Webcomic layout template
Image material. Material catalog. Sign in required. After logging in, please refresh the page and try again. To send a message you need to log in. The material has been downloaded. White gutters borders defined each panel and the grid followed the Western method of reading — left to right.
Note this example from Jack Kirby , where you see Captain America in a battle over a 9 panel grid. Throughout the years, artists and writers were compelled to push the boundaries of their work, and influences from comics in Europe and Japan began to introduce layouts that did not conform to a traditional grid format. Although they were visually stunning, these pages could end up being an illogical disaster if planned improperly.
To keep things basic and structured in order to retain the the flow of your story, there are a number of grids that can be used to moderate pace, and allow for eye-catching imagery.
In a standard issue , the 9 panel grid becomes most useful when your story has a lot of information that needs to be relayed to the reader. For example, The Watchmen series used the 9 panel format to deliver the content.
This grid layout allows enough room for dialogue and action. The 6 panel page is the traditional layout for North American comics, and is still the the most widely used to this day. As a contrast to the traditional left-right storytelling method, look at this sample of a manga influenced comic book page layout.
A different style of layout utilizes a long panel, similar to a widescreen view. My comic uses Wordpress with a Webcomic plugin and Inkblot theme.
It's true that Wordpress gets hacked, but just make sure your hosting provider can deal with it. I use nearlyfreespeech guys, and they locked down my login page and sent me an email when they spotted some bot attacks. Thanks for all the replies, guys! They sure are helpful, although I am even more aware now that this will take time as well as attention and will be the cause of quite a headache. I would like not to spend anything while my comic is still so small and then upgrade later when I have more content.
This is probably going to be the best route for me right now. Does anyone know if there's a way to have a single webcomic site for multiple comics?
There's a lot of people including myself who do second series' and it'd be great if we could have a single hub for them. Maybe have the archives seperate them.
I'm not sure. My site is using the Comic Easel plug in for ComicPress, and running multiple comic titles. The ComicPress theme actually comes with a comic manager which makes it easy for you to publish new comics. The creator made a huge walkthrough guide covering everything you need to know about the plugin. It works for any theme so you could even use the default WordPress theme to publish comics. This works exactly the same as the themes page so you can search for webcomic by name and it should come up.
But there are a few staples I always recommend for WordPress sites. All of them are completely free and easy to install. First is W3 Total Cache which caches your site to make it load faster. With Yoast you can easily change the title and meta description of any page including archives.
Plus you can submit your Yoast sitemap to Google which helps your site rank quicker. Just get Yoast installed and worry about the details later. You just install the plugin, activate it, and copy a bit of code into whatever page you want the form to appear.
But you will need to create a contact page and copy the shortcode. Next to it should be a long code inside square brackets [like this]. On this next page you can paste the code right into the body section. These are the primary plugins I recommend for every site.
But if you ever need more functionality on your site try searching for a plugin because there are a lot out there. So you have your new webcomic site installed with some custom settings. You also have a nice theme and some plugins to help it all run. The last piece I want to cover is the Webcomic plugin and how it works. These permalinks should be changed to match the name of your webcomic.
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