Thursday, January 29, 2009

What I'm working on as of 1/29

Phonogram 2

This book is published by Image Comics written by Kieron Gillen and drawn by Jamie Mckelvie. Despite their British spellings I quite enjoy working with them :P This series is 7 issues.

Issue 1


My two other books are both written by Rick Remender and published by Dark Horse Comics. The first is The End League, drawn by Eric Canete.

Issue 6






My other Dark Horse project is drawn by Eric Nguyen, and it's called Gigantic. It's a 5 issue series, and I've just recently completed the third issue.

Issue 1





Issue 2




I've got one other project, with Tyler Chin-Tanner and Andy Macdonald. I'm not sure I can share any images, so I'll just leave you with links to the creators.

MW

Monday, January 26, 2009

Please explain.

Most people that ask what I do for a living, even after I tell them, have no idea what my job actually is. I think that people who have little to no contact with comics don't realize that there are distinct steps that go into making a finished comic. I imagine that these people see the process as this: Person A creates the idea for comic. Person A tells Person B the idea. Person B creates the pictures for the comic. Comic made! (yay) It's a good thing comics aren't made like that because I'm not person A or B, and I wouldn't have a job.

I don't blame people for these misconceptions, or the lack of knowledge about my field. There are plenty of professions that I have no clue about, like taxidermy for example.

So, I decided to use my first art post as a tool that better explains comic coloring. This won't go into the processes that come before coloring like script writing, drawing tumbnails, penciling, inking, or lettering.

Once the black and white page is approved by an editor it is sent to a colorist via the publishers ftp.

The file a colorist receives looks like this.



Sometimes a penciler will put notes on a page if the art is unclear, or the colors need to indicate something the black and white art doesn't show, or the penciler wants the page to be colored in a specific way.



Next the colorist usually flats, separates, or selects the page (all terms that mean the same thing). This step can be done by the colorist, but is often outsourced to another person for a predetermined page rate. By having someone else flat all of the pages the colorist saves time. Instead of having to trace out the drawing they now have shapes they can easily select.

A flatted file.




At this point the colors are most likely incorrect, but that's ok because the job of choosing the colors belongs to the colorist. Once the flats are received the colors themselves need to be changed to properly reflect the characters colors and the tone of the scene.

A flatted file with the colors corrected.



This is a base, and starting point for the final page. The colorist then adds textures, rendering, and special effects to bring the page to life.

The final colored page.



All original art by Eric Nguyen and colors by me.

Now, with all of that said I should mention that this only describes my process. Other colorists may work in a similar fashion but there are many ways to color a page. I didn't get into settings or specific techniques because this post is more of a general demonstration of what a colorist does, and not how they do it.

I hope this was understandable and informative, but if not just pretend it's a Denny's menu and look at the pictures.

M

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Up to this point.

I've colored comics for a while now. Until somewhat recently it's been for Zylonol Studios, owned by the colorist Lee Loughridge. The most prominent project I've colored there was Y the Last Man for Vertigo (issues 21-60). While I still do projects for Lee I've started coloring comics under my own name in the last year. I still feel like I have everything to learn, and when I get a page I'm happy with it still feels like an accident.

In an effort to put work in an easily accessible location I have started this site and I plan to use it to post work.

Thanks for stopping by.

MW