Sorry for not updating Friday. I’m having finals coming up and I’m currently in the middle of transferring schools. I’ll try to get a page up this week, but things might be a little slow right now until I get my projects done first.
In one of my late-night proverbial strolls across the internet, I happened to look at my referral links on Project Wonderful and saw I had been linked to on Reddit . This link made me giggle. For extra lulz, read the comments.
In light of this link I am posting a disclaimer, in case you’ve never had a science class in your life, informing all of you that apparently the girl in page 21 of chapter one of my comic(s) should have died. Because, you know, everything else that has appeared in comics EVER before the meteor incident on page 21 of chapter one of Starcrossed is 100% true.
So in case you didn’t know, there’s really a guy named Peter Parker who got bit by a radioactive spider and has superpowers. Head injuries really do spawn robots.. And a talking, anthropomorphic duck really can survive a rifle shot at point-blank range to the face with no apparent damage being done other than his bill spinning around his head in a humorous manner.
It’s all true. I read it on the internet.
Updates . . . Let me show you them.
I updated twice this week to make up for the lack thereof recently.
Question:
I changed up the toning for Starcrossed from the previous chapter. I thought the screen tones looked bad and instead opted for sort of an inkwash look for chapter two.
I know it’s only five pages in, but what are your opinions of the look?
I’m still sort of experimenting and finding something I like that’s quick and looks good, but I’m curious as to what people think.
I’m trying to find something more consistent with the covers (it seems a little jarring to have a painted cover and something entirely different for the pages), and it would take way too long to make it just like the covers.
Does anyone have any suggestions as to ideas for things to try out?
Let me know!
Oh almost forgot, Starcrossed won second place for Best New Comic of 2008 in the WebComic Readers Choice Awards! Woohoo!
Thanks to everyone for their support on my last post. I’d like to elaborate more on this, but that’ll have to wait until a later time. Right now I’d like to post about the comic.
I do hope the new page is an improvement from the art in chapter one. Back in August I received a tough, but fair review on Choice Comics that reamed my artwork quite a bit. I was kind of surprised, but at the same time not by the feedback. I always expected my comics to gain attention from the art rather than the writing, and this review was quite the opposite of that.
Initially Starcrossed is as much a learning exercise as it is a serious project. Not to say I put any less work or effort into this comic than I would my other projects I have lined up. I’ve just never really done much narrative comic art before. My previous comic projects include Value=Dead, which is more self-contained gag comics rather than a story and Wake Odyssey which I wasn’t entirely happy with and put on the back burner.
At the time when I had finished chapter one of Starcrossed, I was proud of it and happy with it. I’m still proud of it, because I stuck with it. After a while of looking at it, though, I can see what the reviewer meant by the art. I can do better. I had never done screentones much before, and I learned a lot from using them in chapter one. They’re not that great, and I don’t think they do my artwork justice. I’m weaning myself off of screentones in the first few pages of this chapter, and then they’ll be gone almost entirely. My strength lies more in a painted effect. You’ll be seeing more of that by around page four. I think it’ll work a lot better. It’s less time consuming, and is less distracting. I want to make this good, so don’t be afraid to tell me what you think. I like being proud of my art, but there’s a difference between proud of it and complacent. If you receive nothing but praise, you tend to get a little fat on creating mediocre work. I was actually kind of glad to get the critique because it gave me an objective and honest look at what I had made.
As for the writing, it’s funny that that appears to be this comic’s biggest draw. At least according to this review. Part of me knows how the story goes, but mostly it’s free form. I don’t really fancy myself as much of a writer, so I chose Starcrossed as a starting point for my comics because I thought it’d be best to start with what I know. Quinn is sort of loosely based off of me and my experiences. Similar hairstyle, freckles, we even dress sort of similar, same introspective artistic bent. Granted she’s not me, but it is easy to step into her shoes and write things from her point of view.
The family’s believable because, well, it’s my family . . . err . . . sort of. In a comicky sort of way. The personalities are pretty much established. I actually have two younger brothers, but for this story I wanted to just have one and play up on the sibling rivalry aspect of their relationship. It’s all too familiar. -_-
Quinn’s brother, Roger, goes through a small design change in chapter two. I thought he looked a bit too much like Vash the Stampede with the broom hair, so I shortened it after the first couple of pages to make it more believable.
Starcrossed is actually going to be a fairly short story. It’s intended to be roughly about 15 chapters long, give or take. Depending on how it evolves. I wanted something that was a fairly involved series without being too epic. I have two fairly epic projects I want to get to in the future after Starcrossed. One, being Wake Odyssey, an idea Rumor, another friend at the time, and I started brainstorming on back in 2004. We tried to do some pages for it back in 2006, but it hadn’t been quite well enough planned out and the pages just didn’t do it justice. We’ve been doing a pretty heavy reworking on it since. The other one is a brain-child I started when I was sixteen called Medusa Complex which is supposed to be a mystery/phychological fantasy. It’s been redone more times than I can count because, well, I was sixteen when I came up with the original concept. Things change.
Anyway, I do hope you all enjoy what I have coming up for the comic. I have a lot of projects I want to get to. I think they’re awesome, but I hope you guys will think so as well.

