Friday, October 24, 2008

Learning to Letter

I'm having a tough time getting art done. Mostly because I've been trying to do it myself. The biggest problem stems from the fact that the lines I put on the page do not resemble the image in my mind, and when I change the lines, the image in my mind gets corrupted as what I've drawn on the page looks more and more like a train wreck. Unless I'm trying to draw a picture of a train wreck, in which case it looks like a pile of crude blocks.

Fortunately, there are endeavors which don't require mad rendering skills but are still necessary for production. These are layouts and lettering. I've been dabbling with Comic Book Creator 2.0, and although it is a schizophrenic mess of features (animation? sound bites?), I thought there would be enough functionality there to produce something. Sadly, it won't let you easily change or create layouts, but perseverance and a little investigative work unlocked the secret of their XML-like layout language. Or at least enough secrets that I could produce a page that had the panels where I wanted them.

The real show-stopper came with the lettering. The word bubbles do have some flexibility, but tend to consume excessive space if you're using a lowercase font. Trying to get a bubble to cut itself off in a corner is impossible. And just to drive home that it's really amature night, visiting PlanetWide Media's tutorial on "Word Bubbles" gives you a video that has nothing about it, instead the actual tutorial appearing under "Using Your Own Pictures".

I guess I'd better save up my money and get Photoshop after all.

Learning a new trade is fun!

No comments: