HOW TO MAKE A COMIC STRIP (or more accurately How to make the 93rd instalment of Lucy the Octopus) PART 1: THE FOUNDATIONS OF WRITING

INTRODUCTION

To be clear, this is not the definitive way I’d recommend trying to create a comic strip. It’s not even how I always go about creating strips.

Each project requires its own approach.  However, I thought I’d document the minutia of the process of what it takes to make a Lucy the Octopus strip every week.

In fairness some Lucy strips are more straight forward than others.  Some arrive fully formed in my head with very simple drawing required.  The 93rd strip was a bit different though.  More of an action strip than normal, I thought it was a good one to document as I was bound to face unusual challenges along the way…
Planning-01THE FOUNDATIONS OF WRITING
When it came to writing the script for Strip 93 the task was relatively easy-peasy.  This is only because by the time I came to write the actual script most of the work had already been done.

The foundation of the strip is character.  Lucy is clearly defined as having a problem that effects all aspects of her life.  Her lack of cool or unpopularity gives me something for her to respond to with every character she encounters and every situation she finds herself in.

Rather than being an ensemble piece, all other characters are designed based on how they react to the protagonist Lucy.  Some highlight the difficulty of her situation.  Some shed new light on what she is able to achieve.

Here’s how the crowd of characters around Lucy were looking 40 strips into the strip…
Planning-02Many comic strips work on the assumption that characters can’t generally develop or evolve.  In those instances the situation at the end of a storyline should leave the characters pretty much where they were at the beginning.  Certainly nothing wrong with that – Charles Schulz did it amazingly with Peanuts for 50 years.  Bill Watterson’s Calvin and Hobbes would have been very different (and presumably less funny) if Calvin learnt lessons from the consequences of his actions.

However with Lucy the Octopus, I wanted the story to have an arc and for the central character to grow.  So while I don’t have a precise plan for every strip from now until the end of the story I know roughly where I’m heading and that clearly helps focus the writing.

THE LUCY DOCUMENT

With the ongoing story in mind, ideas for funny lines and situations pop into my head long before I need them, sometimes when I’m working on another Lucy strip and sometimes when I’m not doing anything seemingly relevant to Lucy or comics in general.  As a result, I’ve never once been faced with a blank sheet of paper staring back at me as I sit down to draw the next Lucy comic.

Sometimes I end up scrawling ideas down on paper or emailing them to myself but as soon as possible any stray ideas are noted down in one Word Processing document.

Part of me would like to write scripts and ideas soley on paper and collect them in a big physical binder.  Here’s a recent script I did for my Rosie and Jacinda comic, where I couldn’t suss out the order of the key plot points until I’d cut up a print out of my story plan and rearranged it physically.  My brain often seems to flow better that way.
Planning-03If I were always working out of my studio a physical script for Lucy the Octopus might be practical.  However, work and parenting mean I’m far more likely to be writing Lucy scripts on the tube or waiting for my son to go to sleep after bedtime stories.

So here’s what my Lucy document contains…

1) A list of strip titles from all previous episodes of Lucy:

So the most recent of these before Strip 93 were…

89. RD 5 March  Jessica’s been picked on
90. LU 12 March Dad signs for Lucy to go a school trip
91. LD 19 March Lucy has to sit with cool girls on coach
92. RU 26 March Coach riding through seascape. Monster appears

These titles are for my reference only – I don’t title each strip on the website or in the printed comic as it’s hard not to give away too much in a title.  It’s also unnecessary extra work.

The number is obviously the strip / episode number.

RD / LU / LD / RU stands for Right Down / Left Up / Left Down / Right Up.  This is the position each strip will appear on a double page spread of the printed comic.
Planning-04Ideally when working in print comics I’d aim to put little cliffhangers or things making a reader want to turn the page in the bottom right hand corner of each double page spread, and save big revelations for the top left after a page turn.
Working in a comic strip format, things don’t exactly work out that way but it’s good to be conscious of where things will fall in print.
Also as I occasionally do episodes that fill an entire page I need to ensure they are due to be printed starting at the top of a page, not from half way down.

2) Details of each printed Lucy Collection:

On my plan I group the list of episode titles according to which printed collection of Lucy they will appear in, along with what other details of each physical comic…

#2 I’ll Take What I can Get
Cover Intro, Websites (etc)
Inside Front Cover:
Page 1: What’s happened so far!
Strips: 41-77
Extras Page 1-3 Lucy Advice
Extras Page 4-5 WASP report
Inside Back Cover.  David WASP strip / Zarina WASP strip
Back Cover  Blurb

3) Story Ideas

I note down any ideas for jokes, story lines and characters, no matter how vague or incomplete.  As the strip moves on I get a sense of where certain jokes and story elements would make sense within the overall arc.

