Now, when I was writing the dialogue for the strip, I called my mom in for her opinion, as I often do. To say she found it funny for the wrong reasons is too much of an understatement for me to even go into.
She laughed for half an hour about how ridiculous the little drawings were. And after that she opened the scanner and found the individual ripped-out doodles. This caused another half hour of laughter as she ripped up a piece a paper saying how hers were as good as mine. "Purple Crap" she called mine. My masterful doodles?! I think not.
She haphazardly threw her paper scraps onto the scanner, and I scanned them to show her how inferior hers were to mine. Here is the result- [link]
After this, she had to leave the room because it was all just "too funny". I worked on my strip's dialogue a little more, and called her back in. She returned with this- [link] Oh, the mockery.
She told me I shouldn't post my comic because no one would get it, and, sadly, she may have actually been right. My longest dA bud didn't get it. The horribleness! And worse, I posted her mockeries to deviantART as a joke, and [link] was faved within seconds after me posting it!
Now, just so Everyone knows. My mom wasn't being mean at all, and I was laughing just as hard as her. She really loves most of the stuff I post on dA, and is very supportive. Also, the strip is so much stronger due to her input. It was an amazing time. And when it was all over, we watched American Beauty. Good times.
The moral of the story, is that I'm kinda bitter about my mom's instant recognition on deviantART, and confounded that my strip isn't clear, proving my mom right. Bleh. The end.









Again, thanks for faving my first DD!
--
[link] Counting Clouds - an exciting book!
[link] My tutorials!
If you LOVE it then suggest it to a GM - now!
--
[link] Counting Clouds - an exciting book!
[link] My tutorials!
If you LOVE it then suggest it to a GM - now!
--
Lean your body forward slightly to support the guitar against your chest, for the poetry of the music should resound and come from your heart."
--
Lean your body forward slightly to support the guitar against your chest, for the poetry of the music should resound and come from your heart."
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