Post 9xq0DFGDc0KLbyXXXc by yncke@comicscamp.club
 (DIR) More posts by yncke@comicscamp.club
 (DIR) Post #9xpHiZGOnOgWgnBanQ by ScribbleAddict@mastodon.art
       2020-08-05T22:35:06Z
       
       0 likes, 1 repeats
       
       Fellow board artists, and artists who thumbnail, how do you thumbnail these days? Do you use post-its, quickly drawn rectangles on a page, or digitally with drawn out rectangles? Part of me still loves doing it on paper/post-it.
       
 (DIR) Post #9xq0DFGDc0KLbyXXXc by yncke@comicscamp.club
       2020-08-06T06:53:38Z
       
       0 likes, 1 repeats
       
       @ScribbleAddict I make the thumbnails for my comics as quickly drawn rectangles on paper. They're very rough, so I'm not sure if there would be value in doing it digitally. Another reason is that I need a quiet mind space without distractions to do my thumbs, so paper and pencil suit me better for that.
       
 (DIR) Post #9xr5KjQCZAWo6tYh96 by ScribbleAddict@mastodon.art
       2020-08-06T19:25:50Z
       
       0 likes, 1 repeats
       
       @yncke I think it's smart, whatever way you do it, to get stuff down quickly and not worry about proportions and technicalities, while you work out the story. This is similar to what I do too :) I recently got some film aspect ratio, or storyboard shaped, post-its, and I've been having a blast using them for thumbnails today. If something isn't working, you can just throw it out, and you've lost nothing XD