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October 7th, 2006
Events were held at 89 locations in 17 countries,
including
23 US states and 4 Canadian provinces
All
contents copyright 2004, 2005, 2006 About Comics
Interested in supplying food, drink,
or art supplies for 24 Hour Comics Day? Click
here
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Sending
in your comic
One of the rules of the 24 Hour Comics Challenge is that you have to
send a copy of your completed work to Scott McCloud. This is true whenever
and wherever you do your 24 hour comic.
We here at 24 Hour Comics Central will be collecting the copies on his
behalf. Some things to consider when sending your work in:
- Include a filled-out copy of the cover sheet, which you can download
here as a PDF file.
- Send in a photocopy. Never send originals, we
ain't gonna return 'em! In the past, we said you could send in a CD-ROM
instead of a photocopy, but that ended up being too cumbersome on this
end (the effort in going through hundreds of CD-ROMs, figuring out
each person's file naming convention, and printing them out was huge.)
You can send in a CD-ROM along with the photocopy or printout, if you
wish.
- The address to send it to is on the form: 24 Hour Comics Day, c/o
About Comics, 217 Red Oak Lane, Thousand Oaks, CA 91320, USA.
- If you're doing the online variation at home and you don't want to
submit for the book, you can simply send an email to online@24hourcomics.com
with a link to your story, the information from the cover sheet, and
let us know whether you're willing to have a link to your story on
the blog. (We don't know how much traffic this will add to your site.)
Submitting for the book
Please don't focus on the book
I'm very proud of the Highlights books.
However, if I have one regret, it's that the existence of these
books causes some people
to view 24 Hour Comics Day as a big contest to get in the book.
If you go into 24 Hour Comics Day with the goal
of creating a really good comic, then you've got a reasonable chance
of success. If you have the goal of completing a comic, good or
not,
then your
odds of success are quite good.And if your goal is to have an interesting
experience and learn something about what you're capable of, then success
is practically assured.
But if you're aiming at getting into the book, you've
got a tough goal to start with. 2005's book had 24 stories and about
20 single panels from other work, and we only managed to squeeze that
much in because the odd nature of a few stories made it possible to
fit them in a few pages. This year if we publish a book at
all, we
may well have fewer stories, and it looks like we'll have far more
cartoonists
celebrating
the day.
Secondly, the goal is very fuzzy. While the quality
of the work matters, part of the goal of the book is to create a sense
of what the day was like. As such, stories are picked for their variety
and the way they reflected different aspects of the day. If you take
a look at 24 Hour Comics Day Highlights
2004 (and you should, it's
good!), you'll see that it includes work by very young folks and
fairly old ones,
by amateur
cartoonists
and pros, by folks working in varying countries, styles, formats, and
genres. It's not "the 24 best stories from the day", and you might
create a wonderful comic and still not get in the book.
And thirdly, the prize is not that great.Last year's
book, while nominated for an Eisner award, was a weak seller. The
pay one gets is very
poor
for
24 hours
of effort. And even if you don't make the book, you are free to
publish your work yourself.
I understand that for some of you, it would be quite
cool to be in the book, but believe me, the experience of taking the
challenge is far more worthwhile.
Nat Gertler
founder, 24 Hour Comics Day
editor, 24 Hour Comics Day Highlights
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On the cover sheet, you'll see a section to fill out if you want your
comic considered for a possible upcoming anthology of 24 hour comics.
You do not have to fill this out to participate in a 24 hour comics day
event;
only fill this out if you're willing to have your work included in a
book. Some things to consider:
- You should send in your work, even if you did not successfully
complete the 24 hour comics challenge. Past books included
not only "Gaiman variations" (stories of less than 24
pages complete in 24 hours), but also work that was not technically
a 24 hour
comic (it was a collaborative work rather than a solo work), and
shots of individual panels and pages from works that were simply
not completed. For 24 Hour Comics Day Highlights books, we're
interested in showing interesting things that were done on the day,
whether they were legitimate 24 hour comics or not. (If it is some
variation from a normal 24 hour comic, please note that on the form.)
- You can be considered for the Highlights book even if you did
not participate at an "official event site". So long
as you did the work on 24 Hour Comics Day, it counts.
- If you did a 24 hour comic on some other day besides 24 Hour Comics
Day, submit it anyway but note it on the form. Your work won't qualify
for the Highlights book, but it may qualify for one of our other books.
Just be sure to note on the form that it was done on some other day.
- Please get your work in quickly. If your work is not in our hands
within three weeks after 24 Hour Comics Day, we may not be able to
consider it for inclusion in the Highlights book.
- If you're submitting a photocopy, please make sure it's a clean copy,
and that you don't cut off the edges of your work.
- Do not submit files via email. We can't have our email
flooded that way.
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