dang thing,” step by step. If not for others, at least for me: Something I can look back at every time I get stuck or forgot a trick to speed up my process. After that, I plan on updating periodically when I have some things to share with no hard deadlines. Whether they’re actual updates about anything creative, or if its just musing about the creative process or other under-the-hood art things, that’s to be determined. And finally, if you somehow made it through this insanely long, insanely rambling post, thanks for reading!

UPDATE #3: Crafts and Upgrades

Long time no update– I know I meant to make this a monthly thing, and although I still probably could do it, some months would be so quiet I’d be hard-pressed to find something to write about. Things haven’t been that quiet, but time has gotten away from me for sure. I’m trying to figure out what the best timing of these would be, because a month feels too short, but I’ll just play it by ear for now. I had a draft for March prepped several months ago, but never finished it, so I’m going to rope it all into this one. After I started that draft, In April I had a tooth extraction that set a few things back that I wanted to do, including updating this. My work schedules been changed since then as well. Earlier this month, I came down with a nasty cold that gave me a terrible dual ear infection, that I only found out about after going to urgent care twice. So, due to my long absence, I apologize for the length of this update, hah. But what have I been up to?

Inspirations + Last Time Goals

For my goals from last time, I wanted to work more on my personal projects and maybe read some books from my shelf. I didn’t work much on those projects (and I’ll get more into that later) and although I didn’t read the books on my shelf I wanted, I did…. buy some more books! And I’ve been consuming a lot more media just for my leisure but also pieces I really enjoy and are inspiring as stories. A few months ago I was getting back into anime pretty hard– which in many ways was one of my roots in art. I’ve been getting into Spy Family, and decided to buy a few volumes of the manga. I also watched Given, which gave me some inspiration for my band comic.

Mostly, sillily maybe, I’ve been really been getting back into gaming. After having a big rut with Genshin Impact, I found myself really invested in it for the first time in awhile and I’ve been hyper fixating and playing it often. It even inspired me to do some related stickers, which I’ll get into a bit later.

After watching Across the Spider-Verse in theaters twice, I decided to go ahead and order the art books for both the first and second movies. Many years ago, ITSV inspired me a lot and I was enthralled by it, and the same has happened again. It’s honestly a technical and artistic source of genius, and is everything I think animation could be, I’m hoping this books can serve as an inspiration for me in the future.

Goals Re: Social Media

Another goal of mine was to finally post my commission info on Instagram, which I actually did a few months ago at this point. I got over run by scammers and bots in my DMs quickly– which i didn’t even see until months later because I forgot to check message requests. I never expected to get many real biters from it anyway, and specifically wrote to contact me through email or my website, so I knew those scammers never read it anyway. Although I knew Instagram is full of those things, I wanted to do it to say i did, and to finally post something new. I’ve been thinking about social media and how much I dislike the format, for lack of a better word. Instagram never really supported artists to a massive degree, but now that it’s switching into short form video like TikTok, it’s even harder. It’s hard not to just abandon it completely. Likewise, twitter is… well, It’s been twitter. I’ve posted on there occasionally and although I like it more than Instagram, still not that sustainable for artists, especially among policy and leadership changes.

In that vein, I’ve been an avid tumblr user for about 10 years now, and although I have had art blogs in the past I let them fizzle out. I started one (still empty at time of writing this) and have thought about ways to integrate it with my website, this blog, or something else. There’s also something to say about how as I use it for leisure, and have a blog I’ve had since I was 13, so it almost feels weird to integrate that with my art/business. It’s definitely one of the most freeing social medias, but a lot of the leg work in discovery and algorithms (lack thereof, mostly) is from users and myself. I’ll probably work on that in the future, but it’s on the back burner for now. I might start sharing these blogs on to it, so if you see it there, that’s why.

Other Projects

Over the last few months, I’ve been slowly but surely working on another project I was approached for. In March, I was working on the preliminaries, thumbnails and designs, things like that. It was a long time since I thumbnailed or drew any comic pages, so it felt a little strange but of course, it was something I needed to do. The art rut I had mostly ended in every other front, except for my comics. I hadn’t made a comic page since I graduated, and part of me was worried I could even do it anymore.

It’s the beginning pages of a pitch with a script, and it was honestly pretty fun working on something that wasn’t mine. There’s something nice about not being ABLE to double guess and mull over my decisions in the thumbnails– the words are already decided, what’s shown in each panel is already decided, all I need to do is pick the angle and keep things consistent. Its a fun, different puzzle, where there are constraints.

