Polterguys: An Original Online Manga Series
- At June 19, 2011
- By Laur
- In blog, updates
- 0
Yey! I’m pretty excited to share the first promo image related to my new project, Polterguys. I’ve been working on the comic pages since the first of this month to give myself a buffer so I should be able to start publishing pages around mid-July.
Polterguys is the story which I based from to create my Yen Press Talent Search entry, Final Track. It’ll have comedy and drama elements (just the way I like ’em!) so I hope you stick around for it!
Contest Results + New Project
- At June 14, 2011
- By Laur
- In blog, updates
- 3
Thanks to everyone who commented over the weekend! You can view the winner’s commissions, plus a few more drawings here on tumblr. I was hoping to livestream while I worked on the commissions but it seems to make Photoshop super laggy. Can anybody recommend what I should do? I checked my internet speed which seems to be more than capable and I was using the normal setting. I can try testing it again later since I have one more commission to finish.
My sister Kay stayed over last week and is helping me with preliminary work for my new project. Together with my youngest sister, we’re working out all the tedious mediocrity in my character designs and preliminary thumbnails. While my love to tell a good story is incredible and vast, my ability to convey exciting visuals is still lacking in some areas. Glad to have an animation student and a fashion-conscious teen go over my designs and push them to the best it can get.
Meanwhile, I also introduced Kay to Baccano while she made me watch Paranoia Agent.
Rewatching Baccano for the first time in English is a delight! Firo and Luck’s voice actors are so dreamy. I’m particularly susceptible to accents so I really recommend Funimation’s dubs. Paranoia Agent, on the other hand, may be unsettling but the animation quality is so rich – it really is a must see for fans any animation buff.
Expect another update this week. I’ll be showing previews of my new project! I’m pretty excited to share them.
Site relaunch! Contest time!
- At June 03, 2011
- By Laur
- In blog, updates
- 7
I decided to start my wordpress site from scratch and streamline a lot of the areas to “read better.” Ofcourse, what followed was an intense two-week struggle against the nearly alien language of php and css. Crazy times, but I did learn much!
I’m happy to announce I’ve uploaded several comics which have previously only been available through Deviantart in “vertical stacks.” It took a while and I’m very grateful the Webcomic plug-in for wordpress took care of all the navigation and archive coding for me. While there is a learning curve to customizing your pages, I do recommend it for people interested in making webcomics with wordpress. Unfortunately, comicpress refused to place nice with my local files so I can’t make valid comparisons.
Breathe is now available to read in its entirety and while it looks fairly dated now, like perhaps some of the other comics here, I like to think of each one as stepping stones toward improvement. Each of these short stories really helped me improve my craft. I still hope you derive some enjoyment from reading them here.
Subscribe to my blog feed, or follow me on DA, Tumblr or Twitter for updates on my next project. I’m pretty excited to be finally working on it after working on it off and on for three years.
CONTEST TIME!!!
Have a look around! Let me know if links are broken or some weird stuff is happening and just comment on this blog. You can also just let me know what you think about the site or comics. Any suggestions or recommendations for improvements? Which comic did you enjoy most and why? Comments that aren’t just one-word entries will be automatically entered into my little raffle. : )
PRIZES
I’ll be raffling off a full color commission for a random commenter and come up with special prizes for those who provide feedback I’ll be adapting.
DEADLINE
Sunday midnight (That’s Sunday 11:59PM Pacific Standard time.)
Thanks for looking around!
Self-publishing my own manga
- At May 24, 2011
- By Laur
- In blog, self-publishing
- 5
I’ve decided to self-publish my own manga graphic novels.
It’s going to be a long, momentous effort and I will probably get to moments when I’ll be regretting those words (in the same way I did after saying, “I want to do an Honor’s Thesis!”) But I’ve given this some thought and it’s worth it for me to learn the ins-and-outs of publishing if I want to dive into comic business and stay in it for as long as I’d like.
Who am I exactly?
I’m an aspiring comic artist living in Los Angeles. I’ve been drawing comics since high school (Here’s that story in 24HR comic form!) Throughout college, it’s what I did on the side. I couldn’t afford to go to art school for reasons I could cover in another post but I was recently laid off from my first job post-graduation: a small internet start-up that buckled under the weight of this recession.
In the time since, I’ve assessed what I want out of my designated time on this planet and I think I want to keep telling stories through my art. While I had come to my love of the medium via animation, I’ve always felt like my ability and love for making comics is something special. It feels wrong not to keep working on it. So many artists, writers, stories have inspired me throughout the years, I want to do whatever it takes to “pay back” that debt. And perhaps, inspire future artists in my own little way.
Why manga?
Manga is dead. Original English Manga doesn’t sell. Didn’t you hear Tokyopop just died?
Because this medium (not style) still holds so much promise.
Anime and manga were the gateway to my deeper appreciation of comics. Growing up as a shut-in kid Philippines, there was no other way to come across any other kinds of sequential art, save for my classmates. Even without understanding what I was reading (I had to look up translations online for the imported books I borrowed), I was hooked. I fell head over heels for the art styles, the hilarious expressions and relatable storylines.
Why self-publish?
Early this year, I had the strongest hopes to start my manga career, pinning the majority of this on getting picked by the editors at Yen Press, one of the few reputable manga publishers left soliciting original manga submissions. I was contacted as one of the finalists but they never followed through with providing feedback for the finalists. None of the finalists were guaranteed publication or contracts in the first place but so many like myself had strong hopes to start a career doing something they loved. I understand they are probably busy but the fact they did not give this undertaking some priority was disappointing.
I’ve decided if I want to see my work in print so badly, why not get it out there myself?
But Laur, you’ve been talking like this for years! What makes now any different?
Because now, I have a clearer idea of what I want. The first step to achieving any dream is always identifying clear and quantifiable goals. I’m hoping to share what I learn on this journey with, not just with aspiring manga and comic artists, but perhaps also for anyone interested in starting their own business.
I’m going to self-publish my own manga graphic novels.
I could use all the help and all the advice I can get!