Saturday November 10th
We will be holding one of our famous Auctions on November 10th at noon.
Plus we will be holding a Magic the Gathering Modern tournament with no entry fee.
A box of Return to Ravnica to the winner.
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The Graphic Novels and Comics Round Table of the American Library Association is dedicated to supporting library staff in all aspects of engaging with graphic novels and comics, including collection development, programming, and advocacy. With more than 1000+ members from all over North America - and colleagues in Australia, Europe, Latin America and more - we are committed to comics advocacy and library and educational work in all aspects and in all areas. We believe #comicsareforeveryone.
This is my current longer webcomic. The goal is to draw an average of 2 pages per week, and finished pages will be posted in batches every few weeks, as best fits the flow of the story. The story has Christian subject matters as its foundation, and you can read more info about the comic in the "about" section on its website. Suited for teens and up.
I like to self publish my comics as physical books whenever I can, and currently you can get both "A Meandering Line" and "lovely People" as little hardcovers from my online shop! (They're shipped from Finland)
Note for people from the USA/North America: A small Christian online book shop called Wise Path Books (link to shop) also carries my books, so you can get also them from there with way cheaper shipping.
My personal coming-to-faith story, told in comic form. Half of the story focuses on the years when I was an atheist, how I ended up with the conclusions I did, and the other half goes through how God ended up leading me back the other way.
I made the short comic "Lovely People" during 2020-2021 when I felt an internal alarm about the societal creeping towards possible social credit systems in the future, and I felt like I needed to throw my skills into the mix to help people understand how such systems can function. (This was the comic I made right after my conversion.)
If you'd like the physical copy you can currently buy one from this small Christian online bookstore called Wise Path Books. (My own little webshop is on a break until I have some spare time.)
I can't whole-heartedly recommend the comics I finished during my pre-Christian era, since eventhough I tried to make them as "just entertainment" and for mass appeal, our worldviews always colorour creations. But the comics exist, and as long as they're read through a lens of being aware that these were written by a 20-something woman with a somewhat progressivist worldview at the time, then they can be decent as entertainment. So if you do want to read them they are:
"A Redtail's dream" My first finished comic, made when I was in university (finished 2013). It's a fairytale-ish adventure set in a dream world inspired by Finnish mythology. I'm still pretty fond of this one.
"Stand Still. Stay Silent" Begun in 2013 and ran for nearly a decade. It's a post-apocalyptic horror-adventure story, set in the Nordics and with a fantasy flare inspired by Nordic mythologies (Norse and Finnish). NOT suitable for children (and not sensitive adults either), has lots of prominent horror elements.
WEBTOON is the go-to site to easily read comics in many forms, with manga being particularly popular. From slice-of-life like My Giant Nerd Boyfriend to myth retellings like Lore Olympus, readers are spoiled for choice. You can read online or via the app.
Once you have 100 subscribers for one of your titles you can monetize the ads on your page, and after 250 subscribers you can use their in-built creator support tool, where readers can tip you. The platform occasionally partners with traditional publishers to turn popular comics into printed books.
Tumblr is still an excellent place to share your creative work if you draw comics. Many of the most popular webcomics on the internet have an account here due to the support and acceptance they give to the genre.
Spinwhiz Comics is a discovery and distribution platform which was specifically designed to allow content creators to share their content, build their brands and start to gain revenue through multiple avenues. It was also created to give readers a daily stream of new comics and webcomics they may not have noticed otherwise with all of the competitive noise in the marketplace.
Webtoon is a digital comic platform where users can read and publish comics, predominantly in a vertical scroll format optimized for mobile devices. It hosts a wide range of genres, including romance, comedy, fantasy, action, and more. Webtoon features works from various artists and creators from around the world, offering a diverse selection of content to its users. It has gained significant popularity, particularly among younger audiences, and has become a prominent platform for both established and aspiring comic creators.
Webtoon's phone app is the best well-designed comic app I've ever encountered. Its user experience, color palette, and layout are top-notch. Sometimes I find webtoons advanced chapters elsewhere, but I wait for them to appear in Webtoon, just for the pleasure of reading them on that platform. Highly recommended! One comic I'm into now is "Stray Souls" :)
Anybody -- from preschool to high school -- can be a comic book creator with these tools that help students make sequential art. You'll notice that some of these tools are designed specifically with comic creation in mind, while others, many of which are tuned to older kids' needs, lack comic-specific scaffolding and instruction but can be used to make more professional-level creations. Use these great creation tools to help students learn cartooning and sequencing fundamentals, or just express themselves and demonstrate learning. Teachers might also create comics to put a fun, accessible spin on content, whether it's a set of visual classrooms norms or a cheeky hook to kick-start a lesson.
MK has been making comics under the pseudonym Comic Nurse since 2000. In addition to lecturing, teaching and comic-making, she co-runs GraphicMedicine.org, a website devoted to the intersection of comics and health.
Webcomics (also known as online comics or Internet comics) are comics published on the internet, such as on a website or a mobile app. While many webcomics are published exclusively online, others are also published in magazines, newspapers, or comic books.
Webcomics can be compared to self-published print comics in that anyone with an Internet connection can publish their own webcomic. Readership levels vary widely; many are read only by the creator's immediate friends and family, while some of the most widely read have audiences of well over one million readers.[1][2][3] Webcomics range from traditional comic strips and graphic novels to avant garde comics, and cover many genres, styles, and subjects.[4] They sometimes take on the role of a comic blog.[5] The term web cartoonist is sometimes used to refer to someone who creates webcomics.
There are several differences between webcomics and print comics. With webcomics the restrictions of traditional books, newspapers or magazines can be lifted, allowing artists and writers to take advantage of the web's unique capabilities.
The creative freedom webcomics provide allows artists to work in nontraditional styles. Clip art or photo comics (also known as fumetti) are two types of webcomics that do not use traditional artwork. A Softer World, for example, is made by overlaying photographs with strips of typewriter-style text.[6] As in the constrained comics tradition, a few webcomics, such as Dinosaur Comics by Ryan North, are created with most strips having art copied exactly from one (or a handful of) template comics and only the text changing.[7] Pixel art, such as that created by Richard Stevens of Diesel Sweeties, is similar to that of sprite comics but instead uses low-resolution images created by the artist themself.[8] However, it is also common for some artists to use traditional styles, similar to those typically published in newspapers or comic books.
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