kneukm03
August 14th, 2005, 06:22 PM
Hey,
I'm looking for an artist interested in a non-paying collaboration on my webcomic (in standard comic format), "The Deprogrammers." It's a super-hero story about a psychiatrist who has left his practice for the more interesting job of hunting down and "deprogramming" deluded super-types. I'd like to start putting out issues regularly (bi-monthly or so), and I need someone who can work on it as a collaborator.
You can check out the comic here:
http://www.boringlawyercomics.com/webversion.htm
Yeah, I know. Why should I bust my hump to do a full comic and then just stick it out there on a website for nothing? Because the alternative is to sell 15 copies on Comixpress, or the 200 or so through Diamond that an average indie pulls. Because Image or Darkhorse or whoever are getting hundreds of submissions a week, and they're MAYBE going to publish a couple of those a year.
You'll get a body of work in full comic format you can show around to people at conventions that they can sit down and read, you'll get substantially more people to see your art (which is always a good thing if you're trying to break in), and you'll get reviews and feedback (comic reviewers are pretty open to webcomics).
If you're interested, shoot me an e-mail at kneupper@gmail.com - send along samples of sequentials (either as files or as a web link). I can give you some info about my plans for upcoming issues, the next issue's script, etc. as well if you're interested.
I'm looking for an artist interested in a non-paying collaboration on my webcomic (in standard comic format), "The Deprogrammers." It's a super-hero story about a psychiatrist who has left his practice for the more interesting job of hunting down and "deprogramming" deluded super-types. I'd like to start putting out issues regularly (bi-monthly or so), and I need someone who can work on it as a collaborator.
You can check out the comic here:
http://www.boringlawyercomics.com/webversion.htm
Yeah, I know. Why should I bust my hump to do a full comic and then just stick it out there on a website for nothing? Because the alternative is to sell 15 copies on Comixpress, or the 200 or so through Diamond that an average indie pulls. Because Image or Darkhorse or whoever are getting hundreds of submissions a week, and they're MAYBE going to publish a couple of those a year.
You'll get a body of work in full comic format you can show around to people at conventions that they can sit down and read, you'll get substantially more people to see your art (which is always a good thing if you're trying to break in), and you'll get reviews and feedback (comic reviewers are pretty open to webcomics).
If you're interested, shoot me an e-mail at kneupper@gmail.com - send along samples of sequentials (either as files or as a web link). I can give you some info about my plans for upcoming issues, the next issue's script, etc. as well if you're interested.