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A Clip Studio Paint tweet today reminded me I had intended to post here about my workaround for a problem that almost scuppered the planning of my 24hr comic.


See, I draw a lot of my sketches and comics in Clip Studio Paint on a Surface Pro (2017 model) which is handy when sitting at a desk feels a bit too restrictive. I take it to coffee shops (remember coffee shops?) and pubs (remember pubs?) and the park (remember... okay, we can still go to the park... I think) and it's not as portable as an iPad because it's a mini PC but it's good for PC stuff too. Balances out nicely, I think. Except for one thing.


Shortcuts. Lack of access to shortcuts, specifically. With a Surface Pro, you have a type cover, rather than a keyboard. It attaches magnetically to the bottom of the screen and looks all swish, but if you're drawing with the tablet in your lap, or oriented portrait style, that type cover becomes untenable as an accessory. I guess you could fold it around the back and train your fingers to find the keys without looking, but that's not my cup of tea.


So I needed a solution. For over a year, I tried to find a mini-keyboard. Something lightweight, compact and uncomplicated. Everything I found was either unintuitive, unwieldy or (ugh) for gamers. You know, lights up and says 'ninja' on it or something.


Ironic, then, that the solution came in the form of a video game controller. A Twitter pal recommended the 8BitDo Zero 2, which connected via Bluetooth (so no need to take up the Surface Pro's one (1) USB port), weighs less than a baby bird and also connects to the Nintendo Switch. Bonus, if it didn't solve my problem. For under £20, I was up for finding out either way.

Now, I won't claim that it's perfect, but there was a way to make it work for my purposes. When drawing a comic, I only need a certain amount of tools (other creators may need more, but hey) so I only needed a number of shortcuts. Unfortunately, the Zero 2 doesn't allow you to reprogram the buttons. Luckily, Clip Studio Paint does allow you to reassign shortcuts.


I'd created a custom pen tool and was only going to use that one pen, in 4 different line weights. So I assigned them all the key F. This allowed me to cycle through them using just one button.

I also prefer to erase artwork using the same pen or brush, set to transparency, as the eraser tool isn't great in CSP. So I reassigned the colour selector tool to the C key and applied it to allow me to cycle through main, secondary and transparency colours.

Then it was simply a matter of choosing the rest of the shortcuts and assigning them to the remaining buttons. This is the layout I opted for:

The only missing function I needed was text input, but at that stage a keyboard is unavoidable. I got around 10 hours of use out of this method before I had to swap to the iMac to finish the comic, a consequence of the Surface Pro overheating rather than the shortcomings of the controller.


So I'd recommend the 8BitDo Zero 2 for those in my position, which admittedly isn't that many - most artists use Procreate on the iPad but I had to be different, didn't I? It might even work on the iPad, who knows? Not me. Seriously, I don't know. Hopefully, this has been useful to somebody. It's not an advert, I'm not sponsored. If anything, I just wanted to show off that I managed to understand some tech after the age of forty.

I streamed for 24 hours and created a whole comic from scratch as part of Thought Bubble's Digital Con.

 
cartoon, livestream, streaming, comics, marathon, thought bubble 2020
Yup, I'm a moron

Like most real-life events in 2020, Thought Bubble, Yorkshire's own premier comics festival was cancelled and carried over to 2021. Shame, but also of course. I was due to exhibit my comics and prints for the third year running, including volume 3 of Flamefoxes which I was working on but not feeling great about. Anyway, the postponement meant I took my foot off the gas and thought a bit more about how I wanted the comic to go. Then they announced a digital comic con instead!


So there I was, caught with my trousers down - metaphorically speaking - and no new comic to sell. I got thinking, what could I make in a couple of months? Then I blinked and had mere weeks instead (2020 is a wild ride, time isn't so much a flat circle as a dog savagely chewing spaghetti). My solution? I'll do it on the night.


It was ridiculous as an idea, but I streamed myself brainstorming, writing, drawing and lettering a comic over 24 hours on YouTube. I'm 41 years old and tiredness is my default, and while is was actually quite terrifying and not a little masochistic, it was great to have company in the chat.


Maybe I'll do it again...


I didn't record the stream (22 hours total for 24 pages was pushing it, plus I was listening to music so no way YouTube would have allowed it), but click the link to my YouTube channel, where you can subscribe and get notified of future streams!


Finally, the comic! It's called Snake Prince and I'm very proud of the result. Read it here! I hope you enjoy it.



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