(no subject)
So, I'm collaborating with
yhlee on a new comic. Well, her work is done, mine's just started. I plan to post this one chronologically for a change ('cause it, ya know, makes more sense that way... even though I usually start with my favourite pages, or the ones that will go fastest). The next few days I probably won't have that much time to work on it so until I got some actual complete artwork to post, here's a sneak preview.

This is the inkwork for page 2, more or less finished. It still needs a few shades added but now the upstairs roommate demands an episode of Bones, and who am I to argue... [eta: Oh, The Woman at the Airport is so much better on second viewing. What a pleasant surprise. The out-of-sync sound in my first avi file was so irritating that I couldn't really appreciate the snappy dialogue.]

This is the inkwork for page 2, more or less finished. It still needs a few shades added but now the upstairs roommate demands an episode of Bones, and who am I to argue... [eta: Oh, The Woman at the Airport is so much better on second viewing. What a pleasant surprise. The out-of-sync sound in my first avi file was so irritating that I couldn't really appreciate the snappy dialogue.]

no subject
But anyway, I'll never use photoshop for drawing. But I think it will be very useful for reworking artwork done in traditional media. And my roommate recently had a job where the publisher wanted the finished artwork sent to their server. And she knew even less about this stuff than me. Now she knows a lot more, but man, it cost her nervers.
I think there's a good chance that this will become more common - turning in the artwork digitally. After all, the client saves the money for the computer guy, so it's convenient for them. Just for that alone, I'd like to be prepared.