ACW Episode 112 – The Hazards of Experimentation

A brief explanation as to what’s going on here. In my quest to discover the best way to draw the web comic on the iPad, I decided to try drawing this week’s episode using Inkpad, a vector graphics app. I like Inkpad a lot. It’s easy to use, it works very well and responds very quickly as I draw. It also allows me to draw at very large sizes, much larger than any of the other apps I have on my iPad. And if what I draw on the iPad isn’t large enough, I can simply export the image as a Scalable Vector Graphic (SVG), then import it into Adobe Illustrator and scale it up even further, with no loss to the quality of the image.

So I was very excited to try drawing this week’s cartoon with Inkpad. Only, for some reason, when I set up the document, it gave me a cartoon strip that was turned 90 degrees from the direction I needed. In other words, it gave me a sideways page to draw on.

I couldn’t figure out how to change this, so I ended up drawing the whole cartoon sideways. Thus the final product you see above. I have since figured out how to fix this, and I am creating a template on my iPad that I can reuse over and over again so I don’t always have to set up the document and add the credits. I can just jump straight in and draw.

Overall, how did it work? Well, **I** certainly like it. I was able to sketch the rough images with the brush tool first, then use the vector pen tool to create the line art and colors. The colors are nice and bright, the lines are dark and smooth. Plus I can now draw all the panels in one document and I can create a color palette in Inkpad’s color picker so I don’t have to keep hunting for the right colors once I’ve found them. And the fact that I can scale up the cartoon so that it’s large enough for quality prints? Abso-frikkin’-lutely beautiful! I can even scale and readjust the drawings in each panel if I need to, to make more or less space for the word balloons. In fact, this is just about perfect in my opinion, except for two small things.

First, Inkpad does not allow me to draw lines with tapered ends, like I would get if I used a brush pen. The only way I can get those tapered ends that you see in all the line art above is to draw each line as a closed filled object and then adjust the vector points as needed. That slows the process down a bit, and I’m not crazy about that. I’d rather just draw a line and have those nice tapered ends show up automatically, or be able to apply a brush style to the lines like I can in Illustrator. It would speed things up quite a bit!

My second complaint is the text tool. There’s no way to adjust the line spacing in blocks of text. To get the text spaced just right, I have to make each line a separate object, then carefully space them by hand, which is also annoying. If I could just adjust the line spacing, I’d be able to type in my text and BAM! Dialog would be done!

But still, these are minor problems, and I’m hopeful that future versions of the app will fix those problems. In fact, I’ve already sent email to the app creator asking about the tapered lines. Hopefully, he’ll respond soon.

So, I like it. And the truth is, it took me less time to draw this cartoon than the previous two cartoons, although the artwork in this week’s strip was much simpler. I’ll continue to work with it to see what happens when I’ve got a really complicated strip to draw, but right now, this is a good working solution for me.

ACW Episode 111 – GWI?

Ugh. I almost didn’t get this week’s cartoon up today, and not because I didn’t have it drawn. I did have it drawn! I drew it on my iPad while I was in DC over Easter weekend visiting Hubster’s family, so this was finished on Sunday. All I needed to do was bring it over to my desktop, add the titles and credits, and then post it. Problem was, ever since we got back yesterday afternoon, I’ve not been able to get a damn thing done. Hubster and both kids are home all week long and they’re completely disrupting my work schedule and driving me CRAZY!

Anyway, last week a friend of mine mentioned he’d love to see a cartoon about gardening while drinking wine, so I came up with this. Note – I do not normally take requests! It’s all I can do to get a cartoon out every week as it is. However, the moment Mark mentioned the idea to me, I knew exactly what to draw.

The greatest hazard of drinking and gardening is not watering the plants with the wine, however. It’s having little helpful hands accidentally dumping compost into my drink when I’m not looking. Take it from me, merlot and manure do not mix well. And no, I do not plan on drawing that. I’m doing my damnedest to bury that particular memory.

A few notes about how I produced this week’s cartoon and last week’s, since some folks have asked. I started both cartoons by outlining the script and panels very quickly in Notes Plus, a productivity/note taking app on my iPad. I can type, hand write, and draw (very roughly, but I can draw) in Notes Plus. I can also keep my notes arranged in various notebooks and label the pages in each notebook to make things easier to find. I’ve started one notebook just for cartoon ideas and I label the ideas by date and/or subject, depending on how quickly I plan to use the ideas.

