Detail from page 254 of Family Man.
Detail from page 254 of Family Man.
Detail from page 253 of Family Man!
I’ll be in Vancouver (B.C.) this weekend for the first-ever Vancouver Comic Arts Festival! Admission is FREE and it’s right in the middle of Yaletown, so you locals should stop by.
Detail from page 252 of Family Man.
Detail from page 251 of Family Man. I like how this panel came out.
I told you guys that I totally redid dylanmeconis.com and that it’s awesome now, right? And that there are piles of art and comics there that a lot of people haven’t seen? Heck, don’t take my word for it.
Detail from Page 248 of Family Man.
An little Ariana drawing celebrating recent plot developments in Family Man. With a little luck, I’ll have prints of this for sale at Emerald City Comicon this weekend! (And on the internet, after.)
Detail from page 247 of Family Man.
There’s a nice reveal on this page. And by nice I mean totally icky.
Detail from Page 245 of Family Man.
Last chance to submit questions (about me and my comic) and make it onto my upcoming podcast!
Detail from page 243 of Family Man.
Family Man layout sketches on Flickr.
This is a quick picture I took of one of the stages in the creation of a recent page of my graphic novel, Family Man (www.lutherlevy.com).
Since my script doesn’t always break out action or dialogue into specific panels within specific pages, each page is its own little puzzle; how much of it will make sense as a visual unit? What moments need their own panel, and which ones can be combined? What’s important, and what can I just suggest and move on from? And does character X really need to say three sentences when she can say one?
Unless the page is very simple, I’ll start out by drawing a big brain-dump like this on a piece of printer paper, covering ALL of the stuff I think might go into the page.
I break out chunks of action, experiment with facial expressions, poses, and angles, and just generally reassure myself that I’ve given everything a good dose of consideration.
On of my great hang-ups is the belief that somewhere in my brain is The Perfect Layout, and if I just keep trying and redoing and rearranging, I’ll eventually stumble across it. Imposing a period of playful experimentation like this helps shake me out of that notion.
You can see the finished version of this page here: www.lutherlevy.com/?p=1273
And some of the visual information was bumped onto the page following it: www.lutherlevy.com/?p=1276