Does this look as bad as I think it does?
Posted: Tue Mar 10, 2009 7:15 pm
So, what with the rewarding prospect of being able to at last get my comic up and running, I finished and colored a few pages to scan and then upload. However, I am very disappointed in the quality of the scanned image.
It is very very blurry, and just looks a whole lot crappier up on the computer screen than it does here in my hand, which frankly breaks my little heart.
Can anyone help me in terms of indicating whether this looks as bad as I'm imagining it to be, and if so, what steps I can take to lessen the horror?
Things that I know are wrong with it:
1. There's darkening around the edges of the paper because it's not flat against the scanner- it's sort of wrinkly from painting.
2. The border around the top panel is all wiggly waggly, which I'm going to go fix by hand.
3. The colors are kind of obnoxiously bright, a combination of the paint used and the fact that I tried to do the white balance in order to cancel out the graying at the edges- could possibly be fixed by re-scanning.
4. I have to tinker with the first panel a lot- I didn't really envision that peace-sign sorta thing going on there at the beginning, it was sort of a last ditch thing I did before scanning. So I know that has a lot of work to be done on it.
6. In the bottom panel the one chick's had is kinda coming out of the panel border which I'll also try to fix by hand.
5. It looks dreadful.
I really, really like working with traditional media- I'm not savvy enough to make a digital switch yet, so I don't think that's a possibility for me right now.
I don't want to leave the picture huge, since I know a lot of people really hate having to scroll in order to read a comic. However right now that seems the only way to get things to look good, is to leave them a wee bit bigger. They're all this size in terms of panels/taking up the screen, more or less, although some are a little longer. How much does scrolling make you hate a comic, anyway? If you have to scroll to read one, does it make you less likely to come back to it another time?
Total n00bness: I knew this wasn't going to be easy, but I didn't imagine it was going to be this frustrating.
It is very very blurry, and just looks a whole lot crappier up on the computer screen than it does here in my hand, which frankly breaks my little heart.
Can anyone help me in terms of indicating whether this looks as bad as I'm imagining it to be, and if so, what steps I can take to lessen the horror?
Things that I know are wrong with it:
1. There's darkening around the edges of the paper because it's not flat against the scanner- it's sort of wrinkly from painting.
2. The border around the top panel is all wiggly waggly, which I'm going to go fix by hand.
3. The colors are kind of obnoxiously bright, a combination of the paint used and the fact that I tried to do the white balance in order to cancel out the graying at the edges- could possibly be fixed by re-scanning.
4. I have to tinker with the first panel a lot- I didn't really envision that peace-sign sorta thing going on there at the beginning, it was sort of a last ditch thing I did before scanning. So I know that has a lot of work to be done on it.
6. In the bottom panel the one chick's had is kinda coming out of the panel border which I'll also try to fix by hand.
5. It looks dreadful.
I really, really like working with traditional media- I'm not savvy enough to make a digital switch yet, so I don't think that's a possibility for me right now.
I don't want to leave the picture huge, since I know a lot of people really hate having to scroll in order to read a comic. However right now that seems the only way to get things to look good, is to leave them a wee bit bigger. They're all this size in terms of panels/taking up the screen, more or less, although some are a little longer. How much does scrolling make you hate a comic, anyway? If you have to scroll to read one, does it make you less likely to come back to it another time?
Total n00bness: I knew this wasn't going to be easy, but I didn't imagine it was going to be this frustrating.