Folklore influences in Badirfilay

I’ve always felt fascination for themes related to death and the dark side of people and things. I’m not an emo, goth or anything related. I think it’s something more like anthropological/psychological curiosity. That’s probably because I used to talk about death in my stories.

Well, Badirfilay is about this, actually, and more than death itself, it’s the feeling it brings to the ones who are left behind; the ones alive.

Death can have many faces but I’ve based my story on some legends and a compilation of stories I’ve been hearing and reading all my life. Folk stories of different countries and cultures, small stories, religious stuff and even personal things. I don’t think there’s an unique vision about that theme… Death and mystery can be treated from many different views. Every religion has its own way to explain what happens once we die. I have my own opinion about this, but I didn’t want to put my beliefs here. I thought doing Badirfilay and focusing on death in Badirfilay as an eclectic thing, would be more interesting.

It’s still quite early to talk about this because you’ve seen just a peek of it in the story.

At the point, some myths appeared already:

Banshees: A very interesting character in Celtic folk stories.

Greek Mythology, Kharon, the river Styx, and Sirens: Not the beautiful, friendly mermaids fairy tales have sold to us. No, the real mermaids as they are: creepy, dangerous, and probably not so beautiful, but enchanting in fact.

Genies of the 72 hours after Death: The belief that people “can be resurrected within those 72 hours”. It was a legend I heard when I was a child that impressed me so much especially because I heard it in a very sad moment of my life. That story is the basis of Badirfilay. I’ll talk about this later, when this shows clearer in the story.

Edgar Allan Poe: His obsession for young beauty perishing. Young ladies dying. A very common theme used in Badirfilay too.

Post Mortem Photography: A FASCINATING thing I discovered many years ago. The most beautiful and sad way to retain the memory of a dead beloved. Now seen as a creepy bizarre thing, but in those times, it was almost the only way to keep a visual tangible memory of those who died. Beautiful. In my story, they are used by the Docs to receive the information about clients to be revived.

As I said, you’ll be seeing many things related to those mysterious subjects. Some will be very well known by you (like vampires, for example) and some other are very anecdotal. But everything will be used to give the story that darkness it requires. It’s funny, for me, it is. Lots of work to put together and make them fit, actually, but I think it will be very interesting.I hope you’ll think the same. Thanks for reading!

 

Staff note: Badirfilay’s latest chapter has our hero Valdemar meet a mythical three-headed dog! Go check it out if you haven’t already.

About Ninona

Hello! I'm a freelance illustrator and comic artist from Barcelona who enjoys (needs) coffee. My current comic is the steampunk inspired Badirfilay.

Window Painting on Holidays

While most folks put up Christmas lights and trees, a member of our website has a creative way of embracing the holiday rush: painting holiday motifs on glass windows.

Deb~or~ahh explains that this hobby of hers is turning into a profitable side project. For a couple of bucks, she turns a clear and barren glass window into a vibrant facade of bright red ribbons, cotton-white snow, the ever- omnipresent mistletoe, and gold still bells that go ding-a-ling-a-ling in your mind.

On seeing her creations, one could easily close their eyes, and feel Santa coming his way with his entourage of reindeers. Her postcard-like creations are made from nothing extraordinary—latex house paint for base layers and acrylic paint for colored and indoor projects. Window painting is a unique way to decorate your windows and a good way to earn some money, too!

If you want to know more details read Deb~or~ahh’s blog post on the website.

 

 

 

 

Favourite Storytelling Techniques in Comics

In reading comics, I’m not really conscious with the techniques on how they are portrayed, or the subtleties they possessed. Rather, they manifest in my mind retroactively, which, I must say, a shame. As long as a comic has good story, good characterization good art, I’d read it.

But there are just some things I won’t pass up. Techniques or styles in storytelling that make my heart go doki-doki ( Japanese onomatopoeia for heartbeat) with awe and admiration. Some of these are the following:

(Caveat: I may confuse technique with style, and vice versa, and rather concern more with narrative than anything, so this may apply to other forms of narrative medium as well.)

1. Cliffhanger. I have a love-hate relationship with cliffhangers. On the one hand, it is a great way to keep your readers at the edge of their seats, begging for more. On the other hand, HJASDHVIGUIVCNSICFOSIKMDSAIJSAFIKOJJNMOREMOREMOREICAN’TWAITFORTHENEXTCHAPTERGIVEITNOW.