A lot of my thumbnail process involves reworking, erasing, trying it over and over, which that still exists to a degree, but its a lot less. If it’s my own work I’m constantly trying to change things as I’m working in it, which impedes my process (or perhaps– IS my process? I don’t think I can separate the two.) It makes me also realize for my own work, the more work I put into my scripts, the less time It’ll take me to thumbnail. It almost feels like in comics, there’s always gonna be about the same amount of work put into the total piece, but which step you choose to focus on changes. For instance, if you have really really loose thumbnails, it will make your penciling process a lot slower. You make up that time and effort somewhere else in the process if you don’t put it in first. I’m not sure if one method is better than the other, but it’s food for thought.

Since March, I’m now in the inking process, which I was looking forward to. I love inking. It’s a lot of fun. I’m wondering how my inks will fit into fully colored work– and I’m wondering how I’ll be coloring it– but I’m looking forward to keeping up the process. Here’s a teeny tiny sneak peek.

CRAFT PROCESSES

Before I had a section on working on my zines in these updates, and since I’m mostly done with zine design I’m not sure what to call this section. This is not related to my art process, like making drawings or pages, but the process of the craft side maybe– any book or zine making, or anything else that relates to my art but isn’t drawing, I guess.

I finally decided to revamp my font that I made last year in school– It was done hastily at the time, so now I have time to make it nice. I use Calligraphr, and decided to get the premium– It’s about 16 dollars for 3 months, so I thought it was a good deal to be able to mix and match different versions of my font. I originally had 3 fonts, missing some key characters, all separate that I would physically change between if I wanted the separate characters. I used this to make it into one font that randomizes the characters to make it look more like hand writing. I really enjoy hand lettering, and how my hand lettering looks, but it is very time consuming– It’s an easy place to save some time in the comic process, as well as how important typed fonts are for translating and the like. It’s also what I used for the page I showed in the last section. The folded sheets are two of my original fonts, with only uppercase letters, while the others are my new fonts with full lower and uppercase, as well as symbols.

Sometime in March, I decided to get a Cricut Joy to die cut stickers. I had saw some YouTube tutorials on how to get it to cut them with it, along with a sale and how small and compact it was, so I thought it was a good investment. I didn’t get the chance to mess with it until a month or so later, which made me realize it was a little more frustrating and tedious than I wanted. Since it doesn’t print, pin point cutting stickers is more of a MacGyver effort– the machine isn’t made for it, but you can do a work around for it. You have to get the paper in the same registration on the mat each time, keep it in the same exact spot, reload your mat the same way, and cut it from the app. This worked okay, but again, it was very tedious and came with a lot of mistakes.

At one point I stumbled on a Brother brand die cutter- I have a Brother Brand printer and sewing machine, so I know they’re both powerful and affordable machines. The Brother Scan N Cut is so much easier than the Cricut Joy for my needs– and a pretty big upgrade in my opinion, considering the price difference. The Cricut Joy at full price is $169 (I picked it up for about $99 on sale, along with maybe $30 of accessories) and cuts about 4.5×9 inches at a time; it’s possible to get a longer mat but that’s how wide it goes. The Scan N Cut has a 12×12 inch mat area, but can go longer or use a roller. The model I have, the SDX85S, retails around $299, accessories included, and I got it for around $200 on sale (And even less with rewards points- thank you Office Depot). As long as you have the space for it, it’s a nice machine for a good price and little hassle. It doesn’t print (Which I personally liked, since I already have a printer) but as the name suggests, has a high functioning scanner that automatically detects the edges of your work. If you don’t want to, you don’t even have to connect a computer at all. It has an LED screen that you can control it from, and it automatically tells the edges of what to cut, where you can add an offset border if you’d like, which I really loved. Of course, you can also connect it to designs on your computer, but the versatility really enticed me.

This is not supposed to sound like an ad for Brother– I’m sure other machines work better for other people, but after trying both that’s my opinion on it. The Joy is good, and I’m keeping it for now as it can do other things besides stickers that I might mess around with, but for my own needs, the Scan N Cut was so much better. Here’s my printing space with my die cutters, which I finally organized, and the stickers didn’t turn out too shabby, either.

