In the first class with Paul Karasik we where introduced to different elements in telling a story with pictures through an old newspaper strip called Nancy by Ernie Bushmiller.
What to think
of
when telling a story through pictures
shown through
a Nancy strip
Engage the reader
Nancy's back is towards to reader, which makes the reader put him/herself in Nancy's shoes.
The place is
established by slightly showing the start of a fence and a vanishing
line textured as grass, making the reader create his own picture of
a backyard.
The middle
panel lets the reader think by not showing Nancy, where is she etc..
and also gives a sense of time passing.
In the last
panel the picture stops before the action so the reader has to
picture the outcome. The tension is magnified by the four water drops
near the start of the hose. The four water drops shows that the
water isn't just turned on but there's a high pressure. The lines in
the fence gives a sense pressure/rhythm building up as well as
creating depth. The crosshatching above the fence, gives a feeling of
looming danger and depth. Nancy is also bigger in the last panel so
we know she's on top of the situation.
Options of
change from panel to panel:
Point of
view
Time
Space
Leading the eye:
Use negative spaces to lead the eye through the panels(in this case
the solid blacks)
In the first panel the chars form an arrow pointing right going
through the black in the second panel along the hose in panel 3
ending in Sluggo's shirt, eventually forming a traingle shape in the
end.
Baloons:
The repetition in text work like the porridge in Goldielock and the
three bears.