Not the best example, but it’ll do.

2. Point-of-View. In a visual medium, employing multiple points-of-view is common, for a wider breadth of narration. But a clever timing of shifting a point-of-view helps greatly in moments of suspense, or when holding back information for future dramatic reveal. Or, you know. Cliffhangers.

From Yvette’s heart-stopping (!!) situation suddenly shifting to a mundane scene with Dimitri. :3

3. Panelling. There is an art to panelling. Done right, you can utilize panels in creating nuances. Take this, for example. A large panel means emphasis, means something significant. Aside from Hiromu Arakawa’s brilliant wording in the dialogue, placing Selim in close-up in a large panel indicates that he is significant to warrant such attention and to provide subtle foreshadowing.

4. Tones that complement the atmosphere. If a comic has a light-hearted story, then it would do well to give it tones and shades of grey (no, not that shades of grey ಠ_ಠ), or bright colors if we’re talking about comics printed in, well, color If a comic has a dark story, then blacks and/or dark tones/colors would fit the mood. It’s about mise en scène. DOGS: Bullets and Carnage is a fine example of a comic that makes use of more blacks and fewer tones and minimalism to give off a film-noir-like impression.

5. Trope Deconstruction. Ahahaha haha ha. *dies*

 

In conclusion: I try to apply such techniques in my own comics. But alas.

 

P.S. Some of you are already aware of my utter loathing towards (using!) shoujo bubbles. Haha. Well, there are two exceptions: 1) if they’re used sparingly; and most especially 2) if they’re used for the lulz.

About archiloquy

Part-time student, full-time worker, all-time procrastinator. Draws comics in her free time, and some other things. Author and artist of Quickening and Skiagraphia.

Victor answers your questions: How do I get promoted to featured/premium?

A lot of users ask us “How do you decide on who to promote to featured and premium?”, so I thought I would take a moment to explain to the best of my ability what we look for during our promotion process.

Our process:

All authors must begin at our site by creating an account and climbing up from member to featured, and then premium. Each step tests and confirms whether an author is suited for our site. It also gives our team the data necessary to determine how well our community and outside readers are engaging with a series.

Featured: To become featured, we are looking if you have done the basics towards proving you are taking your work seriously.

  • We look for a minimum of 30 pages of content already on our site.
  • Regular updates to your series.
  • Maturity and commitment towards engaging with users. Too many series upload pages, stay quiet, and then disappear forever.
  • A unique story and/or style that set you apart from your fellow authors and shows your originality and talent.
  • External validation of your work and progress so far: Twitter followers, Deviantart views, Smackjeeves followers, Competition results, Blogger mentions, etc.

Premium: To become premium, we are now looking into the details of how you have been doing on our site and how well you are engaging existing users, attracting new readers, and showing consistency. The numbers in most cases speak for themselves at this point.

  • Visibility in our traffic data of reader adoption both of existing site users and new users.
  • Consistency in publishing the same top quality content that caught our attention in the first place.
  • Consistency in engaging users through our site in sincere and interesting ways as well as other social media channels.

Some tips:

  1. Don’t spam! : Authors who put in the effort to engage and attract readers from outside our site have been the most successful. Going around asking every single new user on MangaMagazine to check out your series is annoying to users at best and from everything we have seen, a waste of your time. Constantly bugging people one at a time to read your series is simply annoying and is a negative sign for us when considering a series for promotion.
  2. Help yourself get noticed: Don’t just focus on MangaMagazine. We will help promote your series but this doesn’t mean you should not put in your own effort to stay in touch with your readers. In today’s digital age, you cannot just lock yourself up in your studio and draw. Readers want to feel like you are accessible, friendly, and care about what they think. This can only be done by consistently engaging readers through your own social presence such as Facebook, Twitter, Deviantart, Tumblr and so on.
  3. Be authentic and do what you enjoy: There is no one “right” way to build a fan base. Readers can tell whether you are enjoying what you are doing. Engage in the way you enjoy the most. This could be by posting illustrations that you draw in your free time or getting on the forums and starting discussions about what should happen next in your story.

I hope this lifts the curtain a little bit on our process. It is by no means a perfect science, but we try our best to be as objective and fair as we can.

