Showing posts with label print. Show all posts
Showing posts with label print. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Indie v. Corporate Comics by the Numbers:

From the good folks at Publisher's Weekly. (Read first before proceeding)

Over the summer you might have stumbled onto Robert Kirkman’s plea for comics creators to leave DC and Marvel behind for independent publishing (or to come to Image, if you read it with a cynical view). You may also have heard that Brian Bendis attempted to call BS on Kirkman’s plea and debated him on the topic.

While the debate didn’t have a clear winner, the stances were clear: Kirkman wishes more creators at DC and Marvel realized how much money they could make by going independent. Bendis thinks Kirkman’s sales are too high to be a reasonable example, finds his Marvel deal (including a page rate, royalties and placing Powers at Icon) preferable and kept talking about the value of trade paperback reprints.


For those of us who've engaged in the healthy debate over webcomics and the like over at Kung Fu Monkey these numbers prove a lot of things:

1. It takes a lot of time and effort to make it in indie or corporate comics.

2. There are a ton of expenses charged back to the titles in order to make that meager amount. See charts in the article.

So the question becomes: How does the internet save you money, increase your profit margin and reduce the time it takes to get paid?

Important questions to be sure, because as we all know --- business grows or contracts with the economics of a situation.

Sunday, September 07, 2008

Flash! Ahaaaaa....


Flesk Publications announces the January release of Al Williamson's Flash Gordon: A Lifelong Vision of the Heroic.

From the press release:

Al Williamson’s Flash Gordon: A Lifelong Vision of the Heroic, collects all the major works of the artist featuring the character. At 256 pages, it encompasses Williamson’s three stints of depicting Flash in comic book format: the legendary King Comics stories from the 1960s, the 1980 adaptation of the Universal Flash Gordon motion picture, and the Marvel Comics miniseries of 1994.

In addition to these classics of sequential storytelling, Al Williamson’s Flash Gordon features Williamson’s Flash drawings done for commercial illustration and prints, his assists on the Flash Gordon comic strip, a variety of Flash images contributed to amateur publications, and a selection of largely unpublished images spanning his interest in the character from childhood to the conclusion of his career. With an introduction by Sergio Aragones, text by Mark Schultz, and images reproduced directly from the artist’s original drawings, this long-overdue collection of evocative artwork documents the lifelong impact that Flash Gordon had on Williamson and the particular impact that Williamson had on Flash Gordon.


Hardcover, 256 pages, $44.95
ISBN-10: 193386513X
ISBN-13: 978-1933865133


H/T to Coming Attractions for the info.