Once I’ve outlined the ideas, I then hop into SketchBook Pro and start drawing. I sketch each panel with one of the pencil brushes, and export the pencil sketches to my iPad’s photo album as I go. If need be, I can then import the previous panel into the panel I’m working on to check placement, size, etc., of various drawing elements. Once the panels are sketched, I then go back and reopen each panel’s drawing, start a new layer, and begin inking.

Unlike other graphics programs I’ve used to ink my cartoons, Sketchbook Pro does not have a smoothing option, which makes the lines nice and smooth no matter how unsteady my hand is. However, I’ve discovered I don’t really need the smoothing option. I just need to draw fast and trust my hand. Sketchbook Pro responds very quickly, allowing for very fluid strokes, and the pen brush works very nicely. It doesn’t give me as thick a line as the brush pens I use when I draw with real paper and pen, but I still get a nice dark line.

After I ink each panel, I then start a new layer in the first panel (remember, each panel is it’s own file on the iPad) and I paint quick color swatches for each of the elements in the panels. Then I save a copy of the file, open that copy, and delete all the layers except the color swatches layer. With just the color swatches layer in place, I send the image to my iPad photo album. Then I can import that image into each panel to make sure I use the same colors for each element in all the panels.

Once coloring is done, I go back and add text and word balloons. Right now, I’m using Sketchbook Pro’s text tool, but that’s a pretty primitive solution, given that Sketchbook Pro won’t even allow me to create multiple lines of text. So I’m seriously considering leaving the lettering of the cartoon until the very end and doing it in Strip Designer. Which brings us to the next step after lettering anyway – exporting each finished panel to the iPad photo album. Once all 4 finished panels are in the photo album, I open up Strip Designer, select a 4-panel comic template, and bring the panels in one by one. Then I email the final strip from Strip Designer, selecting “high quality PNG” for the export option, and voila! It shows up in my email. From there, it’s a simple matter of downloading it and opening it in Photoshop to add the final elements of title and credits.

All this may seem like the long way around to do things. It is and it isn’t. When I draw by hand, I draw all 4 panels on one page, using a red pencil, and then inking with a brush pen. Lettering is done by hand, and I have to add the lettering lines using a lettering guide (a nifty little tool that lets me draw evenly spaced straight lines across the comic strip). Then from there, I scan in the cartoon, which has to be done in two scans since e the paper is too big to fit into my scanner in one scan, and then I have to reassemble the comic, do some basic clean up, get rid of the red lines, pull everything into the final template, and post it to the web.

Both methods take time. Both methods have multiple steps. Both methods have their pluses and minuses. The pluses for the iPad method are that it’s very easy for me to cartoon now no matter where I am. I can pick up the cartoon and work on it at any time, any place. I don’t have to worry about carting around a bulky drawing pad, set of pens, erasers, t-square, etc. And I can color the cartoon, knowing the color will look the same on the computer screen as it does on the iPad. Coloring the cartoon on paper before scanning it in doesn’t work well at all, because it never really scans in right and I still have the issue of having to remove the red pencil lines.

The minuses of the iPad method? Each panel has to be its own separate drawing. The final cartoon is only half the size of the scanned cartoon (I always scanned the artwork in at a large size in case I ever wanted to print the comics). And it actually takes me more time to do the cartoons now because I’m taking time to color each panel.

It’s not a perfect solution. However, I am working on finding a perfect solution, one that will let me continue to cartoon on the iPad, because it is so danged convenient to just grab that slim little device and go! I’m hopeful that some of the other drawing apps I’m looking at turn out to provide some further options for me, because one way or the other, I think the iPad cartoons are here to stay.

Rats! Episode 57 – All’s Quiet on the Western Front

I vaguely remember having to be Officer of the Day once or twice for my battalion. Vaguely. I think I was up most of the night waiting for something to happen but nothing ever did. I have a clearer recollection of being Staff Duty Officer while attending OBC at Fort Eustis, and that was another all-nighter where once again, nothing ever happened. Thank goodness for quiet nights.

