I _thought_ the lines in the first panel looked kinda heavy… Cleaner… dunno. Perhaps there’s a little less aliasing now, which I don’t really care about. I am, however, doubting if you could’ve drawn the two patches of grass in the last panel differently, if you’d been using a pen. And whether that matters or not. And I’ll be wondering all night about whether or not I like those bikini bottoms, and how that defines my level of derangedness. But I don’t think that concerns the question.
The penmanship (eyes in the third panel are even more golden than usual) and the jokes all have the same feel, so it really makes no difference to me. I don’t think there’s much of a difference in commercial appeal either (for, you know, whenever you want to start profiting from us. Any day now, yes? Please?). So, whatever feels more comfortable to you. I’m happy either way!
I’m still trying to figure out how anyone can tell the difference, except that — maybe — some of the tinier details aren’t so clear. Losing those would be a terrible crime.
Personally I prefer your hand drawn comics over the Cintiq. I’ve tried digitally drawing my comics but I believe the artist’s personal talent and style comes across when the work is hand drawn. No matter how well an artist can handle a Wacom or Cintiq it still comes across too mechanical to me.
BTW, I thought you might try for a double entendre with the punchline by having her say “Anybody want his hacky sack.”
…Somebody’s art go back to being digital? (Another great one, by the way!)
Yeah, kind of an experiment. Gonna draw the strip on the Cintiq this week. What do you guys think – better, worse, no real difference?
It looks good! It somehow feels…’cleaner’?
I _thought_ the lines in the first panel looked kinda heavy… Cleaner… dunno. Perhaps there’s a little less aliasing now, which I don’t really care about. I am, however, doubting if you could’ve drawn the two patches of grass in the last panel differently, if you’d been using a pen. And whether that matters or not. And I’ll be wondering all night about whether or not I like those bikini bottoms, and how that defines my level of derangedness. But I don’t think that concerns the question.
The penmanship (eyes in the third panel are even more golden than usual) and the jokes all have the same feel, so it really makes no difference to me. I don’t think there’s much of a difference in commercial appeal either (for, you know, whenever you want to start profiting from us. Any day now, yes? Please?). So, whatever feels more comfortable to you. I’m happy either way!
I’m still trying to figure out how anyone can tell the difference, except that — maybe — some of the tinier details aren’t so clear. Losing those would be a terrible crime.
There’s not much of a difference to me, but I personally prefer the hand drawn when given a choice.
I can’t see the difference.
I didn’t notice the difference till you pointed it out, I am so art ignorant..
The only other opportunity is to still have a frisbee from your childhood.
And good luck finding that sucker in the park!
/WHY did I buy a green one?!
Or hope to find someone else’s lost frisbee in the park.
You buy one with the new dog, of course!
You’ll need one for your Ultimate Frisbee team.
You take the one that sat in the lost and found at college for months.
i’m that guy that buys stuff the day i need it >.<
The secret is to get your toys to do double duty. Almost any flying disc product makes a great rolling tray.
…I don’t think I’m doing this right.
Personally I prefer your hand drawn comics over the Cintiq. I’ve tried digitally drawing my comics but I believe the artist’s personal talent and style comes across when the work is hand drawn. No matter how well an artist can handle a Wacom or Cintiq it still comes across too mechanical to me.
BTW, I thought you might try for a double entendre with the punchline by having her say “Anybody want his hacky sack.”
Bikini bug – she’s a new look here!
Every KanJam set comes with a frisbee – no need to buy your flying discs separately!