And online, obviously.
We talked about that too. I think Dinosaur Comics is funnier and smarter and better than anything running in the newspapers today. And there are many other examples.
Oz ,'First Date'
Discussion of Buffy and Angel comics, books, and more. Please don't get into spoilery details in the first week of release.
And online, obviously.
We talked about that too. I think Dinosaur Comics is funnier and smarter and better than anything running in the newspapers today. And there are many other examples.
Also, comics are becoming huge in libraries. And librarians are realizing they're not just for kids.
And librarians are realizing they're not just for kids.
"Pow! Wham! Bomp! Comics Grow Up!"
I would imagine a lot of folks who would be inclined to produce indie comics are moving towards making webcomics instead just because it's easier to put up a webpage and try to get people to link to it than it is to print something up and try to 1) get stores to carry it 2) get folks to buy it. I'm sure it's not the only reason for the decline in numbers, but it certainly helps.
I would imagine a lot of folks who would be inclined to produce indie comics are moving towards making webcomics instead just because it's easier to put up a webpage and try to get people to link to it than it is to print something up and try to 1) get stores to carry it 2) get folks to buy it. I'm sure it's not the only reason for the decline in numbers, but it certainly helps.
The big lesson I learned in comics/publishing when I was in it was simply that distribution was the great bottleneck. The internet circumvents that. If you can build up an online following, get some ad revenue and then publish book-store carriable collections then you might be able to make a run at it.
I don't know. Bone might be the last really successful paper-first indie comic.
Also, comics are becoming huge in libraries. And librarians are realizing they're not just for kids.
Heh. I have a sneaking suspicion that I'm one of the top comics-checker-outers in my library. Whenever they get a new TPB in that I've been wanting to read, I always thank them.
Just call me Teppy, GirlGeek.
For Teppy, GirlGeek: [link]
It's strange, though, that Girl Genius is the only comic that I'm aware of that started out as hard copy, and then moved online. It isn't really that indie comics are moving online, they're getting displaced by them.
Another thing I'm noticing is that the indie comic aesthetic is having a huge influence on contemporary art. Maybe it's easier to sell prints online than comic books.
Oh, and indie animation is the new indie comic.
It's strange, though, that Girl Genius is the only comic that I'm aware of that started out as hard copy, and then moved online.
A Softer World was in zines before it was online. I'm 90% sure there's another fairly well-known comic that stopped hard copy production and moved online recently but I don't have time to dig around right now.
I think the web comic that's up on girl-wonder.org was print before it was online, and stopped doing print a few months back.
(Which reminds me, I need to write my stupid column, now that I have some free time.)