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If drawing by hand, the first step is to create or download a storyboard template. These look much like a blank comic strip, with space for comments and dialogue. Then sketch a "thumbnail" storyboard. Some directors sketch thumbnails directly in the script margins.
image: image: The page image (image of the character[s]) URL: required: Creator(s) creator creators: The name (or names) of the original creators (writer/illustrator) of the comic. String: required: Other contributors: writer: List of current/former writers of the strip. Unknown: required: Current/last artist: artist: The current illustrator of ...
The strip's title. image An image from the strip. Example: image=example.jpg alt The alternative text for images (this is not the same as the caption). caption A caption for the image. author or creator The author of the strip. current The person currently responsible for the strip, if different from author/creator. illustrator
This category contains articles supported by the Comic strips work group of the Comics WikiProject which have been rated as "Template-Class" by the WikiProject. Articles are automatically placed in this category when the corresponding rating is given and the appropriate parameter is added to the project banner; please see the assessment department and the project banner instructions for more ...
Comic strips have appeared inside American magazines such as Liberty and Boys' Life, but also on the front covers, such as the Flossy Frills series on The American Weekly Sunday newspaper supplement. In the UK and the rest of Europe, comic strips are also serialized in comic book magazines, with a strip's story sometimes continuing over three ...
Goofus and Gallant is an American children's comic strip appearing monthly in Highlights for Children. The comic contrasts the actions of the eponymous characters, presenting Gallant's actions as right and good and Goofus's as wrong and bad. Created by Garry Cleveland Myers and first published in Children's Activities in 1940, Goofus and ...
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One page of a full-color comics section can be divided horizontally into two, three or four parts. Comic strip collectors call strips that occupy one-third of a full page "thirds". From the mid-1940s until at least the 1980s, "thirds" were the most common comic strip format, and "thirds" are still common today.