Don't talk to me or my boyfriend ever again
(theyre from my webcomic)
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from Yemen

seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Russia
seen from Russia
seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from Netherlands
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China

seen from United States
Don't talk to me or my boyfriend ever again
(theyre from my webcomic)
I meant to post about this weeks ago (oops) but why the heck did no one tell me about the webtoon Time And Time Again?????? It's so good?!?!? And perfectly fits my specific niche of things I like??? And I just had to stumble across it on my own cuz I needed something to read while AO3 was down????
Anyways psa go read this webtoon because it's freaking amazing and needs more love and appreciation right now immediately. Especially since it's finished (as a free user I'm still waiting for the last 4 episodes) and I don't know what I'm gonna do with myself if I can't talk about it with more people.
It's really so good and has so many cool things going on with it. Vampires, werewolves, and other supernatural creatures, along with time travel and the silly hijinks that ensue from it, and as a cherry on top an absolutely beautifully written queer love story. It's so good and I cannot recommend it enough so please I'm BEGGING you people to go read it pleasepleasepleaseplease
incredible dash lottery
I can 100% imagine Steve (@deoidesign ) worrying about pikmin
How I save time on backgrounds as a full-time webcomic artist
Hi! I make webcomics for a living, and I have to be able to draw a panel extremely fast to keep up with my deadlines. I draw about 50 panels a week, which gives me about 45 minutes per panel if I want any semblance of a healthy work-life balance.
Most webtoon artists save time on backgrounds by using 3d models, which works for them and is great! but personally I hate working in 3d... I went to school for it for a year and hated it so much I completely changed career paths and vowed never to do it again! So, this is how I save time without using any 3d, for those of you out there who don't like it either!
This tactic has also saved me money (3d models are expensive) and it has helped me converting my comic from scroll format into page format for print, because I have much more art to work with than what's actually in the panels. (I'll touch on this later)
So, first, I make my backgrounds huge. my default starting size is 10,000 x 10,000 pixels. My panels are 2,500 pixels wide, so my backgrounds are 4x that, minimum. Because of this, I make them less detailed than I could or that you might expect so it doesn't look weird against my character art when I shrink portions of it down.
I personally find it much easier to add in detail than to make "removing" details look natural at smaller sizes, but you might have different preferences than I do.
I also make sure to keep all of my elements on separate layers so that I can easily remove or replace them, I can move them to simulate different camera angles more easily, and it's simple to adjust the lighting to imply different times of day.
Then I can go ahead and copy/paste them into my episodes. I move the background around until it feels like it's properly fitting how I want.
Once I've done that in every panel, I'll go back through the episode and clean up anything that looks weird, and add in solid blacks (for my art style) Here's a quick before and after of what that looks like!
This makes 90% of my backgrounds take me just a few hours. This is my tactic when I'm working in an environment that an entire scene, or multiple scenes, will take place.
But many panels will inevitably have a location that's used exactly once, and it would waste time and effort to draw a massive background for those. So in 10% of cases, I just draw the single panel background in the episode. I save all of these, just in case I can re-use it later (this happens more often with outdoor locations, but I save them all nonetheless!)
I generally have to draw about 2 big backgrounds per episode, and 3-5 single-panel backgrounds per episode! At the beginning of an arc/book the number is higher, but as the series is continuing and I'm building up an asset library of indoor and outdoor elements to re-use for the book, the number generally goes down and I save more time.
My series involves time travel and mysteries, so there's a lot of new locations in it and we're constantly moving around. If I were working on a series that was more consistent in this aspect, this process would save me even more time!
Like I said earlier, this also saves me a lot of pain and gives me a lot more options as I'm converting from scroll format to print format!
panels that look like this in scroll format...
can look like this in print!
because I drew the background like this, so I didn't need to go through the additional effort to add in the extra detail to expand it outwards at all.
Anyways, I hope this helps someone! As always if it doesn't help, just go ahead and disregard. This is what I do and what works for me, and I feel like I only ever see time-saving tips for comics that involve 3d models and workflows, which don't work for me at all! I know there's more people like me out there, so this is for you!
Enjoy!
Also obligatory "my webcomic" if you want to see this in action or check it out!
Happy pride from Adam and Steve, my t4t gay vampire and werewolf!!!
They're from my webcomic. It's good. I'm not biased. It's funny and gentle and they time travel to a new location every full moon, where there's a new little mystery to solve!
Sorry I havent stopped thinking about them since I saw this post
panels from my webcomic. the characters are also from my webcomic. believe it or not it's about gay time traveling vampires