Tabling 2: Electric Boogaloo

Of course, the main reason I got interested in a die cutter what that I wanted to make stickers myself for another tabling event in my town. It was the same operators as last time, so I knew more of what to expect. This time, instead of focusing a lot on new prints or zines to make, I focuses on presentation and stickers. My table partner and I bought display pieces and practiced a few times on how to put it together.

I looked for awhile on buying a display for my zines, but everything was either too big/small or too expensive. I found this post from StuffAeaMade on tumblr (here’s a link to their gumroad!) where they made a DIY display out of foam core and I thought it was genius! It was harder to cut out neatly than I thought, but I spent two or three days getting all the pieces cut and put together. I changed the dimensions a bit to suit my needs (doing that math was surprisingly hard to wrap my head around.) Since this photo I’ve painted the outside of the side panels, but I still need to paint the inside. Other all though, I think it came out good, and I can’t wait to use it more.

I designed a handful of stickers– Mostly my characters or things that interested me. I did make a little fan art stickers, but only things I really cared about. Since I’ve been really into Genshin Impact recently, I made a few of my favorite characters, as well as redoing some very old sticker designs I had to refresh them. I cleaned up an old sketch and also made a Fall Out Boy themed sticker as well.

So, over all, we were a lot more prepared this time, and were really excited for the day! Or display was miles better than last time, and was easier to show everything we had. My only sort of regret was it was hard to see either of us from the way the table was, but was sort of nice to be anti social in that way, hah.

My half of our table display!

Unfortunately, it was scheduled on the same day as a huge art festival in my town. I was optimistic that this wouldn’t make too much of a difference, as people might check it out and then go here, or vice versa. Since this was the second event for the organizers, there was more advertising than before as well. Those things didn’t really affect anything though, and we both barely made any money. I know its not all about the money, but it’s a little discouraging. It was pretty much dead for the vast majority of vendors most of the time. We both took time off of our job for it, and spent a lot of time preparing. Over all though, I know it had nothing to do with our artwork, and instead was the circumstance. At least we have everything set up and ready for next time. Just a few days ago we just got informed we were accepted to another event in town, so that’s definitely has lifted my spirits and got me excited again for that next time.

Mulling over a Store front

In that vein, I’ve been looking more and more into putting an online shop up– I’m between a few different platforms– I’m really interested in Big Cartel, but I know I’d have to do all the advertising myself (Which I’m not that good at, hah!) Etsy is a possibility, and has a good discovery system, but I know they’ve had a lot of policy changes in the last years that make me worry what else they’ll do for profits. I’ve also seen people who have both, and redirect Etsy customers to the other when possible. If there’s anyone reading who has any opinions on any of that, moistly the platform I’d love to hear it.

Goals

The only sort of stern thing I’d like to do is possibly make a very small zine for my next table, finish inking my project, and maybe start the process rolling to set up a store. I’m going to try, for now- to have a lot less stern goals. Mostly because I’m not sure how often I’m going to try to keep these coming– I still want to keep writing these posts, but I’ve learned for me, a month is too small of time for how much I want to do with them. I know I’d have less to update with, but I’d rather have at least something interesting to say. On the other side, I don’t want to go this many months without one again, so they wont be this long, hopefully. I’ll certainly try to figure it out, and figure out what to call these, but that’s about it for now. I could keep going, but I shouldn’t. (This is SO LONG REMY. STOP)

If any one has gotten this far, thank you for spending some time with my rambles. I’ll leave with a character sketch I did recently. Until next time!

UPDATE #2: Tables and zines

Happy end of February– Time moves on. This time I actually have some updates that aren’t just musing, which on its own is fine, but it feels good to have some progress that’s tangible. And with pictures!

Prepping to Table!

This month I worked on tabling in my home town– I’ve done a few table events in school, usually slapping things together semi-last minute (Or, if not last minute, taking a lot of time/stress out of my already limited free time). Since I didn’t have to stress about tabling AND school work for the first time ever, it was nice to focus most of my free time on prepping for this. (I work full time, but since its not art related, its nowhere as draining artistically as art school.) When I saw a tabling event being tested in my town, I thought it was a good way to dip my toes back in, and get back on my feet a bit. It would be a bit more professional than before, but in a more relaxed and less high stakes way than a bigger con.

Zine Production and Revamps (hah!)

