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The next thing to keep in mind after you have your supplies together is a very common mistake.
A lot of folks get excited to do a comic strip. It's something new. It's neat. They've drawing
for a while and they're ready to take it to the next step, but they really haven't thought
it through. By thinking it through, I mean coming up with characters. Nice consistent
characters that you're going to have, which will populate your strip. Cartoon artist don't
just put down their pen one day and invent great characters. It takes a lot of practice
and effort to be able to find the exact right look that you're looking for in your comic
characters. Before you ever actually put anything on an official comic strip, you should make
sure that you're giving a lot of developmental time to the characters that you're planning.
These characters should be very life like. They're going to have their likes and their
dislikes. They're going to have a definite physical look that you're going to want to
consistently portray on your page, make sure not to rush it and that you're not drawing
characters for the first time when you put them in your comic strip. It should be characters
that you have developed over the long hall.