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BEHIND-THE-SCENES: Comic from start to finish
Damiani.guilhermeBem legal ver o processo. Fico feliz que alguém se proponha a fazer isso, eu jamais faria.

Even though I’m away for a couple of weeks and there won’t be a new comic, I still wanted to update the site with some juicy content. And since I got some great feedback from my last little behind-the scenes post, I thought I would show you the breakdown of an entire comic and not just one panel. I found it amusing that some readers were surprised by the amount of work that went into one panel and thought I drew polished drawings from the start, just like magic. Man, I wish that were the case! Nah, I don’t have any magic powers. As you’ll see, I slowly and painfully extract the comic out of my head and hands over the course of an exhausting but satisfying week. For this example, I’m using the recent Tim Minchin comic. Also, I got some complaints that the Marc Maron panel I used last time was not appropriate for the classroom so I’ve got rid of the naughty words in this comic so teachers can share it with their students.
STEP 1: The idea
Completion time: Usually a few days to a week, sometimes longer.
Once I find a quote I like, I usually print it out and just leave it on my desk while I’m still working on another comic. I’ll read it a few times, think about it while i’m in the shower, walking my dogs, knitting or doing water aerobics (I made two of those up). In this case, Tim Minchin is talking about being hard on your opinions and that they should always be examined and tested. So eventually I got the idea of a man getting his opinion examined by a doctor just like they would any other part of their body. This didn’t just come to me like a lightning bolt, it slowly formed from other ideas. The initial image I got was a guy actually beating their opinion with a cricket bat because that’s what’s in the quote and is already very visual. That meant the guy’s opinion had to somehow get out of his head which led to a machine, which led to a machine operator, which led to a doctor and so on. It’s very organic. It’s also the most challenging step and the most satisfying when I manage to stumble onto a good idea.
So the final idea I have is a guy who visits a doctor to get his opinion examined. He walks past a beggar and brushes the beggar off. He gets his opinion ‘fixed’ at the doctor and when he leaves, decides to give the beggar some money. That’s the basic idea. At this stage I don’t know what the characters look like, how the opinion gets out of the guy’s head, how the opinion is fixed or anything else beyond the basic idea.
STEP 2: Thumbnails
Completion time: Approx 1-2 hours.
Ok, now I start doodling and attempt to flesh the idea out into a proper story. This is a very important step because I’m plotting out the comic, figuring out what goes in each panel, the pacing, where the words go, which parts need to be emphasised. This is storytelling, the most important skill of a cartoonist. Forget technical ability, how well you draw, how much cross-hatching you can do, how perfect you can draw hair – it doesn’t matter if your story makes no bloody sense! As you can see, my thumbnails are a complete mess and are probably only legible to me. The only goal here is to figure exactly how the story unfolds.
NOTE: You can see below that the quote was originally meant to be longer, but that last sentence didn’t end up being needed for the story I came up with.
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STEP 3: Roughs
Completion time: Approx 30 mins.
Once the story is plotted I get on the computer and draw out all the panels. I also paste the words in and then print it out, in this case on six A4 pages. Next I very roughly draw what’s going on in each panel. I then scan them back into the computer, enlarge each A4 page to A3, then print the roughs out in light blue ink ready to start a more detailed drawing.

STEP 4: Reference
Completion time: 30 mins to an hour.
I usually search on Getty Images or Google for various reference pics I need. In this case, some homeless men, medical centres and surgical stuff. Also, I’m not very good at drawing hair so I grab a pic of Mr Labeouf and Mr Clooney, who have the greasy, slick business look I’m going for. Remember, these are just reference photos to help with the drawing and environment, don’t copy poses too closely (or worse, trace them) because your figures will look too stiff.

STEP 5: Pencils
Completion time: A few hours
Now that I have my roughs in very light blue ink on a bigger A3 page (just cheap copy paper), I start doing a more detailed drawing. The drawings are very loose and fast and since it’s on cheap paper, I’m not precious about it. I’m still trying to work out the faces of the characters and in this comic, I really struggled with the main guy’s hair – it keeps changing from panel to panel. You can see in the panels where the opinion is being injected with the needles, it’s a different order and some of the images are reversed. I usually fix any mistakes with panel layout in the next stage.

STEP 6: Tighter pencils on final board
Completion time: A few hours
Once the loose pencils are done I scan those in again, fix the order of the panels, then print it all out in light blue ink on the final art board. I’ve only starting doing this recently, the extra scanning and printing on a clean piece of paper. Before I would draw the complete pencils on the board and ink over it, but my pencils were very dark and the page would get really messy with lots of smudges and it would be a pain to erase. With the rough pencils printed in blue on the board I can do tighter pencils over the top without the page getting too dirty. I’m probably not making much sense – all you need to know is that in this stage I further refine and flesh out the pencils, ready to be inked. I also rule in all the panel borders once the pencils are done.