(this subsection name is funny to me exclusively because it involves a vampire comic I made)

I had a zine for A Vampire’s Reunion that I threw together last minute before a show last year– I had some weird page breaks for the 12 page comic, in a way that having a 12 page zine wouldn’t quite work, so I had 4 breather pages to make it fit together better. The problem was, I sort of just threw some sketches of the environments on to a page, one that took up a whole 2 page spread right in the middle of the book. The page after that also had a sketch, but much smaller, and I just hated how it looked. Since it was the middle spread, I decided to just take it out and print a whole new one, this one with a little bit of color.

Additionally, I had a pure black spread near the beginning that also annoyed me– so I made a little drawing to go on that. I printed a few off on one sheet, cut them and double sided taped them to the old copies (New ones I just plan on changing that page of course, but it was a pretty low-hassle make-shift solution for the time being. All in all, I enjoyed fixing it up and I liked how it came out so much more than the first time around.

On to mermaids! I managed to finish the cover and assets for Field Research and I have a lot of process work for it! I originally sketched it digitally– I had this idea to have a little flap on it, like one of those old school pirate journals. A lot of the design for the cover page was inspired by that, like the stitching on the spine. I printed it out two sided on Bristol board (my printer did not like that– I had to just put it through twice.) I inked it, and finally I broke out the light table and did an ink wash on watercolor paper. (I wanted to do a wash because I originally planned for this piece to have a wash layer on the comic pages, but ultimately did not have the time and was satisfied with the piece without it.) This ended up being a bit more difficult since I had it double sided, but since the inside didn’t have a lot it wasn’t too bad. I scanned both pages separately, put them together, then colorized it. At first, colorizing was much more frustrating than i anticipated- the colors just weren’t getting as deep or as vibrant as I wanted them too. Eventually I got it, involving duplicating the wash layer to deepen the darker values. I really enjoyed how it came out, though I wish I spent a bit more time on the inside cover.

For the inside, I planned for all these pages to be one after the other, so it didn’t take much finagling to get it how I’d like- I only had 2 extra pages to work with, two at the very end. One I put a conclusion-y sketch, the other I put my original character designs along with some notes. If you ever think cleaning up old dirty sketchbook sketches would be easy to just slap on a page, you’d be surprisingly wrong, at least in my case. But I managed to get them to a level of polish that looked good enough for me.

Lastly, I did throw together a little zine of a lot of my shorter comic projects, from 1-3 pages, most being one, thus the name. A lot, but not all, of the pages can be found here on my site. Two of the pieces, Ophelia’s Slog and In Ten Seconds were the ones that weren’t actually one page, but I figured the name would still work out. I took a note from my idea on A Vampire’s Reunion, and designed it so the middle spread would be in color. Funny enough, since they’re only a page it didn’t HAVE to be in the middle, but it worked.

Buttons & Stickers

Along with my zines, I worked on some new buttons and stickers. After considering what would be best way to sell buttons (buying them online, versus investing in a button maker, etc) I decided it’d be easier to buy them for now and think about getting a button press later on. I found an Esty store (CheapestButtons.Net!) that sells them very cheap (so much that cheap is part of their marketing!) From there I found the website and decided to order from there! They seemed to be great quality, as well as being able to do a lot of different designs– This was a huge selling point for me, as I wanted to have a lot of different designs to work with, but a lot of other places would charge separate for each at a huge cost. My friend and I prepped 25 button designs total and did 10 each about a week and a half ahead of time. Unfortunately, winter storms in the shipping area delayed it just enough we didn’t get it until a day after the event, but when they did get here they were exactly what I wanted. I’m super excited to have them for next time! After hand pressing a number of buttons in college, I was also so glad to just pay for it and not have to go through that struggle.

The stickers were printed at home, and most were mostly just prints of things from my comics and illustrations– I did them very last minute. (Ironically enough I completely forget to grab them for the table, but c’est le vie!) I still have a lot of sticker paper, and I’d love to make specific sticker designs in the future when I have time. My prints were more art I had already done– I planned to print more but ran out of time.

Tabling Locally

I wasn’t sure what to expect with this table, but it was pretty nice! People really put their all into their work, and focused on all types of crafts, not just art, so it was fun to see the breadth of the types of creators in my community. Most tabling things I’ve done have been specifically art or comic/zine related, so I enjoyed that a lot. The turn out itself was pretty decent, but not overbearing. It was the first event of its kind, so I’m thinking as it goes on, it might become more popular. There was a lot of sitting around and doodling, which was fun after two weeks of grinding on page and graphic design. I probably spent about as much as I made back on fellow vendors.

