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Manga Art for Everyone: A Step-by-Step Guide to Create Amazing Drawings
Manga Art for Everyone: A Step-by-Step Guide to Create Amazing Drawings
Manga Art for Everyone: A Step-by-Step Guide to Create Amazing Drawings
Ebook522 pages52 minutes

Manga Art for Everyone: A Step-by-Step Guide to Create Amazing Drawings

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About this ebook

Bring your own manga characters to life!

With millions of fans around the world, manga is a beloved art form. Now you, too, can learn how to draw your favorite characters from Japanese comics and anime! Manga Art for Everyone shows you how to draw detailed clothing, facial expressions, and other features, like hair and accessories. With gradual steps and helpful tips, this book will have you creating your own colorful characters in no time at all!

Learn to draw:
  • Gothic
  • Shonen Hero
  • Bride
  • Groom
  • Nekojin ("cat people")
  • Yokai
  • Victorian Man
  • Female Warrior


The authors have done all the work for you. Just follow their simple, straightforward instructions, study the step-by-step drawings, and you'll soon have your own collection of fantastic manga characters!
LanguageEnglish
PublisherSkyhorse
Release dateJul 19, 2022
ISBN9781510773622
Manga Art for Everyone: A Step-by-Step Guide to Create Amazing Drawings

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    Book preview

    Manga Art for Everyone - Danica Davidson

    Getting Started

    Tools Needed for Making Manga

    You have different options for making manga—from software to pen on paper. Software will typically give you what you need for the different aspects of making manga, like helping you with screentones and colors. If drawing on paper, you can use pencil, and finish it up by inking it with art pens, easy-to-find ballpoint pens, or special pens used by professional mangaka (manga creators) in Japan, depending on what you want and what your budget is. This section will talk about some of those options.

    Beginning with a Sketch

    All manga drawings start with a sketch. Any sort of paper would work. Plenty of high school students draw manga characters on printer paper or notebook paper, but professionals use thicker paper for their work. These can be found in sketchbooks sold in art stores and sometimes in retail stores in their office supply section. In Japan, the type of paper suitable for drawing monochrome manga (meaning manga using one color, like black) is called kent paper and packed kent papers are sold as manga manuscript paper at art shops. And, like so many other things these days, they can also be bought online.

    In Japan, artists sometimes use mechanical pencils with blue lead for the preliminary drawing where they put down the basic outline of the character. A mechanical pencil with regular gray lead works as well. In this book, you’ll see blue for the preliminary drawings, then a gray pencil for more detailed penciling, followed by inking. This is one of the typical methods of manga character drawing used in Japan, and it’s suitable for learners at beginner or intermediate levels.

    Mechanical pencils aren’t used as much in America, but in Japan, they’re prized for their clean, straight lines and their affordable prices. In manga, you often see characters using mechanical pencils, and there’s a reason for that!

    If you don’t have blue or gray lead for a mechanical pencil, a regular wooden pencil can also work, but you have to make sure it’s properly sharpened for the kind of lines you want to make.

    A ruler is also useful when drawing straight lines, like background buildings. It can also help you measure distance.

    Pens and Inking

    Once the drawing is done, then it is time for inking. On paper, there are different options for how you want to ink, and sometimes Japanese mangaka and American comic book inkers use different materials.

    A calligraphy dip pen called Speedball #102 is popular among professional comic book inkers in the United States. Other artists use Pilot ballpoint pens; these aren’t common in Japan, and in many cases, publishers there do not approve of using ballpoint pens. So a ballpoint pen is not good if you want to show your work to a Japanese publisher or in a Japanese competition. However, ballpoint pens are easy to find, and if the art is just for fun or not for professional manga publishing, then they are fine to use.

    Specialty art pens can be bought in art stores, in some stores that sell office supplies, and online. Sometimes you can buy a pack of pens (as opposed to one pen that holds different nibs). If you notice numbers on the pens like 01 or 08, these are telling you how thick the ink line will be. Getting a starter pack of pens like this can be a good way to get started and let you experiment with ink. Waterproof ink is recommended.

    In Japan, the most common types of ink are Pilot Drafting Pen Ink and Kaimei-Bokuju. Pilot Drafting Pen Ink, which is also easy to find in the United States, dries quickly and is waterproof.

    While pens work for the basic outlining of characters, a brush is used for filling in black spaces, like hair. Raphael series 8404 #2 or #3, Sharf brushes, and the Japanese Kuretake brush pen are all used by American inkers. Kuretake brush pens were originally made for calligraphy and later become popular with manga. Felt nibs are often not waterproof, though they are also very useful for coloring in black hair, but there is also the option of brush nibs. Likewise, it’s not rare for a packet of art pens to include a brush pen. We will discuss more about inking in the following pages.

    What If I Make a Mistake?

    Have a good eraser on hand for any mistakes made while using your pencil. If you mess up while working with ink, don’t worry. It happens to everyone from time to time, and there are options. Many mangaka in Japan use Dr. Ph. Martin’s Bleedproof White as you might use Whiteout

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