Claw would probably quite happily squash a dozen underclassmen and find it relaxing. He’s that kind of guy. Irwin (and later Ivan) would probably be much more hyper about it, both relishing in the power to punish others and fearing having to do so. I was always more like Irwin and Ivan, never like Claw. The military was never an easy fit for me, and to this day I’m surprised I got through 11 years in the Army Reserves.

I believe the school year is winding down at Virginia Tech. All the cadets must be getting ready for exams by this point. Good luck to all you guys, and to those of you getting ready to graduate and be commissioned into the military. Enjoy your last days of college while you can. It all changes drastically after that.

ACW Episode 110 – Wake Up Call!

Ta-daa! I know this is up a little late this morning, but look! It’s in color! Oooooooh, shiny bright color! And yes, I did this one on my iPad.

I have been doing so much drawing on the iPad, I had to try doing a full 4-panel comic on it just once. I used 3 apps to put this one together. I outlined the idea and script in Notes Plus, since I can keep a an entire notebook in that app just for webcomic ideas, as well as complete notebooks for any topic I like, and I can do very rough doodles of the panels with Notes Plus’ drawing tools. Then I hopped into SketchBook Pro to sketch out and script the panels. Each panel is a separate drawing, so I had to import the first panel into each one to keep my color scheme consistent, but that wasn’t a bother, and as soon as the coloring was done, I could delete that first panel from the layers. Then as each image was finished, I took it into Strip Design to put the whole thing together. Once all the panels were put together in Strip Design, I exported the final strip as a PNG, brought it into Photoshop to add the titles and CC license graphic, and then uploaded it to the web. Voila! Comic is done. And in COLOR!!! Shiny, bright color…

Overall, I like the way this worked. Because I walk around all day with my iPad in hand, I could work on this in bits and pieces as I went. This was especially nice when I ended up sitting in not one but two doctors’ waiting rooms this weekend (Princess is doing fine, by the way, but we have now determined she has a rash caused by a virus). That meant I could do the comic anywhere, and actually get it done pretty quickly. I also didn’t have to write the text by hand since SketchBook Pro has a text tool, although if I want to hand-write my script, I still have that option.

So productivity-wise, this really worked out. And I like the way the coloring turned out. The marker tool in SketchBook Pro works exactly the way I think a marker should, and I like the effect. Of course, I can use the hard edged brush and airbrush tools as well if I want a more polished coloring, and SketchBook Pro has brushes for cross hatching and stippling which I think I’d like to try for inking.

The down side to this? The final size of the comic is not as large as the size I normally produce when I scan in the paper and ink comics. Strip Designer only produces an image that’s less than half the size of the cartoons I scan. I have the option of just skipping Strip Designer and importing each individual panel into Photoshop if I want a larger comic strip overall, but even then I only get a comic that’s 3/4ths the size of what I get when I use pen and paper and I scan the artwork.

My only concern is if I ever decide to do a print volume, I might need to have a much larger comic. And while I have no plans for doing a print volume of the webcomic in the near future, it would be nice to have that option. I’ll have to do some research to see what size image I’d need to have to produce a decent print version.

So anyway, if you have any thoughts or opinions on today’s comic and the method by which it was produced, let me know. And let me know if you like the addition of color. I like it, but that’s mainly because I can now show off the blue parts of my hair this way! };D

Freaky Friday – Free Sad Robot Mini-Comic!!

Because I love you all, and because I love my iPad even more, I created a mini-comic starring Sad Robot. It’s 4 pages of kooky robotic fun, free to you in PDF format. It’s licensed under a Creative Commons 3.0 license, so you can download it and share it for free, just don’t change it or sell it or claim it as your own work.

Download the PDF of Sad Robot’s first adventure, “Too Much Laundry!” right here!

(And if the link above doesn’t work, it’s because I screwed up linking the PDF to the blog post. Tweet me at Cynical_Woman and I’ll fix it when I get back from picking up the kids.)

Rats! Episode 56 – Hair

It’s absolutely hysterical for me to read this particular comic and compare it to my life today. Most days I’m up around 5AM. My wardrobe consists of what I call my Mama Geek uniform – funky t-shirts and recycled jeans skirts. As for the hair? I dyed part of it blue. You see, you can dress strange and still be responsible!