For example at the beginning of the strip I did lots to establish Lucy’s unpopularity but once that was really in place I could play with the formula more.
More recently, as I knew that as of Strip 93, Lucy was going to find herself alone with Kate, I made sure that shortly before that I had a strip which while seemingly a stand alone episode, was planned to reestablish the relationship between the cool girls (including Kate) and Lucy…
Planning-05Some jokes and story ideas will hover around for years before the right moment to use them comes up.  Sometimes a good gag’s moment will never come up and it will have to be sacrificed in the name of moving character development and story forward.

In my document, I list different types of idea together under titles such as…

Music
Puffy
Family
School
Sandra
New Friends
Other

Then I make sure I generally don’t stick to any one category for too long in planning the overall story.

Likewise, I try to touch base with all the key characters every once in a while. Some characters aside from Lucy will evolve over the course of the strip. Sandra is very different now to how she first appeared. In these instances I generally prefer to have their character arcs spread out over years rather than weeks.  This way the change and occasional pay off is all the more satisfying and earnt!

I have tried using a spreadsheet as a visual reference to when my characters have last appeared. 
This is based on the idea of TV and film makers laying out key scenes on different index cards.  They mark each card with different colours representing the characters involved and can therefore see very quickly if any particular colour / character hasn’t been used in for a while.
Planning-06To be honest though the pace of making Lucy (in terms of writing at least) is not so fast that I struggle to keep track of which characters have been used recently.  I usually forget to fill in my spreadsheet for Lucy but have found it useful when planning Rosie and Jacinda and other comics.

4) Technique Ideas

Finally in my Lucy Document I list ideas for ways I could use different mediums or express things differently in the strip.  For example…

Pencil
Biro
Black and White with brush
Panel a day for a week?  Month?
Strip in silhouette.  Putting mask on.
Graphs
Infographics

As with jokes, I don’t shoehorn these techniques into the strip.  They will wait until a suitable moment or won’t be used at all.

In Part 2 of HOW TO MAKE A COMIC STRIP (or more accurately How to make the 93rd instalment of Lucy the Octopus), I’ll discuss fleshing out the script and laying down lettering.

Lettering before the art?!!!  You betcha!

For Part 2 of this series of blogs: Script, Lettering & Layout, click here!
For Part 3: Pencils, click here!
For Part 4: Inks, click here!
For Part 5: Erasing, Scanning & Cleaning Up click here!
For Part 6: Colours click here!
For a video overview click here!

Process at Gosh / Watercolour Presentation Pictures

I had a great time giving a watercolour presentation at Process at Gosh Comics last night.

Before it kicked off I prepared an ink drawing to add colour to later…

WatercolourProcess-01 WatercolourProcess-02 WatercolourProcess-03 WatercolourProcess-04Process is organised by the fantastic Steve Walsh (below, far right).  There was a great turn out yesterday.
WatercolourProcess-04.5 WatercolourProcess-05Andy Poyiadgi talked brilliantly about putting together his exhibition for The Lakes comics festival and how the festival involved the local community, similar to the French Angouleme Festival.
WatercolourProcess-06Next up the brilliant Lorenzo Fiorini talked through the process of laying out panels and story telling as told to him by artist Eduardo Risso (100 Bullets, Batman: Noir). WatercolourProcess-07 WatercolourProcess-08Then it was over to me to babble away while painting.  Two pics below by Lily Withycombe.WatercolourProcess-09 WatercolourProcess-10It was good to hear further watercolour suggestions and ideas from many of the experienced creators gathered around, including Rosie Polet, Francesca Dare and Maartje Schalkx.
Two pics below by Francesca.WatercolourProcess-11 WatercolourProcess-12So here was the piece by the end of the presentation…WatercolourProcess-13And here it is after I added some more layers of watercolour.
I added some additional texture on the wood, ground and bushes. I also gave some of the other areas richer and more defined tones.
After scanning it, I cleaned up the speech bubble a bit on Photoshop.WatercolourProcess-14There you go.  Thanks very much to Steve for asking me to come along!

Water Colour Presentation at Process

I’m looking forward to doing some live watercolours tomorrow and talking through the process at, appropriately enough, Process at Gosh Comics  tomorrow evening…

Process
Gosh Comics
1 Berwick Street, London W1F 0DR
Wednesday 6th November 2013, 7pm

8-WatercoloursCome along to this fantastic free event.  As well as my presentation you can listen to Andy Poyiadgi talking through putting together his exhibition for The Lakes comics festival and Lorenzo Fiorini will be talking about an instructional essay on storytelling visually that he was given by Eduardo Risso (100 Bullets, Batman: Noir).