Like I said earlier, it was a nice way to dip my toes back into tabling, and it was a lot of fun tabling as a team with my roommate. It gave me a lot of ideas for ways to display my work in the future, or streamline the selling process, keeping track of inventory, etc. I made a google sheet for inventory, but didn’t use it at all– I think I’ll print out a copy next time to tick off on, especially if I have pen and paper out anyway. I was still rushing out the door to finish everything I wanted to do unfortunately– So next time I’ll definitely have all of that stock and inventory sorted before I go.

I’d like to get some more display pieces– maybe some of those standing cube pieces that you can click together separately and mess with that. Eventually I’ll draw a mock up and decide what I want to put in exactly, but we’ll see. I have a binder that I could also display prints, but we’ll see. One day when I have a lot of zines, I’d love to get one of those magazine-esque racks to put them on. I want to have some kind of display to advertise custom work and commissions– I’ll work shop that and figure out what will work best.

I had a lot of change for the first time EVER tabling, which is kinda hilarious, but didn’t have anywhere to put it– Next time I’ll definitely invest in a small cashbox. I’ve thought about getting a square reader as well, but I’ll wait to do that until I’m more certain It’ll be helpful.

I’m excited, to say crassly, to finally get my shit together and table in a more professional way, and possibly sign up for bigger cons or events further away– I’d love to go back and do more events in Minneapolis and nearby! But I still feel like I have a long way to go to do that– mostly because I need to compile where would be best, when their events are, when the applications are, etc etc. It might be a long process, but I don’t mind.

Creative Drive + Personal projects Update

It pretty hard for me to implement deadlines for myself (As a popular tumblr post jokes, I know who made that deadline and they’re full of shit) so having a specific deadline enforced put my motivation into overdrive.

Because of that drive, afterwards I didn’t have a whole lot of time to work on my personal projects, though I’m happy to say I did work on one a little. I decided to do some plotting on my story Bonnie & Psi, a story about a alien fleeing to earth and meeting a bored convenience store worker. I feel good about jumping in, even if it’s not what I focus on over all, I’m no longer scared about the sunk-cost-fallacy of working on one project all the way, versus a little here and there until I get focused on one.

What drives me to work on this in particular? I’m not really sure. I think the recent read of Paper Girls was a good inspiration to work on my sci-fi story. While I was looking at my old documents for it I found my entire original list of influences! Influences are a big part of my creative process- I like to have a whole list of what excites me in the story to keep me motivated, and finding the old one really re-sparked the project for me.

Besides that, as a little nod to Cypher Creek, Bonnie lives in the same town Freya went to college in. Since I didn’t talk about the city much, It’s a good opportunity to expand the world building, and the connection excites me for whatever reason. I love having my work being an interconnected universe.

Overall, it still needs a lot of concept work, world building, etc. for the different spots in the story. Everywhere needs more work, but in particular, the middle needs a lot of elbow grease. However, I never realized how much work I did have of it– My initial “word vomit” document of me musing about the characters and world is TWENTY SIX PAGES. Like, bro. That is why rambling is my brand– its all in huge rambling paragraphs that tangent off and come back, written in steam-of-consciousness. So, I have to pair that down. I’ve been going through the old scripting and trying to figure out what I can keep and what need redoing. A lot of it is that I have a new way of scripting that’s more streamlined to look at, but before that, I need to work on the outline for the overall plot a lot more. I formatted it into the Plot/Pitch Bible I described in this post, and it’s a lot easier to access and view than that 26 page document, hah.

There’s something to say about it being one of my only comics that I don’t have much tangible pages to show of it (I penciled an 11 pager of it, about three years ago at this point for a final, but never inked it. I’d work on inking them, but I’d rather just redo the whole thing at this point– I’ve gotten better at my craft by now and I have some new ideas for the sequence.)

An old penciled page of the original Bonnie & Psi.

I have a new idea for how the story will start too, which interests me– This is gonna be a longer story, probably the longest one I have planned, so it’s a little daunting– but I’m enjoying working on it for right now.

One thing that I liked a lot about Cypher Creek was having a lot of characters to work with. That can be both a blessing and a curse, of course. With Bonnie & Psi, they are basically the only two developed characters-despite being very well developed, I felt like I needed more to the story. Luckily, the middle of the story needs a lot of plotting and specifics still, so I’m working on putting some new characters in different parts to flesh it out a bit more.

