Drawing with words, writing with pictures: children who make comics
Chris Riddell’s chosen quest as the new Children’s Laureate is to encourage children to draw – and to keep them drawing! One of the best ways to get children hooked on drawing is to get them making their own comics. Hannah Sackett looks at the advice and inspiration available, and at examples of children and young people who are establishing themselves as cartoonists.
C
artoonists Neill Cameron and Sarah McIntyre have both been advocates for children creating their own cartoons. Asked why children should make comics, Neill Cameron: ‘I think making comics is, frankly, one of the best things kids can do. It combines all the fun of making up stories, with all the creativity and expression of drawing, and is a form that is uniquely open to people of all ages and ability levels. If you haven’t quite got the hang of writing yet: you can tell a story using comics. If you’re not very confident in your drawing: you can still tell a story using comics. Basically, if you can draw a stick figure, you can make comics. And if you can’t draw a stick figure, you can learn how in about seven seconds.’ Cameron has published a book on making comics, and has also created a large number of resources for budding cartoonists which can be found on:
www.thephoenix.com. He has also argued for the power of comics in teaching literacy skills
neillcameron.blogspot.co.uk.
Sarah McIntyre, meanwhile, has created a series of brilliant videos for Booktrust on how to draw characters, create comics and run a comics jam:
www.booktrust.org.uk/programmes/primary/the-write- book/sarah-mcintyre-video/ She also has a guide on how to run a school comic fair
jabberworks.livejournal.com/
501730.html.
Neill Cameron: Young Cartoonists
The colourful pages of readers’ comics and artwork published in The Phoenix and The Beano every week show that many children are already accomplished cartoonists.
Some young
artists take their dedication to story-telling further – creating their own comics to sell to friends, at school, in comic stores, at comic conventions and online.
14 year-old cartoonist Zoom Rockman
started drawing
comics six years ago, when he bought a box of old Beanos at a car boot sale. Now he has his own comic strip (Skanky Pigeon) in The Beano, as well as publishing his own comic The Zoom.
Self-published or ‘Small Press’ comics by young cartoonists have been popping up at conventions and in independent comic stores. Last year’s Thought Bubble – the annual Comic Art Festival held in Leeds – included comics by young creators Johnny Toons (cartoonist behind The Crystal Orb), Jordan Vigay (creator of The Red Crow) and the comic collective Pink Fluffy Ketchup Covered Flower Ponies (or Team Ketchup for short).
But children don’t need to print large numbers of comics to get their work seen. Widcombe Junior School’s Library Newsletter, sent out once a term as a PDF, features comics by several children at the school. Year 5 pupil, Matty has been making comics for the newsletter for the past two years. Her cat-girl characters, influenced by Japanese anime, have encouraged other children at school to make their own comics.
Draw your own comics! How to Make Awesome Comics, Neill Cameron, David Fickling Books, 978-1910200032, £6.99 Write and Draw Your Own Comics, Louie Stowell et al., Usborne, 978-1409564256, £9.99 Let’s Make Comics!, Robin Etherington and Zak Simmonds- Hurn, Oxford University Press, 978-0198308195, £5.80 The Blank Comic Book Panelbook, About Comics, 978-1936404391, £5.75
Comics by Young Cartoonists: The Red Crow by Jordan Vigay
www.jordanvigayweb.webspace.
virginmedia.com/
Index.html The Crystal Orb by Jonny Toons
https://www.etsy.com/uk/ shop/Jonnytoons The Zoom by Zoom Rockman
www.thezoom.co.uk/index.html
Hannah Sackett works part-time as school librarian at Widcombe Junior School, Bath, where she runs an after-school comic club. She also works as a freelance educator.
But how to get started? Zoom Rockman says ‘My advice would be to just do it. When you start something try and fill a whole page even if it’s just a pencil rough [you can ink in details later.] It’s a real boost to get a whole page finished and it only takes 10-20 pages to have a whole comic ready to print out.’
Matty of Nimbus Comics says, ‘Don’t be embarrassed about how you draw. I used to worry if my characters’ noses were right or their feet were too big. You can get ideas from other comics, but don’t just copy them. Make your own stories. Go crazy! Comics don’t need to follow strict rules. You could make a comic about a talking jelly or a spider that turns into a marshmallow.’
Matty:
Use this link
http://booksforkeeps.co.uk/issue/childrens-books/articles/draw- ing-with-words-writing-with-pictures-children-who-make-comics for information on comic conventions, workshops and competitions coming up this year.
Books for Keeps No.213 July 2015 9
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