
I think you should take a better rest.
It’s probably taking about three hours for the hiatus illustration.
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By using just 3 hours, you can take a week’s break every 7 days and a 14-day break every 2 weeks.
>>1
Take a proper rest.
That’s usually a simpler drawing that requires less effort.
Aren’t you using the ones that you wrote in advance?
It’s still better that there are no illustrations to pause for due to sudden health issues, as it would be scary.
It’s not a cover illustration that was discarded or rejected.
This is also an opportunity to present topics that are difficult to depict in the main story, so there are quite a few writers who are quite enthusiastic about it.
If it’s a heartfelt work that makes you want to turn the unfinished illustration into a poster to hang in your room, that would be one thing.
If it’s just a doodle out of habit, I don’t need it.
I thought there would be an update, so I went with the mood to read it, but if it’s just a single doodle, it actually leaves a bad impression.
The thread illustration actually has three characters, so it’s not strange that it took about five hours.
There are also those who use manga as a way to take a break from manga…
I wonder if you don’t want to do other things more.
I like easy school parodies and contemporary parodies.
Some people may just give up if there are no updates, and they can be forgotten, so sometimes a hiatus is necessary.
There are also those who draw things like “x pages of a manga on hiatus.”
Tanaka-sensei is good at drawing nice breasts, but apparently not very skilled at drawing women.
Kazuhiko Shimamoto said he really wanted to draw an apology illustration, so he intentionally took a break from serialization, but then he thought it wasn’t very interesting, and he hasn’t done it since.
Isn’t it the case that many people will walk away if there’s nothing but a single doodle?
Just by posting a notice of suspension, you can earn advertising revenue from views.
Because the site’s handling of paused illustrations will also be treated as updates.
“I expected to be able to read a manga (expectation value 20), but the result was ‘one doodle (harvest 1)’.
It results in a structurally subpar experience, leaving a negative feeling towards the work and the author.
This is strange; it doesn’t really happen with magazines, perhaps because you’ve already paid for it in advance? Anyway.
On the web, update notifications really feel like borrowing joy in advance, so if it’s a hiatus illustration, it’s better to just not do anything at all and keep it clean and simple.
It will probably make things easier for my future self since it will become materials for things like books and merchandise.
Jump R has uses for T-shirts as well…
If there are no update notifications, I completely forget to live.
In Jump Plus, it says [Illustration] at the point where the work jumps to the thumbnail, right?
There is a strong theory that a new publication is coming out.
Even though I say I’m resting, I’m not really resting at all.
The manuscript work is often replaced by tasks like book publishing or supervising anime and other jobs…
If you’re going to do it, I’d feel reassured even if it’s a lie if you reported every day what you were doing to rest during the hiatus.
There are also places that say they’re on hiatus for the work on the paperback, even though it’s a different company.
If you don’t make sure you’re not forgotten, the view count will drop…
Aren’t you getting paid for the manuscript?
In other magazines, I used to get 10,000 yen for a 1-page bonus manga.
On amateur-oriented sites like Nico Nico, some people promote new works by including a single illustration as an update for older works.
I hope you won’t do it because it gives a bad impression.
I feel like I’m being passed around from one advertisement to another, and that’s actually true.
When the rough sketch-like deformed calculator illustration was released during the hiatus, I felt like saying, “If that’s your limit, please take a good break…”
In the world, there are surprisingly few people who remember to check the update day every two weeks.
Even for an anonymous user, there are probably quite a few people who notice the update date when they see a thread being created.
The disappointment when you think a new update has come but it turns out to be a rescue illustration can’t be saved by a 9-year-old illustration no matter what.
Every time, there are illustrations in 100 Kano that are on hiatus…
People like Chōka don’t need any graffiti, so just take a break! Sleep! That’s how it became.
Is the cancellation of publication after a long break like a sudden escape at night?
The thread image is usually developing something during the promised hiatus, so it doesn’t bother me, but I think they should wrap it up so that the chapters don’t get too disconnected.
Since the thread image is a girl from Young Jump, I can’t quite get into the conversation…
For these kinds of people, drawing is a form of relaxation.
It’s fine to have simple illustrations or just text when taking a break due to illness or other reasons.
Even though it’s not really an illness, I don’t understand the updates that are just illustrations done with a certain level of enthusiasm.
Why is it that you appreciate the illustration during the hiatus but can’t forgive the author who licked the bread?
The girls at the junket bank are cute, aren’t they?
If I don’t draw even a waiting illustration, I’ll forget I exist.
The series that announces breaks after each episode is now something I see as a joke.
The web is much more flexible than paper, so there are likely places that take a break and say they couldn’t meet the deadline.
Unlike comics, illustrations can be drawn casually.
There is an author who keeps repeating 3 pages → 1 illustration → hiatus (without illustration) → 3 pages… it’s unbearable to watch.
Moreover, it’s not the main story (currently on hold) that I’m writing, but rather something that feels like a suddenly started side story.
Since I’m doing Chainsaw as well, one of them should be included, so I’ll take a look on Tuesday.
Neither of them was included.
Devil Twin Minds has a lot of suspended chapters, making the story feel like it’s progressing slowly.
I understand that Mr. Tanaka seems busy, but…
The person in the thread posts interesting side-situation illustrations every time there’s a hiatus, but when they’re so busy they don’t have time to draw that, the drawings really reflect how overwhelmed they feel.
To be honest, I don’t need this kind of illustration at all.
It’s just cheating to say you’re taking a break but still post new content.
When it’s really bad, there won’t even be any illustrations for the hiatus…
I think it’s fine to just do it like a doodle without trying too hard.
It’s fine if you just make a collection of dialogue collages on the existing page.
Rest.
Today seems to be a day to draw and stockpile illustrations for a hiatus!
Sometimes there are people who draw a few pages of short stories that aren’t for promotion or anything.
It seems like they are drawing it properly even though it’s tough, thinking it’s better than taking a break…
Cheating…
If there were no manga or illustrations, it would still make sense to have something new, but since there are newly drawn illustrations, that’s unfair.
The main manga needs to connect with the subsequent developments, so the amount of work is completely different, and thinking it can be done in the time for one illustration is completely off the mark.
The hardest part of manga is coming up with the storyboards.
Sometimes when an extra chapter presents important settings like the main story, it creates a strange feeling of “What is this…?!”
I think it’s a much better measure than being forgotten without any notice after a delay in updates.
I like illustrations that feel like intermission supplements.
In the end, don’t let outsiders fight and make a fuss.
Indeed, if you really take a solid break and there’s no news for over six months, you forget how much you were into it, and the excitement cools down, leading to fewer readers…
There are mangas that come out with 3 to 4 color illustrations for rescue.
A single illustration that can be discarded on the internet.
The effort required to create a manga that is properly established as a manga is significantly different.
I thought it was on hiatus because of health issues for a while, but then they ended up drawing something else as a tie-up.
I can tell that they are imposing too many images on the manga artist and not understanding anything at all.