The Concept: We need at this point to understand that there is a concept creator and there is a writer. Most time we tend to believe that the creator must write the story. This is not always the case even if the creator is a writer. A creator might recognize that he doesn’t have adequate comprehension about a particular story concept and might decide to hire a writer who is good in both narration and dialogue.
The Writer: for any one to qualify as a writer you must be able to write good dialogue. Writing good dialogue is not only about writing how people speak but also able to differentiate who is talking. I have read scripts where everyone seems to be talking the same way (I mean between a professor and a Kindergarten) and though the story may be so interesting and a page turner you finish the book realising something was missing. Any way this is not a tutorial segment and dialogue is not all that makes you a writer.
Artist: These are the guys who transform the words into pictures; pictures that we sometimes want to die to have. Being able to draw again does not make you comic artists as there are certain rules of paneling and story flow that you must understand. I hope in subsequent write ups to talk explicitly about being a comic artist.
Colourist: His medium could be digital or the more customary mediums of pastel, poster colour or gouache. Everyone seems to be going digital nowadays though.
Graphics: Now this can really kill your work if you don’t get it right. I was reading one of our Nigerian comic titles recently and the graphics just killed it (spoilt it). The Mast head was terrible and the word balloons were just horrible. For the purpose of the Nigerian factor I have grouped lettering, layouts and Cover designs under the term Graphics because one person can actually do all of this stages(I hope I don’t take that back later). A good graphical design can go a long way to boost the appearance of your comic especially the cover.
The Editor: Overlook this guy at your own peril. Most of the errors that we encounter in publishing usually occur because this position doesn’t exist or is merged with any of the above. The job of the editor is to help everyone else on the team to see what they have missed. Sometimes the writer, Artist, Letterer and graphics man could make a honest mistake that only the editor can see and point out immediately since he is not emotionally attached to the work. Anyone who reads comics can be your editor really but a good editor must understand all the rules that guide the writer, artist, colourist and letterer.
The Publisher: In this part of the world everyone is selfishly trying to publishing their own books so you would hardly see individuals or organizations wishing to publish your comic book except there is really are large worm at the end of your hook.
I think that sums it all up. It’s of my opinion that if comic publishers can get the content of our books right, hiring the right people to handle each aspect so that when a customer picks up a Nigerian book its very difficult to differentiate it (in terms of content and not story line) from its foreign counterparts. If we can publish books that meet up with the standard quality set by American or Japanese comic book publishers, we can also sell at the same price with good reasons for doing so. Not just by asking the customers to be patriotic and go buy crappy, not well made books just because they want to support Nigeria. They worked for that money you know? I think they deserve to spend it on quality.That’s all for now, phew! Next time I’ll be looking at another challenge our comic industry needs to face to become great indeed. Yeah, it’s the Business aspect of Comics. This again is a big issue. See you then.