Starting a Webcomic for Beginners

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If Yan Can Draw, So Can You !

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Hello, I am the author of the webcomic site called www.packetlog.com and this lens is about how to start your own webcomic blog site.

Long ago I used to watch a TV show called "If Yan Can Cook, So Can You!" and was really impressed with the name of the show and his humorous approach to cooking. And I thought it will not be inappropriate if I pilfer this name, change a bit and convey to the dear reader that it is not difficult to get started in webcomics.

And we will not use fancy computer graphics. We will make do with pen and paper and stick figures.

A Good Webcomic Site

... is one that visitors will find a reason to come back to, one that they will bookmark and email to friends, one that they will subscribe to and link.

Build a Webcomic Site Just by Using Pen and Paper

You learn how to make a basic website populated with cartoons that people will want to visit often. Ingredients: pen and paper and a website.

Steps to Get Started 


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    Get a "niche" idea:

    Think of your audience. A niche idea is a nice idea. Who is going to read your webcomic? If it is office workers, a Dilbert-like webcomic will be popular. If it is geeks who you pander to, maybe a xkcd-like blog is what you are after. Trying to be a generalist is difficult with a webcomic audience (although by no means impossible).

    If you want to please the nerdy, digg, reddit, slashdot crowd your webcomic needs to be geeky and nerdy. If your audience consists solely of entomologists maybe writing about insects is the best way to get their attention.

    You need to be observant in your field (that child picked up a used diaper: can I make a funny cartoon out of that?) and have a notebook to jot down your ideas. Always keep your audience in mind and think what they may find funny. Although nobody will stop you from writing a webcomic that will make people sad and depressed, I think humorous ones will find its audience coming back for more. If you really want to make people sad, go write a novel.
  2. Decide on a format:

    Will it be a one-panel comic? Will it be several panels? Several dozen-panels? You decide.

    I find that the shorter it is the better.
  3. Decide your hosting:

    Where will you put it up for all the world to see? You can put it on a website or a blog. I prefer blogs. I find blogs easier to use. You just post your image and there it is, ready with a datetime stamp, organized into archives and tagged into categories.

    You can have your own website/blog or you can use hosting services. There are more hosting schemes, combinations, plans, permutations than I can shake a stick at. Some are free, some are paying. Check Typepad.com, Blogger.com, Wordpress.com if you don't want to install your own software and update it (some other hosting plans also offer it, and some are one-click installs). If you want to be very flexible and have the expertise and time then maybe go with an independent hosting plan and install Wordpress on your own. I just use Typepad - no need to maintain it, no need to backup or update my software.
  4. Get pen and paper:

    Although you can use anything, I find an ink-pen is the best instrument. You can use any kind of paper. I just use notebook pages.

    Now you need to start drawing. Drawing may naturally come to you, or not. Have no fear ! Look at my site (www.packetlog.com) to see some examples - I make do with stick figures. I can't draw very well. What is more important is that you can communicate your idea in terms of figures (how realistic these figures are is besides the point).

    Just put your pen to paper. Draw a large rectangle. Make two stick figures, as if one is saying something to the other. Now write down the words and put it in a balloon and point that balloon to your "speaker". And sign your first webcomic with a flourish!

    If you are good at drawing or would like to improve upon it, read some good books. In the links below I have put some pointers to some books that may help you.
  5. Scan:

    Get a good scanner. I use a sheetfeed scanner so that I can scan batches of cartoons in one go: Fujitsu ScanSnap s510m is an excellent choice, taking up very little table space and giving you high quality results. Scan your images in high resolution but post them in web pages/blogs in low resolution so that the pages load quickly.
  6. Post it to your site:

    Now just upload or post it to your blog and watch user feedback. You can use www.statcounter.com or Google Analytics to analyze which of your postings have been popular, and which ones hardly get a hit at all.

How to Make People Like You (or, at least, Your Site)

Treat people with respect. Make something useful for them. Make them smile.

Popularizing Your Webcomic 

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Now that your webcomic is online, how do you make it popular?

Make It Searchable
You want people to find your webcomics by their content. Say you have just published a panel about aliens abducting Dana Scully - you want people to google "aliens dana scully" and find it on your site. How do you do it? To make it searchable, I have a TEXT area where I transcribe the text and paste it there. This text area makes it your website searchable. An example can be seen here:
www.packetlog.com/packetlog/2007/11/once-upon-a-tim.html

Most search engines search the blog titles or give them high importance: thus it makes good sense for you to put relevant words -- words you want your audience to find -- in blog title or web page HTML title itself.

EXTRA TIP!! Make It Serchable on Your Site
Once users land on your page and if they want to search your site, how do they go about it? I find it convenient to use the services of a site called www.lijit.com. You can visit their site and see how it is done. To see an example, please visit my website www.packetlog.com
and look in the right-hand sidebar, you should see a searchbox by lijit.

Update Your Site, Make It User-Friendly
If you don't update your site regularly, people won't come to visit again. So update it often.

Give them a feed they can subscribe to. Actively seek the feedback from users. Encourage them to post comments.

Although I have not gone into details, I hope you have found this lens helpful. Thank you for visiting.

Please also visit my pages Macro Photography of Flowers and Learning Macro Photography with Butterflies as Subjects.

Visit the Zazzle Store and Buy Squidoo Art and Unique Hand-Painted Greeting Cards! 

Please visit This Zazzle Store.

All items based on original photographs, artwork or comic strips. Original artwork in watercolor, acrylic, ink and pencil on paper.

Available now: Postcards, prints, magnets, mugs. And more coming on your way !!!

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Books to Help You Draw Better and Make Good Comics 

Perspective! For Comic Book Artists: How to Achieve a Professional Look in Your Artwork

Amazon Price: $14.93 (as of 01/03/2010) Buy Now

Vanishing Point: Perspective for Comics from the Ground Up

Amazon Price: $13.59 (as of 01/03/2010) Buy Now

Understanding Comics: The Invisible Art

Amazon Price: $16.09 (as of 01/03/2010) Buy Now

Making Comics: Storytelling Secrets of Comics, Manga and Graphic Novels

Amazon Price: $16.52 (as of 01/03/2010) Buy Now

How To Create Comics, From Script To Print

Amazon Price: $11.16 (as of 01/03/2010) Buy Now

Great Comics on the Net 

Wizard of Id
Wizard of Id
Snoopy
Snoopy
xkcd
xkcd
minus
minus
stormsillustration.com
stormsillustration.com
cagle
cagle
everydaypeople
everydaypeople

by packetlog


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