STEP 7: Inks
Completion time: Approx 2 days
Inking is when a cartoonist goes over their pencils with either a brush dipped in ink or with pens. Originally, this was done so the artwork could be scanned and reproduced clearly in newspapers or comic books. These days with fancy computer colouring, some comic book art teams digitally paint the colours straight over the pencils, no inking required. However, inking is still widely used and is a big reason why a cartoon drawing … looks like a cartoon drawing! I use mainly Pigma Micron pens and some brush pens that I randomly buy from JetPens.com because they look cool. Once I’m done, I erase the pencils underneath the inks and then scan everything in Photoshop and join all the pages together into one long and skinny file that you’re used to seeing. Next is the boring part – I clean up and erase all the dirt on the page, fix any little imperfections I don’t like and fill in all the big black areas. The image below is the cleaned up and polished final ink drawing in Photoshop.

STEP 8: Lettering
Completion time: 1-2 hours
I save a lo-res version of the comic and import it into Adobe InDesign to do the lettering. Some people use Photoshop or Illustrator or do their own lettering by hand. I use InDesign because I used it everyday at my old graphic design job and know it really well. Lettering and typography is a whole discipline in itself and requires multiple posts to be written about it. I’ll explore it in depth when I write that cartooning ebook I keep telling myself I’m going to write one day. Once the lettering is done I export it back into Photoshop and slap it on the comic file.
STEP 8: Colours
Completion time: Approx 2 days
To be honest, colouring is probably my least favourite part of the process. It is essential though, because it really brings the story to life. The colours in this comic are pretty straightforward – the main thing I was going for was using the orange exterior of the medical centre and contrasting that with the blue interior. It just makes it easier for the reader to subconsciously know the man is outside again at the end of the comic.

So that’s a quick recap of THE PROCESS. You can read the final comic with the quote here. There’s no magic involved, just a slow adding-on process like a sculptor adding more and more clay to a wireframe. I hope you’ve gotten something out of it, even if you’re not an aspiring cartoonist. I know when I was a kid, I used to love seeing the process of my favourite comic book artists. My process is not perfect – I spend a lot of time scanning and printing. I’m thinking of trying to use a Wacom Cintiq tablet and doing most of the comic digitally in the future. It will probably save me some time. I’ll try to be a really good boy from now until the end of the year and maybe Santa Claus will buy me a Cintiq for Christmas.
Feel free to ask any questions in the comments so that I can address them in the next Behind-the-Scenes post or in a future how-to ebook.
Adiós from Peru!
- Gav
shouts out to the approximation of me living somewhere, somewhen, who is one inch taller than I am. I respect you, friend.
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August 22nd, 2013: HEY SPEAKING OF BODY HAIR, yesterday I shaved for the first time in several years! This is exciting for me but boring for most other people, so here's the wonderful Bee and Puppycat so you don't stop reading these posts down here due to extreme hair-based boredom. – Ryan
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mistaken cases of hilarious identity
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September 2nd, 2013: Have you ever wanted to OWN a comic? Well that's crazy but did you know you can own a part of a comic? One year ago today: send not to know for whom the bell tolls; it tolls for he, she, Pawnee, the Adriatic Sea, and your computer science degree – Ryan
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Truth or Dare: Court Version
Call of Duty is Way More Realistic Than We Ever Thought
Between love and madness lies... Obsession.
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September 11th, 2013:
Today To Be or Not To Be, my choose-your-own-path version of Hamlet, is out for real! If you missed out on the crazu-awesome Kickstarter you can get the book at your local book store, or on Amazon, or digitally, or basically in a zillion other ways. Check out hamletbook.com for more details, and I hope you like my crazy book! It is a really good book if I do say so myself! One year ago today: baby, given infinite chances i totally would've made that dunk – Ryan
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Odd Hat
Damiani.guilhermeahahahahahuahha
Lipe, como agir com pessoas que usam chapéu =~~
What Each Country Leads The World In
Damiani.guilhermeWow!