If you have any thoughts, feel free to leave a comment below, or you can reach me through my profile: http://www.mangamagazine.net/authors-and-artists/Victor/detail-page/34

Your feedback is what helps us make this site better so don’t hold back!

Victor

About Victor

Co-Founder of MangaMagazine.net Permanent site stalker :)

Stylized Team Fortress 2 Inspired Art

Wastelands author Gemma Sheldrake (Petitecreme) recently did these stylized interpretations of Team Fortress 2′s video game character classes. If you play the game don’t forget to comment on which items below caught your eye!

You can check out more of Petitecreme’s work on MangaMagazine and tumblr.

Artist Tip: Protecting Yourself with Content Rating System (joke)

How will you defend yourself if your comic causes the death of anyone who reads it?

*This is meant as a joke post and should not be taken for legal advice!

If your comic ever caused the death of anyone who reads it, just make sure you have a warning on it or a label from the Content Rating System (CRS). This warning protects you from getting in trouble!

Always put “Warning: The content of the comic has caused unknown deaths, you have been warned”

Putting a CRS warning has the same effect as saying “I warned you and now you have to pay the consequences”. A related example could be a cigarette advertisement. Usually in every cigarette ad, you always see a warning that it is harmful to your health. But have you ever wondered why people who already knew that smoking is harmful to their health still smoke? In the end they end up having lung cancer and the cigarette manufacturing company continues to make big profits, ironic isn’t it?
Once you warn somebody, it is their decision to whether or not they will take the risk. I assure you, you won’t get in trouble if you have CRS.
What is CRS?

Content Rating System is used on TV Broadcast, movies, comic books or computer games. It is like a warning sign. As long as your comic has this rating system warning on it, if someone suddenly spontaneously explode and die because of the comic you are safe because you already warned them in the first place.

Did you do the right thing by just warning people?

This is a very philosophical question and it’s pretty hard to explain; if you think about it, to know someone really died on reading your work, would you really feel bad inside? Carrying the burden? Would it be ethical? It’s hard to move on once you knew the bad news. But you did warn them, from the beginning, so just go look for another new reader! After all, it is the internet and there are many more where they came from!

About Arme-chan

The name is Arme-chan, the author and artist of Knife Brigade and I'm an artist that has an inferiority complex so bare with me okay.. A.K.A I'm theannoyingfruitloop

Join the MangaMagazine team: Community Intern

Hey everybody,

Have you ever wondered how it is like working at a technology startup? Do you want to get involved early in a company to make a difference and help it grow? Well, we are looking for a community intern to join our community team! Below are the details of the position we are looking to fill as soon as possible:

Job Description:

We are seeking one energetic, organized and dedicated community intern who will assist our community team with maintaining our presence on the site. You will help come up with exciting community activities, participate in community dialogue, and gather feedback from users about improvements the technical team can make to the site.

Primary Responsibilities:

  • Manage community activities: Help come up with and run exciting community activities that allow for readers to better interact with authors.
  • Participate in community dialogue: Help serve as first point of contact and active participant in community to answer any questions or resolve any confusion.
  • Gather feedback: Listen to feedback by users to help our technical team prioritize which features should be worked on.
  • Contribute to blog and user communications: Assist and contribute to official site blog as well as other user communications.

This is wonderful opportunity for an individuals who wishes to work in a fast-paced, semi-chaotic startup environment and gain work experience—and possibly a full-time job (however, it should be noted, that this is based primarily on the candidates’ and company’s performance).

Qualifications:

  • Bachelors degree or equivalent (Marketing or communications degree is a plus): College junior and seniors accepted.
  • Relevant work and/or internship experience is a plus
  • Creative problem-solver
  • A start-up attitude—a go-getter who figures out how to get the task done with minimal resources and support
  • Strong communication skills (both written and verbal)
  • Graphics design experience is a plus

Additional Information:

  • This is a virtual position and you will work from home.
  • Please send a resume AND cover letter (which should include: GPA, motivation for applying, compensation expectations, and availability) to victor <at> mangamagazine.net. Please title the subject “Community intern job application”
  • Review of applications will continue until the position is filled
  • We truly appreciate your interest in this position and look forward to receiving your application!

Victor

About Victor

Co-Founder of MangaMagazine.net Permanent site stalker :)

8 Halloween Illustrations

Hi everyone! Hope you all had a fun time trick or treating. Here’s some Halloween inspired illustrations from MangaMagazine

Thanks for reading!