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    How long does it take you to finish one graphic novel page?

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    • idid
      idid last edited by idid

      Just curious how long does it take people to finish one graphic novel page that is not a personal project but has a client, from drafting to coloring, but not include the time it takes for lettering, since lettering is often handled separately.

      Of course different people draw at different speeds, and I vaguely remember Jake said in a podcast he can draw up to 5-10 pages per day? Hopefully, I can get a bit more data here.

      Thanks you for your inputs!

      NessIllustration 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • NessIllustration
        NessIllustration Pro @idid last edited by NessIllustration

        @idid I wonder if he meant just the pencils. 5-10 pages from start to finish a day seems a bit impossible LOL... When I had my webcomic, it took me about... 8-10 hours from start to finish for one page. But then, it was in black and white and a pretty quick, loose style.

        EDIT - Here's a page for reference:
        FINAL_4.jpg

        vanessastoilova.com
        instagram.com/vanessa.stoilova/

        Check out my Youtube channel for tips on how to start your career in illustration! www.youtube.com/c/ArtBusinesswithNess

        idid 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
        • braden H
          braden H last edited by

          I'm certain Jake didn't do 5-10 fully coloured pages a day from start to finish.
          But then again I dunno!

          It takes me between 4-6 hours for a cully coloured paged from start to finish. Depends on how many panels there are. More panels means more time.

          This was aboot 4 hours or so?

          Bear in mind, though, I cut what illustrative teeth I have on 400 pages or so of webcomic (so I'm kinda geared for it) and I'm using clip studio which streamlines a LOT of the irritating finicky layout stuff.

          alt text

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
          • K.Flagg
            K.Flagg last edited by

            Yeah I think Jake was just referring to penciling. I can probably pencil that many pages in a day but inking and coloring is a whole other story. It takes a few hours to ink a page sometimes even digitally and full colors probably 8-10 hours per page for me.

            image-asset.jpeg
            Cyterna+Final+Color+Issue+1+Pg+14.jpg

            K.Flagg

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
            • J
              jdubz last edited by

              Don't forget that your style is going to influence things a lot. Compare the above page examples with something like Catwad, and there's a pretty big detail gap between them as well. You'd be able to knock out twice as much with less detailed stuff like that.

              catwad-pizza-3_custom-9a790ff99e46b382a35f8d1265195e0f085e20cf-s800-c85.jpg

              Josh White
              https://www.instagram.com/joshwhiteillustration/

              braden H 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 4
              • braden H
                braden H @jdubz last edited by

                @jdubz said in How long does it take you to finish one graphic novel page?:

                Don't forget that your style is going to influence things a lot. Compare the above page examples with something like Catwad, and there's a pretty big detail gap between them as well. You'd be able to knock out twice as much with less detailed stuff like that.

                Very true! Style plays a huge role.

                Also the more pages you complete the faster you'll get. You'll find out where you can streamline things and what corners can be cut.

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • StudioLooong
                  StudioLooong last edited by

                  In this episode of Graphic Novel TK they go into time estimating and scheduling, may be a helpful refrence: https://soundcloud.com/graphicnoveltk/episode-11-how-to-make-a-graphic-novel

                  Taylor Woolley
                  (Formerly Taylor Ackerman / StudioLooong)


                  Website: www.woolleystories.com
                  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/woolleystories/

                  Kayla Groening 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                  • Jake Parker
                    Jake Parker SVS OG last edited by

                    Good question! Here's my breakdown:

                    Layout: 1-2 hours (i'm usually also figuring out dialogue at this stage so that takes longer, but if I'm working from a script about an hour)

                    Pencils: 1-3 hours (all depends on how much detail in the page)

                    Inks: 1-2 hours

                    Colors: 2-5 hours (the longest part is the flatting. If I have the money I usually hire an assistant to do this for me, then I go in and adjust the coloring, lighting, shadow, and any special effects needed.

                    So a page can take me 5-12 hours from start to finish. On average I'm doing about 8 hours a page.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
                    • Jake Parker
                      Jake Parker SVS OG last edited by

                      One other idea to make things move faster:

                      Spend a lot of time on a character sheets for the heads. Draw them in a bunch of different angles like this:
                      alt text
                      Then once you've done your layouts place one of the heads you've already drawn in the spot so it matches the angle and trace over the top of it. Helps a lot if you're doing your layouts and pencils digitally.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 5
                      • idid
                        idid @NessIllustration last edited by idid

                        Thank you @NessIllustration @jdubz @K-Flagg and @Braden-Hallett for your inputs, you guys do gorgeous work! So on average 8-10 hours seems to be reasonable number, I would say, and a 200-page project is almost a whole year of hard work. I think I underestimated the workload of graphic novels before. and there's also the time back and forth between illustrators and editors. I am totally amazed!

                        Also thank you @Jake-Parker for clarifying and your tips. Never thought of it before , but it would be very helpful to prepare a character sheet like that.

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • Kayla Groening
                          Kayla Groening @StudioLooong last edited by

                          @StudioLooong I was literally listening to this episode as I read your comment. Spooky. 🙂

                          Kayla Groening
                          Comic/Graphic Novel Artist
                          Storytelling through Art.
                          Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/kaylagroeningillustration
                          Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kayla.groening.illustration/

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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