I wish I knew what pen I had used to draw this cartoon. The cartoons from this period have stood up very well to the test of time. The ink has not faded nor turned blue. The lines still look very crisp. Honestly, this is some of the neatest drawing I did on “Rats!” Over the four-year period that I drew this comic, I frequently changed pens and drawing pads, which led to some inconsistent results. I chalk it up to being a poor college student who could never find the same art supplies twice at Mish Mish.

By the way, does Mish Mish still exist in Blacksburg? I’d be curious to know.

ACW Episode 110 – Ravencon!

Sorry this is a little late today, but I’m still pretending to be recovering from Ravencon. That means I’m really just being lazy and sleeping in instead of getting up early to write my blog posts.

The following cartoon was drawn on my iPad (have I mentioned how much I love my iPad?!) while at Ravencon. The event depicted here actually happened during the con’s opening ceremonies. Con Chair Mike Pederson OWES me for my many hours of hard work this past weekend (not really; I was just as lazy at the con as I’m being at home today).

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Rats! Episode 56 – Recruiting

I don’t recall recruiting new cadets on campus for the VTCC, but obviously we must have done it. Otherwise, why would I have drawn this cartoon? I’m sure any rat who brought in a prospective new cadet would have received various priviledges as reward, and any company that failed to meet its recruiting requirements would have made life living hell for its rat class. At least I think that’s how it would have worked. Again, I can’t really remember.

I do recall going to my old high school to recruit for the VTCC. One of my former teachers saw me, dressed up all in my uniform, and was shocked. She actually told me she was very disappointed. The military was not a path she thought I would have chosen. I used to like that teacher, and while I did only join the military and the VTCC thanks to some arm twisting, I was rather hurt by her comments. I may not have been overly enthusiastic about my career as an officer, but to this day I am still rather proud of the work I did and the obstacles I overcame, both in the VTCC and in the Army Reserves.

Do you recognize the prospective cadet captured in this cartoon? Yes, that’s Mick, from the previous year’s adventures. I had a number of civilian friends, many of them just as counter-culture as Mick, who could not fathom the VTCC lifestyle. And yet they were never disappointed in me. Gobsmacked by some of the wacked out things I ended up doing for the military and ROTC, but never disappointed. My thanks to all of them. Even if you didn’t understand, you did stand by me.

ACW Episode 109 – Sometimes, they really do mean “Don’t try this at home!”

Ah, the things we do in the name of beauty. I liked my first try at blue hair, but it wasn’t blue enough for me. So I decided to push the effect a bit farther. I found a blue hair coloring kit in my local drugstore, of all places. When I double checked the brand online, many of the reviews mentioned intense and long lasting color, so I decided to try it. First though, I had to redye my hair bright red, because the first time I dyed my hair blue, I sort of did my whole head and that killed the red, which made things too dark over all. So I redid the red, which completely removed all the blonde highlights I had the hair dresser bleach in some weeks back. Now for the blue to really stand out, I had to rebleach those spots. I figured I could do this. I’ve been dying my hair for years, how hard could bleaching be?

Fortunately, I did set aside an entire evening to do this, because the whole process of bleaching and dying took HOURS. I had to put on a tipping cap and pull through the strands I wanted to bleach. Then I had to mix and apply the bleach. Then I had to wait an hour for the strands to bleach out. Then I had to rinse out those strands and then I finally got to apply the blue hair dye. And it was an hour before I washed the dye out and could see the results.

Not satisfied with doing all that, I had also decided Friday afternoon to make a pie from scratch. I had bought a new cookbook on pastry desserts and wanted to try it out. So whilst bleaching and dying my hair, I was also mixing up pastry dough and pie filling, two activities that also took hours to complete. While the hair dying was finished Friday night, the pies didn’t get made until Saturday evening, and then I ended up making tarts with the leftover pie crusts on Sunday afternoon.

Anywhere, here are pics of the results of all my hardwork. And let me just say, next time I decide to dye my hair blue, I’m going to see how much my hairdresser will charge to do it for me.

Blue hair…

and Apple Blackberry pies!

Rats! Episode 55 – Self-doubts

I’m putting this up real quick before I have to run out the door today. Let’s just say being a sophomore cadets kind of sucks. You’re no longer a rat, but you don’t have any real power. You just end up being the dopey sidekick to some junior. I never liked the sophomore cadets when I was a rat, and I hated being a sophomore cadet later on.

Got to run now!