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A: I came from Taiwan where we do it right to left (asian way) I got used to its workflow so I decided to do most of my work Right to Left. |
A: yes, just watch me and comment on my journal/blog entry, you might just become my friend. |
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Sometimes I use maya/3D max too... (but I am not good with 3D yet)
3. Will you teach animation? A: Yes, at a price. I tutor for animation, 20 USD/per hour. |
>>> MANGA RELATED: 1. What pencil did you use to color? |
4. How much do you charge for commission? (a) Can you make an anime for my story? A: Prize range depends on complexity + investment on the materials and shipping :Click to See my listing: |
5. How long did it take you to do one page of manga? A: It varies. Colored manga like Edepth takes 4 hours per page, pencil manga is average 20-40 mins per page. Inking 20-40 mins depends on complexity. But at highest quality, each page takes about 6-8 hours. Occasionally, a page would torture me for nearly 20 hours due to its illustration aspect. |
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7. What kind of paper do you use? A: most of the time my anime/manga works are done on normal injet printing paper, now I also use 25 pound injet printing paper, because its heavier than the normal 20 pound. For more official work I use A4 size manga paper because it's convenient. |
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10. Did it take you a long time to achieve that many good panels in a comic? A: You really need to learn the basic art design principle for this. |
For Eastern side manga, I follow Eastern publishers' demand, most of them take A4 with digital works. So I usually work on A4. Although they said pro mangaka works on B4, dojinshi mangaka works on B5. |
1. How long did it take you to CG or color? A: 4-6 hours upto 30 hours, it depends. A: Thank you for the compliment. I started drawing ever since i could pick up a pencil. Just don't stop learning from around you and don't stop practicing. Observation is key to a good artwork. |
+ Edepth Angel related: 0. Why did you switch from color pencils to CG for Edepth? A: There's only so much pencils can do I got sick of it. I am still experimenting, I didn't give up pencil for good. :P
1."how did you come up with this story?(Edepth Angel)" |
A: Doing comics/manga do require a lot of discipline on the artist's part. The broader the study the better you get. Abstract Art- for mood and art element foundation control Graphic Design- for layout, the comfort of reading, and learn the placement of text, it's selection and flow. Figure drawing- (gesture and character handling) Perspective drawing - for making the world believable Illustration studies on fine arts and digital matte paintings- for colors, composition, and work refinement quality Manga studies- learning other artists' visual languages and culture, as well as all manga foundations. Film studies- study good films that have good camera angle and transitions to apply it to my work News and real life stories, documentries- studies of cultures, different views of the world and people. Animation/acting: For the details expression of life and motion, to live-up your drawing. Other Studies- archeology, psychologies, history, scientific reports, for interesting story development with the help of knowledge. And anything you want your stories to be about... you have to study it. |
A: erm, good question that demands a long answer....
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A: If you post it on anywhere online, it's count as published, but it doesn't mean your publisher on digital world (such as sites like keenspace, drunkduck, Deviantart ) is obligated to pay you for it. For book publishing, there are two major ways to go: go submit to a publisher, But in truth, there are more publishing formats than that. Digital publishing- put your content on web where it can be viewed by the whole world is counted as publishing. The only way to earn with this is using advertisement like what they do on TV, and drunkduck. Once you build enough popularity, its not hard to sell merchandise and earn real money from it. But the road is long and hard to fight because this is the easiest way to get published.
Submit to publisher:
Submit to major publisher that fits ur style: Publishers usually look for a type of artists that fits their niche, so if you fit to manga style, go for tokyopop, if you are superhero kind go for Marvel, DC; unless these publishers say they are looking for a specific look they will only consider those who fit into their framework. At times publishers also look for artists who are out of their box, but that's if they are looking for them. Bigger traditional publishers like these requires a lot of "break in" work, you need to work very hard to conform to their way of doing things, a big battle ship won't turn for you, you turn for them. Usually they won't take you unless you already established yourself with a smaller press. I would be cautious about getting my original titles to the big guys because they tend to keep most of the rights, (or all of the rights)you have to know you are trading your rights for a chance of national exposure. It's not too bad, but there are things that come with it you have to deal with. You have to treat commercial deal as commercial, don't give them your dearest baby unless you can get a good contract with a lawyer. The thing about publishing is... it's a business, in business everyone is equally measured by money, the more money your work can make, or the more money a publisher has (and actually know how to use it) the easier for them to distribute through larger channels and be seen by everyone. However, web is a perfect place to start, if you have a title ready, want to see if it will do well in books, test it online first. After all, when you are posting it online, it's completely controlled by you, while in a publishing house you always have to listen to someone else.
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