Ghost Ink
Time was I’d go through the trouble of redrawing a whole panel with a mistake in it, or at least do a patch or a frisket for a small revision. I’ve covered up many asymmetrical faces and oversized hands this way, and boy did it take time. Having to rescan single elements in, then meticulously pasting it via Photoshop like some digital crane operator was never something I looked forward to.
Digital drawing didn’t right away occur to me as the obvious solution. I’ve been coloring with a mouse for as long as I can remember, and when my peers demanded I get a drawing tablet, it only ever hit me as a coloring tool. Silly me.
It’s no giant leap, I know. But now all my page and panel revisions are done digitally. I erase stuff out and draw things in, all with the Wacom. Only the correction phase has changed though, all the original art is still done traditionally. And that retention makes me happy for some strange reason.
About a week ago I completely adopted the habit of doing absolutely all my spot blacks in the computer. It’s faster and much less messy, but I’m also left, for all intents and purposes, with an unfinished original page. There is a balance to be struck here, and I haven’t found it yet.
The irony of being torn between a laborious and messy physical process versus a speedy and accurate ethereal one doesn’t escape me, but hey… comics versus art?









