- Odd but otherwise friendly Crab Pot

crabs:

khalefornia:

makaiwars:

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crabs

this is my favorite song

(via impomaniac)

381,291 plays
framesofweabon:
“ mcmcmuke:
“ a lil ol walk cycle i made for 2d animation class!!!
look at him stroll!!!!!!!
”
cute
”

framesofweabon:

mcmcmuke:

a lil ol walk cycle i made for 2d animation class!!!
look at him stroll!!!!!!!

cute

(via becdecorbin)

Anonymous asked: man I really hope the WoY crew see that fancomic

tbh I don’t know if they’d like it/I could handle that but I appreciate the sentiment <:’D

Anonymous asked: OKAY I SURRENDER I'll go watch WoY stop making me sad without reason??!?! D8

GOOD

JOIN US OR PERISH

well this got out of hand

also if you haven’t watched Wander Over Yonder or the episode called The Hat this will make zero sense but if that’s the case WHAT ARE YOU DOING GO WATCH SOME CARTOONS

prozdvoices:

her00fthewindz said:

Could you please voice this comic?polyatom1c(.)tumblr(.)com/post/119238228662/majoras-mask

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image
image

come get some, moon

Original comic by polyatom1c

Tatl voiced by redasatomato

153,124 plays
‘don’t do backgrounds you’re not even meant to be doing this stupid thing in the first place’ I screamed at myself from a distance
but it was too late

‘don’t do backgrounds you’re not even meant to be doing this stupid thing in the first place’ I screamed at myself from a distance

but it was too late

alcornstudios:

Heya Tumblr! Here are some poses from last night’s premier of “The Wanders”. My hats off to the team for another great episode… although I’m not on site, I know it was a really special one for the crew. Cyber-high five to Dave Thomas’ son Charlie who came up with the idea for the episode. Great job Charlie!!!

midnightwind asked: Hi sorry to bother you, but a friend and I have been working on a comic idea for a few years and are just getting started on making it happen. I was wondering if you had any advice to paneling and pacing? I've been struggling to draft up rough page outlines without feeling like they're all the same and are uninteresting. Your pages always seem so alive and tend to be easy to read yet also still full of the story. Any tips you can pass on? Thanks so much! (no need to answer publicly if you want)

I’m afraid that’s a hard one and takes a great deal of time and patience to get a feel of pacing, and I’m always learning it myself! Timing is a critical skill and one that you can only learn by practice, practice and more practice, but you can also observe it in good comics and other media.

As an exercise, find a comic that you really enjoy and ‘moves well’, and have a look at when and how they use different shots like close ups and establishing shots. You’ll see the same devices in films too, so watch a film you enjoy and see if you can pick out the similarities; this category of study is often called ‘cinematography’ but when it comes to the timing in comics it slides into another realm all of its own. Draw thumbnails (tiny pictures) of each shot in a scene that you like- look at how are they moving the camera, where the characters are in the frame, how they have used shadows and lighting etc.

On top of this think about the juxtaposition of one shot to another; What is the effect of having a close up immediately followed by a wide shot of the same character? They feel very small. What is the effect of having one character viewed from a worm’s eye view and then the other viewed from a downshot? The first character feels imposing, the other feels powerless. Context is everything in comics because these devices can also affect the flow of time- big, open shots feel like they hold a lot of time, while a succession of small frames with similar content flow one after the other like seconds in a film strip. Slashed, diagonal shots feel more dynamic and quick, and long horizontal shots are slower or can even ‘freeze’ time, like a held breath. Contrast is very important- a long horizontal panel feels much more poignant after a page full of narrow panels, and a full page spread usually only follows a lot of pages with many panels. Use special panels sparingly and they will add a huge kick to your comic, but drown people with them and the comic flow becomes too hectic.

One big tip is to watch out for a type of shot or panel that you seem to use a lot; lots and lots of the same thing can be very dull, and some comic artists fall into the ‘head and shoulders’ trap where you almost only ever see that part of the characters with next to no background. Unless you are doing it on purpose for artistic effect try not to get too samey with your shots. That’s about all I can suggest, the rest is down to hard work and practice! Good luck!