comicsforbeginners.com/ What does David Lynch, Picasso and George Lucas have in common? Setting up guardrails for your creativity can have surprising benefits. For more #makecomics videos and articles go to comicsforbeginners.com/
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Constrained creativity. Perimeter and other limits force you to focus. Too much freedom is hard to manage. Terms of reference in projects are a helpful document.
You hit the nail on the head, sir!
@@PalleSchmidt1 Just an additional thought. The primary constraints are time and physical limits. Time means deadlines. You have to finish the project at a certain date. Physical limits are the most you can do given your workflow. You can only handwrite and transcribe so many words in a given time. You can type directly or even use speech to text tools, still you can only write so many words. That's assuming they're coherent.:- ) Same thing with drawing. You can only draw so many pages from thumbnails to ink and color in a day. Given these limits you look for ways to make your workflow fast. By putting constraints on your processes, how else?:- ) By the way, I have your excellent book Solo and was halfway through it when the lockdowns happened. Will pick it up again.
Thanks Palle, useful tips!
After a long time....hello sir 🤩
Restrictions are great! Poetry is my favorite median to use a complex structure, rhyme, and certain imagery to challenge my skill.
Like it a lot. Simple, to the point and with good suggestions/examples. Nice to see you back.
Thanks Andre!
Good pandemic advice. Ecellent summary of Constrints - they are exactly what creates creative solutions ... sometimes you have to explore what the real constraints are ... vs. assumed consraints.
Spot on, Ken. Thanks!
Pls make more videos please
I will! But at the same time, I gotta keep doing my actual work, so no promises on when another video will go up :-)
@@PalleSchmidt1 hope you're doing fine
The king has returned
"The king"?? Aw, come on..!
Hey, the new season of Twin Peaks ain't bad, just different
It certainly is :-)
@@PalleSchmidt1 But I agree with you, the first 2 seasons are more rewatchable :)
@@CookieMonsterMC11 I'd argue the first season holds up and so does the first couple of episodes of season two. When they catch Lauras killer, the series IMMEDIATELY goes in the ditch. Only to pick back up for the last two episodes (after Lynch returns to the series). I like Fire Walk With Me too, altho it presents more new questions than answers. I think the mistake I (and others) make is to try and find clues and answers, solve the puzzle. And Lynch seems to just throw more pieces on the board, making it impossible to get a clear picture. Especially in this new series.
@@PalleSchmidt1 I agree with that sentiment, especially why the middle of season 2 is so frustrating. And for the second part of your comment, I agree with that. As David Lynch often say, "you have to focus on the donut, not the hole" 😄 For me, the ending of season 3 meant that Cooper tried to to "save" Laura a last time, and the harrowing scream showed that it's not possible, the abuse will always be apart of her story. ( so all the rest of season 3, judy and all that, I don't know what it means, I watch Lynch work mostly for the emotional impact). :)
@@PalleSchmidt1 if you have a lot of spare time, I can recommend this video: kzhead.info/sun/aqWSnqptn4GeqIU/bejne.html