The first is Psi’s advisor, a character I’ve had involved for awhile, but haven’t developed. It was fun trying to make another of Psi’s species, but enough of her own character design elements that they’re different. The other is another species of alien, who’s basically a bird boy– I’m thinking they meet him at another planet, and he’s some kind of space traveler as well. I’m not sure how either will quite fit in yet, but I feel like when I do, they’ll slot in like a puzzle piece.

GOALS

LAST TIME’S GOALS

Last update I said I wanted to finish my assets and cover for Field Research and print some copies, which I actually did, woo! I also made a post on Instagram like I’ve been dreading doing for the longest time, for whatever reason. Worked a bit on Bonnie and Psi the past few days- still not sure if its one I want to solely focus on, but I’m having fun reworking old plots and thinking of new things.

NEW GOALS

Right now I don’t have any particular things to put as a goal, but I’m thinking of having one be to read a book or two on my shelf– Right now I’m thinking maybe Sweet Tooth by Jeff Lemire, and another if I have time. I want to maybe finalize these sketches/character designs and ideas, and flesh out more of the second act of Bonnie & Psi– Not completely, but at least have more solid ideas of the beats and what brings us for A to C. I’d also like to try and advertise my commissions more– I made sheets but never posted them anywhere. (If you happen to be reading this, and are interested in them– here’s the link to the google doc!)

Thanks again for reading, if you did!

UPDATE #1: Artistic Drive and Lack Thereof

Although I said I’d try to do these monthly, I’ve already sort of failed since it’s February when I’m posting this, but hey, I’m not gonna let that bring me down. I knew the goal wouldn’t be perfect to begin with, but it’s a good starting place. At least not that much has been going on, so as promised, there’s more musing about my art, my creative drive, my printing and work processes, and anything else I’ve felt like sharing from the last little while.

Creative Drive

At the end of December I got the flu and it was pretty rough on me. Although it sucked, when I felt better I rearranged a bunch of my furniture in my room and it was a nice way to start the year on a new slate. Last time I made a post I talked about how stuck I feel, and how little my creative drive was, and although that’s sort of the same, I’m feeling a lot more optimistic and I don’t feel as stuck. When I wrote that I recall feeling very lost. Now I feel more like I’m wandering freely– I know there’s a lot of things I could be doing, honing in on those things is hard but I’m not letting it bother me too much. I feel like the best way to describe it is that before I couldn’t see anything, but now I can see those things, and I can work on them as I please, even if it takes me awhile to get to them.

With that, I’ve had a few commissions I’ve worked on this past month or so that have helped me feel less lost. It’s nice to have a purpose in creating, that’s not just all in my own head. Even if you’re really into your own work, usually it takes so long to get out there that it’s kinda… lonely? It’s hard to let other people in while you’re working on it. So outside things like that help a lot.

INSPIRATIONS

Not sure if inspirations is quite the right word, but I wanted to write about some of the things I’ve been watching/reading lately that i really enjoyed. I read Paper Girls some point last month (I had bit the bullet and got the big compendium- before knowing what it was even about, really) But luckily I ended up falling in love with it– the artwork, the well crafted story and all the things that intertwine them. Without going too much into it, there’s a point where many different plot points happen at once in different places, and the fusion of prose story and art there is really just what comics are all about, man. It was good shit.

I also recently (finally) watched The Haunting of Hill House, about 4 years past the hype but I enjoyed it a lot. It reminded me of ways I’d love to tell stories– how it interwove the past, the present, the future. (Something Paper Girls also did, but in very different ways, ha.) Each character was important in their own way, and made big mistakes or big conflicts with one another in a way that was so well crafted and compelling. So compelling, that I tried to go right into a completely different show afterwards, but it didn’t hold my attention like Hill House did.

It was my birthday last week and I celebrated by adding to my comic collection– I have way too many to keep that up, but I’ve been gently trying to make myself read more often, especially comics. I know a big part of being as good writer/artist/comic artist is consuming work that inspires you, so hopefully I’ll keep that up, one way or another.

zine making Progress

I finally got all the assets I’d need to print my own zines from home– even getting a stapler specifically for booklet stapling. Its weird that I’m so excited about a stapler, but I know how convenient it is. I’ve always been into things like book binding and making zines ever since I was a little kid, so its a process in comic making I really enjoy and have fun with. I have cover and copy papers, multiple cutters/guillotines, etc. I need to figure out how to perfect double sided alignment on my home printer, but that’s a note for later. Now I just need some things to print– Preferably some new things that I haven’t got myself to make yet.