9-Watercolours-1st-Layer11-Watercolours-3Watercolour Life Painting 15.11.11Watercolour and Ink Life Painting 7.2.12LucyWatercolour09LucyWatercolour13

Lucy in watercolour – A step by step process

So for #63 of my  webcomic Lucy the Octopus I wanted a moment for Lucy, and the reader, to pause and reflect after a trying time.  This is the end of a story that takes place over a couple of days in Lucy’s world, but took over four months in real time with one strip coming out every week.

Doing one large pretty panel in watercolour seemed like a nice way to do it…

I’m used to doing Lucy seascapes now, so pencilled it out without too much fuss.  I did try to keep the pencil lines cleaner and tighter than normal as I didn’t want too many pencil marks visible under the watercolours.  It’s not possible to erase pencils efficiently once they’ve got a layer of paint over them.

For those not used to watercolours, the basic idea is to build up layers of paint, starting with the lightest colour in any given area…

LucyWatercolour01
I use a Pro Arte Acrylix brush (size 3).  It’s actually designed for acrylic paints, so it’s durable and keeps its shape.  As a vegetarian I try to avoid buying stuff made of animal bits, so I also chose these brushes because they’re synthetic rather than horsehair.  I use these when inking too.

After doing the edges of any given patch of colour I may switch to a larger brush to [WARNING – TECHINICAL TERM COMING UP]… fill in the big bits.

It’s nice to have a range of colours from light to dark so I make sure I leave some paper showing through where the light catches the large yellow rock  formation.

LucyWatercolour02
When adding a layer of watercolour over an existing layer, the wetter the bottom layer is, the more the top layer will run into the bottom.  This makes for a softer transition between the two.  I’ve done a bit of this in the large blue sea area at the top of the page.

Where I want a sharper edge to the area of colour, I make sure the layer below is dry.  You can see my hairdryer is always on hand for this!  This would be the case for the darker tone on the majenta coloured plants.

LucyWatercolour03
A close up of Lucy and Puffy.
Mainly at this point I’m mapping out basic colours, and will add further tones later.
I make sure the paint is dry before adding colour to a connecting area of the paper.  That way I can avoid, for example, the blue on Lucy’s arm running into the yellow of Puffy’s fin, resulting in a weird green that I would then have to disguise as seaweed.

Lucy looks odd without the black in her eye, but I must be patient!

LucyWatercolour04
Notice my watercolour set that dates back to at least the seventies.  I’ve had it myself since I was a kid, but I think my mum may have used it before me. It’s made by a company called Page.  It includes some small tubes of what was once wet water based paint but has long since dried up.  I still keep them in there because I like the look of them!

Anyway, all areas of the picture have at least one layer of paint on them now, so I can get a sense of the colours balancing.

LucyWatercolour05
A second layer of watercolour can be the same colour as the first, making the area richer and darker.

You can also use a different colour for subsequent layers, such as where I’ve used a light orangey brown on top of the yellow in the large rock formation.

LucyWatercolour06
Adding more tone and [WARNING – ANOTHER TECHINICAL TERM COMING UP]… splotches, to plants.

LucyWatercolour07
Here we can see my highly professional desk set up…

  • Paper napkins in case of spills or mistakes
  • Lucky Charms mug full of water for brush rinsing
  • Copy of Lucy the Octoups: Better in Small Doses for reference
  • Scrap paper to scribble notes and check the look of watercolours (they look very different to their dry in the box form)
  • The painting paper is a page from a Winsor & Newton Cotman Water Colour PadI rest it on the pad so I can angle the painting slightly as I paint, not enough for the paint to run, but enough that I don’t get back ache hunched over it.

LucyWatercolour08

This is all the watercolouring done.  Few speckles for sponge plants and rock texture.  A few more for general bits and pieces floating around in the ocean.

Also check out my shoeless feet.  Always paint without shoes on.
It is more bohemian so your art will be artier.

LucyWatercolour09On a separate piece of paper, I mark out where the lettering will sit – I have already laid this out on my Mac.  I then draw the speech bubbles with a drawing pen.
I will scan both pages and layer them using Photoshop.
I may want to turn the original painting into a print or postcard at some point, without any text.

I don’t know why I taped the painting to my drawing board to ink it.  I took the tape straight off again as I find it easier to ink, being able to turn the paper freely.

LucyWatercolour10

At last I can add the dark of Lucy’s eyes and she looks like herself!
I inked over the watercolours with Staedtler Pigment Liner drawing pens.  Mainly 0.5, a bit of o.3 and 0.8 too.

LucyWatercolour11It’s fun doing the black lines.  They define each area of colour, bringing the picture to life.

LucyWatercolour12
I add a bit of coloured pencil for the outline of the bubbles and Lucy’s patches, and some texture on the big rock formation.
I leave the rear rock formation without an outline.  This leaves it looking less defined and further away.

LucyWatercolour13
So there you go!

If you want to see the final lettered comic it’s #63 though if you don’t want to read this final page of the story before the beginning, the start of the story is here!

Cheers!