A larger, zoom-able version can be found at http://thedoghousediaries.com/large/5414.png.
EDIT2: Some Wikipedia articles from which we pulled much of our data have suddenly been updated. Coincidence? Anyway, we’ve made further updates to the map.
EDIT: Made multiple corrections to outdated data and wrong country borders.
"starfleet" was the only word in this comic that spell-check didn't recognize. i fixed that.
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October 17th, 2013: Janek sent me this early comic translated into Toki Pona, which is amazing. Toki Pona is a constructed language I'd never encountered before (Wikipedia says it has 3 people who are fluent) but I kind of love it: it's designed to be simple but still allow you to express complex thought. Check it out: there's five names for colours in Toki Pona (describing black, white, yellow, blue, and red - in other words, the CYMK colour space) and you can describe other colours by combining these two colours together like you would paints. Green is a "bluish yellow". This is totally rad! One year ago today: who wrote panel three, that's gross, i don't want to take credit for that – Ryan
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honestly quite happy with my phrase "pornographic sex movie" and intend to use it at every opportunity in the future
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October 7th, 2013: Thanks to everyone who came out to IndieCade and to our little event last night at the Time Travel Store! I believe everyone had a good... time?? I hope you enjoyed that pun; I am a professional writer One year ago today: should've wished for more wishes, grahams – Ryan
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if your spell check doesn't think "supergross" is a word, i respectfully suggest that your spellcheck has, up to now, lived a charmed life
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| dinosaur comics returns monday! if you're in LA, come see me at our free show today (sunday!)
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October 3rd, 2013: This weekend I'm in LA for IndieCade! If you're going be sure to check out To Be or Not To Be in the reading room because that is where I will be! And if you're NOT going to IndieCade, me and David "Wondermark" Malki are doing a reading / funtimes event on Sunday that you can come to! We'll have books and it will be SUPER RAD:
You should come! One year ago today: "dreaming non-fiction" is a nice way to write "even while sleeping, i obsess over past mistakes" – Ryan
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129. MARC MARON: The social media generation
Marc Maron is a comedian and the host of my favourite podcast, WTF with Marc Maron, which is a comedy podcast where Maron interviews not only comedians, but musicians, actors, chefs and artists. His conversations are always engaging, funny, raw and honest. I recommend it especially to those who are pursuing a creative field, as most of his interview subjects have insightful and unique stories about how they became successful. (As you can tell from its title, WTF contains explicit language and is for mature listeners … you’ve been warned!)
Maron’s own success story is worth mentioning. In his 40s, having lived a life of anger, resentment, addiction, failed relationships and burnt bridges, Maron had just gotten fired from a radio gig when he started the WTF podcast as a last, desperate attempt to stay in the comedy game. The podcast not only became incredibly successful, leading to a resurgence in his stand-up career and a television series, but it’s also proven to be his salvation.
I can’t believe it’s taken me so long to do a Maron quote, as I must have listened to hundreds of hours of his voice while working on Zen Pencils. This quote is taken from his latest memoir, Attempting Normal.
RELATED COMICS: Bill Hicks It’s just a ride, Louis C.K. We don’t think about how we talk, George Carlin On assassination (explicit), Henry Rollins Who’s the crazier man?.
- Since my last comic about social media, I think it’s fair to say I’m still totally dependent and addicted to my phone. Who checks their phone as soon as they wake up and while still in bed? I do. Who takes their phone into the toilet with them? Me. It’s gross, but I bet you do it too … don’t lie. Who can’t be alone in public without looking at their phone every five minutes? Yep, me again. While I love social media (it has obviously helped Zen Pencils enormously and it’s incredible how easy I can interact with readers from all over the world), we should also remember some of its negative side effects, as this article points out.
- What are your favourite podcasts? Some of my other recommendations: Hardcore History, The Bugle, The Smartest Man in the World, The Nerdist, Stuff You Should Know, StarTalk Radio and The BS Report.
131. C.P. CAVAFY: Ithaka
Constantine P. Cavafy (1863-1933) was a Greek poet, although he was born and spent most of his life in Alexandria, Egypt. Ithaka is one of Cavafy’s most famous poems and is a tribute to the original Greek poet, Homer, and his poem The Odyssey (which along with it’s companion, The Iliad, are the two oldest known works of Western literature). The Odyssey revolves around the hero Odysseus and his long voyage home to Ithaka after the Trojan war.
My hero in the comic is NOT meant to be Odysseus. I used Cavafy’s words and drew upon my childhood diet of comic books and Ray Harryhausen movies to tell a different story.
RELATED COMICS: Mark Twain An Educational Journey and No Regrets. Christopher McCandless Into the Wild.
- There are many English versions of Ithaka. I used the translation by Edmund Keeley and Philip Sherrard, found on the official Cavafy website.
- The cyclops I drew is a homage/swipe of Ray Harryhausen’s cyclops from The 7th Voyage of Sinbad.
- For a sexy Scottish version of Ithaka, here’s a reading by Sean Connery.
- Thanks to everyone who sent in this poem, I’ve had it saved in my quotes folder for over a year now.
- For those interested, here’s a podcast interview I did recently.
September 07, 2013

Before you get mad, I'm a vegetarian. Just like Einstein. Also Hitler.
August 04, 2013

Last day of GaymerX! I'll be doing a Q&A at 11.



