As a way to ease in, I realized I neglected to make a proper cover and zine for my mermaid pirate story, Field Research, last spring. Now that I have all these printing materials, I thought it’d be a good time to prep and print some copies. I may have an opportunity to sell them in person soon, but I’m also thinking of setting up a shop online. I’m not sure where, but that’s something to decide later on when it’s more of a real thing in my mind.

Besides that, I want to make new content to make into a book. There’s a lot of little zines I’m interested in making, as well as a lot of bigger projects. I’ve been dying to jump into and sink my teeth into a bigger project, but I have so many that are only in scripting or partial thumbnail stages, that it’s hard to settle on what. It might be easier to go ahead and work on my smaller zine ones for now, until I can settle on what to go foreword with.

Personal Projects

This month I wrote a document for myself that listed all my major (and some more minor) comic projects and where I am in each one. Some are a lot further than others (Cypher Creek is obviously the most completed one, but ironically the one I’m still really drawn to working on. Sometimes I just think about how much I want to keep working on it– I know the main story line has been told, but I designed it in a way that I can keep telling smaller, more anthology like stories.) Most of the big work have pretty solid plot synopses but nothing solid outside that– Besides some old scripting I’m probably going to revamp anyway. A lot of them I haven’t touched in over a year and a half, if not longer– My senior year I mainly focused on shorter, more complete stories, and my senior project, so these bigger worlds haven’t had a chance– which is another thing that draws me to working on them.

I’m really excited to dig into and script or thumb these other projects I got burned out on or put on the back burner. Besides Cypher Creek, my main ones are– Rock Bottom, Bonnie & Psy, and Ophelia and the Deep Dark. (I’ve linked the pages I’ve worked on for those that I have up). I also have been working on and off on another story, that I posted concept of here. Scripting is such an arduous task that makes you feel like you’re doing absolutely nothing. I want to DRAW, not script or thumb. But those things are important, and they build the infrastructure to do the rest. I have a few different reasons to work on any of them– Rock Bottom is the oldest one in concept (one I came up with in high school, around 2016?) and has already been redone once. Bonnie and Psy I have a lot of the big bulk of the story planned, and some penciled pages, but not a lot concrete to show for it. For another class senior year I decided to write the story for Ophelia in prose, but never got to finish the whole thing, even with how condensed I made it.

As I get to scripting and thumbnailing, I’m also interested in decompressing my storytelling— I feel like I’ve gotten pretty good at compressing, and showing what needs to be shown in a short amount of pages and panels for the audience to get it, but maybe not enough for them to be immersed in it– I feel like there’s not a lot of breathing room in some of my work. (Which is a little ironic with how much I write.) Maybe that’s okay and I should accept it as my own, but, I don’t know. Every story is different and its not something I should fret about. Its become a joke to me that I usually end up adding at least 1 page to a lot of my projects (A 10-pager I had turned into 11… My 20-pager turned into 21… etc. ) But, in that way, I feel like I can start decompressing it myself as I work on it. Its good to be able to get a story out quickly, but sometimes you want to live in it longer. It’s not something I’m going to force my stories into, but something I want to keep in mind for myself as now I have the time and pages to do it.

When I work on stories for comics, I compare myself to my own old work too much. I find myself very often being like “You already made a ghost comic– you already explored this theme– you already did xyz” and wanting to make myself explore new territory. New and different things are great, and I feel like I’m good at coming up with random things on a whim, but nothing like that that I’d like to develop. More like exercises. As I continue working on my older projects and refresh them, I want to find the one that excites me like it did when I first made it. Maybe that ship has sailed, but it’s one of the things that’s keeping my from just picking and working on something already.

There’s just kind of a lot of ways i can take my comic work right now. But I’m trying to take it easy, and not constantly think about all the work I could be working on if I just sat down and produced already. It’s a very capitalist way of thinking I shouldn’t shove into my artwork but hard to pull away from completely.

Goals (hold yourself accountable, DAMNIT)

Mainly, I want to finish a cover and assets for Field Research, print a few out and maybe sell them with other copies of my work. I’m gonna force myself to make a post or two on Instagram– for some reason that’s so hard for me. Lastly, I want to work on scripting out at least one of my projects, whichever it might be.

That’s all I have to say this time- Hopefully by the next update I’ll have some good news, otherwise, thanks for reading my ramblings.