
My profile picture was made by https://twitter.com/lilstank0 ! Professional in the art of having no idea what they are doing art-wise, and I do more of my art stuff here: https://instagram.com/fr00t_snacc?r=nametag
878 posts
More Doodles- Those Who Know The Morgan Reference, I Understand Your Pain/jk


More doodles- Those who know the Morgan reference, I understand your pain/jk
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More Posts from Fr00t-snacc
Webcomic tips
In the conclusion for now, some things I’d really recommend doing if you’re seriously considering making a webcomic (or really a comic in general). Some of these don’t really apply to strips or gag-a-day type of comics, but I’m not talking about those here.
1. Write down ideas\sketch stuff, LEGIBLY. “I’m gonna remember it later” NEVER works. And if you scribble it somewhere on a piece of paper, you’d better scan it or retype in one doc later, because tiny notes always get lost among other doodles in my skethbooks.

(i know it’s hard to keep everything clean and organized, but this mess is just not productive)
If your project is a collaboration, save your conversations. If you’re working alone, make a blog for your ramblings. You have no clue what tears of relief I cry when I open that blog and rememeber I don’t have to painstakingly look through my heaps of sketchbooks and folders for a tiny idea I’m not even sure I wrote down a few months ago.
2. Inspiration folders, or even better, inspo blog with tags also help with collecting and remembering ideas. Color schemes, landscapes, style inspirations, atmospheric stuff, maybe some photo references, all those neat things.

3. Basic tier: character design sheets. Top tier: common poses, expressions. God tier: outfits they wear throughout the comic. Holy cow tier: turnaround sheets for all those outfits.

(I’d die trying to find good pages for references without these)
4. If you haven’t finished detailing the plot, don’t even think about moving on to drawing the comic. You’re gonna regret it when you come up with a really cool plot element that can’t be incorporated anymore because you’ve already drawn all the parts you could’ve tweaked.
5. Don’t just define the plot, make a script. Writing down the lines and the brief description of the actions serves me fine:

(notice that I approximately divided the pages & the text that’d go to each panel on a page)
6. Hard mode: make thumbnails for all the pages, if possible. At least whenever a new chapter starts.
7. If your story involves some convoluted chronology shenanigans, you’d better write down the events of your timeline in the chronological order.
8. Backgrounds. You can’t avoid them, bro. Like half of the comics are backgrounds, especially if your story involves a lot of adventuring and looking around. I know it hurts, but you’ll have to become friends with them. Read some tutorials, practice on photos, go out and sketch some streets, use 3d programs (like Google Sketch) to understand the perspective, use sites like houseplans to visualize your buildings better, I don’t know. Just be prepared for their imminent evil.
9. If you’re drawing digitally, pick a brush size for the lines and stick with it. You don’t want your lines and detail levels to look all wonky and inconsistent in different panels. And I don’t mean the cool stylistic varying lines, I mean this:

Also, things on the background should have thinner and/or lighter lines to avoid distraction. Usually less details too, unless you’re making a busy background with a simple foreground to help it pop out. Or wanna draw the attention to an object on the bg.

10. Readable fonts. Even if you chose to ignore people with poor sight or dyslexia, the majority of your readers aren’t gonna be excited about struggling to decypher this:

Also, as much as I love my black speech bubbles, colorful text on black still kinda hurts the eyes. I wouldn’t recommend doing that for all the characters. Black speech bubbles are usually used for creepy, inhuman voices. And yes, having a colorful outline in this case helps.
11. Probably newsflash, but did you know that panels have their place, order and functions? They do! My favourite thing ever is how I used panels when I was like 12:

(comics ain’t rocket science, but this one is)
The composition of the panels and word balloons always serve for a better reading experience. They guide your eyes over the page, so that you never feel lost or confused. The images in the comic equal frames in a movie, so it’s pretty damn important in what order you look at things and how quickly you can understand what’s going on!

(Eric Shanower & Scottie Young’s Wizard of Oz)
12. One update a week is fine for testing waters. Don’t overestimate yourself, especially if you have a pretty busy life outside it. A stable comic that updates slowly, but regularly is better than an unpredictable erratic one. You can always pick up the pace later, if you feel confident enough.
13. Try to always have a buffer - a couple of pages in reserve. If you’re making the pages much faster than you’re updating, this shouldn’t be a problem. But if those paces are equally the same, it’s goddamn HARD. But on the other hand, if something happens and you skip an update, those come in handy.
If you’re looking at this list and thinking “wow that’s a LOT of work”, you’re totally right. And it’s okay to be intimidated at first! But that’s why it’s important to start with something small. Once you get the formula down, these things will be natural to you.
FUCK DISCOVERY HERE'S THE 4 SEASONS OF INFINITY TRAIN


My hobbies include
1. Fun makeup!
2. Yoga!
3. Stalking cute children's backpacks until they go clearance then swooping in like a hungry bird of prey!
4. Journaling!
writing should be fun.
make oc playlists. spend hours on moodboards that have no purpose. write self-indulgent fluff that’s never going to be published. scribble three lines of poetry in the back of your history notebook. draw fanart of your own characters. write stupid dialogue that your publishers might hate. start new wips that you might never finish but write those three chapters that make you happy because if you don’t write them, who else will?
writing shouldn’t always be about “will publishers like this” or “i have to reach this word count” or “how do i get the most likes”.
have fun with your writing.
I propose: magical kid core
I had a whole post written out and it got deleted eye-
basically the magical girl aesthetic but in this house we’re all inclusive
bright pastel colors
cuteness levels over 5000
cute animals
glitter
if you have colored hair and you fill in your eyebrows in the same color,, that’s magical kid core
sailor moon, star butterfly, steven universe, card captor sakura, miraculous ladybug, and bee and puppycat are the ogs
r i b b o n s
candy and sweets and snacks
healthy optimism
lionhearted bravery and standing up for anyone who needs it yourself included
just havin a good time haviNG A GOOD TIME I’M A SHOOTING STA-
doing stuff you love regardless of if you think you’re good just bc you like doing it
dance all the time, fill 14 sketchbooks with whales in cowboy hats, sing off key about whatever you’re doing and have fun doing it
fun is on full boost all the time
stickers stickers stickers
could make friends with lint
cute lil details like glitter in your hair and stickers on your phone case
fruit and baked goods scented everything
giant messy mix of fairies and mermaids and princes/princesses and space and angles and everything else you love that makes you happy
seeing beauty in literally everything even if you have to look kinda hard for it
gas station run? fun roadtrip vibes!!
grocery shopping? yay, food!!
walking your dog? look at all these cool flowers and rocks!!
also lots of exclamation points !!!!
hearts and stars and clouds an
baking sweets every ten seconds
cute wallets and cute bags and cute keychains and cute stickers and cute pillows and cute plushies and cute nightlights and cute socks and cute phone cases and cute headphones and cu
wings and animal ears
twirling around
basically anything else that makes you happy lmao
follow my magical kid core blog @butterflytrees if you want thx babes 💖