Nah, lose 'im.
Regarding the reboot - According to Bleeding cool, a lot of the artist teams are changing for the second issues to keep up with the deadlines, I guess the same will happen for the third and so on. A lot of those series are going to look like shit when collected for the TPB.
Regarding the reboot - According to Bleeding cool, a lot of the artist teams are changing for the second issues to keep up with the deadlines, I guess the same will happen for the third and so on. A lot of those series are going to look like shit when collected for the TPB.
Regarding the reboot - According to Bleeding cool, a lot of the artist teams are changing for the second issues to keep up with the deadlines, I guess the same will happen for the third and so on. A lot of those series are going to look like shit when collected for the TPB.
That's pathetic. They're on the second issues and they're already behind on deadlines?
The reason that the artists could do more is than they had no idea that those titles existed three months ago...
It's been a while since it's been a condition of their continued employment. They'll learn.![]()
I would say about two thirds of the 52 will be on the chopping block by December, either to do with lateness or just plain suckiness. I think there are already articles popping up about which books will survive the chopping block and which won't. No way all 52 will remain healthy.
It's been a while since it's been a condition of their continued employment. They'll learn.![]()
Best decision of this whole thing, IMO. There is no other media where lateness has been tolerated the way it has been in comics. Can you imagine sitting down to watch an episode of your favorite TV series on its regular airdate and seeing just a black screen because the cameraman couldn't get it together that week?
Almost all are still pencilled by hand, I think. Inking is increasingly digital, but there are still a great number, probably an great majority, that are traditionally inked. (I've never fully understood inking in the modern age--it's easy enough to scan in a pencil drawing as black and white, and manipulate blacks via computer, but I suppose a lot of inkers are actually finishing artists, too).So are comic books still drawn and colored by hand then? I'd assumed that everything was done on a computer, and people just used the old terms.
Color and lettering are by computer now. Pencils and inks are still by hand. Though IIRC, Brian Bolland does pencil and ink everything using a computer.So are comic books still drawn and colored by hand then? I'd assumed that everything was done on a computer, and people just used the old terms.
For generations television networks have thrown many hours of new programming up against the screen every year fully understanding as part of their business planning that most of the new stuff will quickly fail (despite always hoping to beat the average this year). Dependably popular shows and whole schedules that work for periods of years - in a few cases, nearly decades - are built by presenting new stuff all the time and then ruthlessly and unsentimentally disposing of anything that doesn't work. The folks at DC may (finally?) see the utility of approaching comics publishing in the same way, particularly given that the financial loss involved in spiking a failing book and replacing it with a new one is minimal in comparison to the same thing on television.
I don't even really know how old-school coloring worked, although I'd be interested (from an academic perspective) to find out.
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