Author
Sanchez Abuli
Tom Alvarez
Max Andersson
Darren Aronofsky
Enki Bilal
Irena Čerčnik, Max Modic, Jaka Klemenčič
Cristina Cuadra
Jean Defaux
Franquin, Greg
Neil Gaiman
Kostja Gatnik
Alan Grant, Tim Sale
Frank Hampson
Georges Remi - Hergé
Ciril Horjak
Hermann Huppen
Francisco Ibáñez
Ryan Inzana
Jack Jackson
Alexandro Jodorowsky
Dušan Kastelic
Saša Kerkoš
Marko Kociper
Igor Kordej
Primož Krašna
Tomaž Lavrič
Izar Lunaček
Milo Manara, Hugo Pratt
Milo Manara
Scott McCloud
Dave McKean
Mike Mignola
Frank Miller
Moebius (Jean Giraud), Marc Bati
Moebius
Alan Moore
Miki Muster
Ano & Nep
Darko Perović
Christian Perrissin
Miguelanxo Prado
Hugo Pratt
Marijan Pušavec, Zoran Smiljanić
Alex Raymond
Joe Sacco
Francesco Satta
J. Marc Schmidt
Vicente Segrelles
Iztok Sitar
Zoran Smiljanić
Damijan Sovec
Art Spiegelman
Lazar Stanojević
Romeo Štrakl
Andrej Štular
Stefano Tamburini, Tanino Liberatore
Jacques Tardi
Osamu Tezuka
Craig Thompson
J.R.R. Tolkien
Various
Bill Watterson
Yslaire
Zalozabal
Krešimir Zimonić
Author: Tom Alvarez
Publisher: North Light Books
Genre: Comics & Graphic Novels
Release: jan 1996   My Rating: 0
Summary: I didn't buy this book here because I was lucky to find it here in the Philippines. I found this book almost complete in its goal to teach its readers to become comic book artists. The book could have been 100% complete if it had a few pages on muscle structure (male and female), more pointers on drawing hands, foreshortening the human body and coloring. Despite these, I still rate it 5 stars.
One particular chapter that I believe stood out was the chapter on Clothing and Drapery. Learn the principles Tom outlined here and you will be able to draw clothing and drapery from memory.
It's not the only book you should buy if you want to draw comics but it definitely is a must-own book. I also bought Stan Lee and John Buscema's "How to Draw Comics - The Marvel Way" from the same bookstore. I haven't finished reading it yet because I'm already practicing breakdowns (posing your character using basic shapes prior to filling them in with muscles and covering them with clothes or costumes) as Tom suggested we do for at least a week or better months or a year (what a perfectionist, ey?).