"All drawing is knowing where to put the lines," said Stan Lee. (I agree with, Stan!)
"The brain draws, not the hand. This is the mechanical part of it," said Kane. "I see the picture in my mind's eye as a cartoonist and the reason that I can draw and other people can't is that I can visualize it. My mind's eye is the projector, so before I do a head or a car or whatever, I see it on white paper. I really have that vision as all artists do."
I've heard this notion before and wonder if it's true. I've only had this happen THREE times in 30 years! You average it out to be once every 10 years where I'm so in the zone that I could see it on paper.
In reality, every drawing is a fight on paper. Not always. Sometimes it's easier but I always seem to only have a loose idea of it in my head. This is why I sometimes hate to get nailed down to being a slave to my thumbnails as things can change. Am I afraid to commit to the line as a better idea will come along? Possibly, as I've had many "happy accidents" as Bob Ross would say.
Case in point, here is a page of Phineas and Ferb I drew quite a while ago. I read the art direction and for some reason saw this complicated scene so clearly that I drew it on paper directly with a blue ink ballpoint pen. No erasing. I still use those pens for writing and they don't have erasers. I did draw a pencil line border that was the correct size spec for the page but that was it. When done I scribbled a blue line border over it to finalize it. When I was done, it was all there. I was kind of amazed by it. So much so that I still have it here. There's also an energy to the piece that gets lost as it goes through the process of refinement and then the cold, sterile look of the final inks.
I know Jack Kirby could start in the top left corner of a blank double-page spread and just work his way diagonally across the page and to the bottom right corner and it would all just be there. Some people have the vision better than others.
The journey continues...






