The 10th of July 2019 marked the 100th day of #the100dayproject. This year I participated for the first time, with this comic. I obviously could not finish the comic in 100 days, so I realised from the first that maybe my project wasn’t the most suitable for this type of challenge. But the idea for me was to use it as a kind of measuring tool and hopefully a extra motivator. And it has certainly taught me a thing or two. Here’s a round-up and evaluation.
How many pages?
Well… The sum total of inked and finished pages I produced was four (4!). That’s an average of 25 days per page. I think I can say that isn’t an optimal pace…
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What, and nothing else?
Well, of course I drew other things! I did quite a lot of drawing in the service of my pages. Some took a lot of sketching because I had to figure things out or practise drawing particular elements, like horses.
For pretty much the first time, I drew costume references. I have a vague suspicion that I am supposed to have reference drawings for my characters, but I have never had any. In this particular set of pages, though, I found it useful to have costume sheets to help with continuity. And maybe improvising costumes on every page hasn’t been such a great way of handling things :p.
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I did proper research for these. It took time :p. In my old sketches, Uther in particular had an earlier period Roman armour, so that got corrected.
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For Ygraine and the girls, I used my imagination a bit more, because if I have to believe my research, all women wore more or less the same formless dresses. Because I don’t have colour, I need a tiny bit more variation in the clothes. I came up with what I think are fairly realistic-looking simple items that are nevertheless not just ‘baggy dresses’.
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Illustrations
I also spent some time on illustrations connected to the comic, but not related to these particular pages.
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I made a colour version of the Summer Break banner for the site. I did it in Photoshop because I still have lots to learn about colour (and you can’t delete a layer of paint). It took me hours though, colouring this small image…
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Just for fun
My comic is about Sir Gawain, but in The Darkest Hour he hasn’t even been born yet – it’s the story of his grandmother, Ygraine… So from time to time I draw Gawain in different shapes and ages, as a reminder for myself. Also, because he is the central character of my story, of course I find him really difficult to draw, so I can do with the exercise :P.
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And now for something completely different
During the 100 days, my friend Nout had his birthday. I think it took me most of the 100 days to draw his gift. *cough*
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In conclusion…
…I’m very slow.
In 100 days, I completed 4 pages of my comic. I also knitted most of two cardigans and two complete jumpers. What, you may well ask, is the difference? It’s not that I care less about drawing than about knitting. It’s that I don’t have a car and I knit during train journeys (and sometimes bus and tram rides). That means that I knit for an hour or more every working day.
Back in the day, when I worked in a different city, I drew during train journeys, about an hour almost every day. I travelled at different hours and always had a little table. I was very productive at the time, and posted two, three or more (sketched) comic pages every week. Now I travel on a very busy line, during peak traffic hours, and I rarely if ever have a table. I have two 30-minute journeys instead of 1-hour journeys. And finally, I’m making the final version of the comic now, not a sketchy one that I’ll redraw.
In short: I have to make time for neat and meticulous drawings after my day job and commute. That’s… hard. Even with the extra motivation of a social media event like #the100dayproject.
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