Nick Bryan's Blog
August 24, 2020
And It Snowed + Monochrome Trilogy Kickstarter falling soon from the sky
So, crawling back to the blog from the pandemic wreckage to announce that I’m doing a Kickstarter for my new comic! Starting on September 1st!
Excited? Yes. Scared? Yes.
The new one is called And It Snowed, it’s a crime/magic fable with my good collaboratory buddies Robert Ahmad (of The Catalyst) and DC Hopkins (of Moonframe).
What’s it actually about? Well, picture the scene…
Ever walked home at night in the snow, long past the last bus, wrapped up in cold and loneliness? Staring up at the sky, wishing you’d gone home earlier as you trudge your way through slush?
Sam and her brother Luke are out too late in London, caught between a rock and a cold place. On one side, a loan shark demanding they repay their debt by stealing a magical artefact. On the other, the icy fury of its original owner – Jack Frost himself.
Scrambling away into the night, they find themselves prey in a desperate chase, caught in a hellish supernatural snowstorm.
A chill hit the air, a hulking figure emerged —
AND IT SNOWED.
I had two main goals with And It Snowed – first, to capture my own experiences trudging across London on a snowy night – the endless, sometimes unsettling loneliness of it. Secondly, to play to Robert’s amazing ability to draw haunting noir-ish storybook cityscapes. I’m thrilled with the outcome on both counts.
I’m also marking this as the end of my trilogy of black and white one-shots, along with Little Deaths of Watson Tower and Moonframe, and I think it’s a fitting, fast-paced, emotional end to this phase of my comics self-publishing. So, yeah, I’m throwing this as a small celebration.
In short – next week, we kickstart, at this web address: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/nickbryan/and-it-snowed
You can go there now and register for notifications, and some of the rewards are limited – we’ve got original pages from the new comic, and commissions from not just one but all three trilogy artists – Rosie Alexander, Lucas Peverill and, of course, Robert.
It’s gonna be fun, I hope. If you go right there on the launch date and help us roll through the funding goal quickly, you can get me to the fun stage a lot quicker. Hope you’ll join us, I’m terrified, but also keen to get going.
Here’s another link to the Kickstarter. Get involved.
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March 10, 2020
Rock Bottom flies at last!
This week on the blog, the big story is the big picture above.
As well as the already-blogged Worrywart, my upcoming one-shot comic Rock Bottom has just been announced by the publisher Fair Spark Books. Don’t worry, it’s not as depressing as the title suggests.
This is a new project by me and Wendy Muldon, another fantastic artist I linked up with via The Comic Jam. You can see more of her work on the webcomic Briarworld, or long-standing followers of my postings may remember her from our Jam one-pager Other Dimensions.
And… that’s the origin story of our working together, really. After being wowed by her work on Other Dimensions, I really wanted to work on something else with her, and tailor it aggressively towards what worked about that comic.
And so we have Rock Bottom, the story of the titular spaceship (also a rock) piloted by two aliens, trying to save planets both from being devoured by a gigantic ghostly being and extorted by the establishment for overpriced ghost repellent strategies. It’s a little bit Robin Hood, with an added edge of quick, zippy adventure and, well, flat-out surrealism.
And it’s landed with Fair Spark, a UK-based publisher who produce lots of cool all-ages comics and (with their partner charity Little Heroes) do great stuff to get comics into the hands of kids. They’ve always been very supportive of my stuff and it’s great to finally get to work with them.
As you can tell from the extract above, Wendy’s gone to another level with the art on Rock Bottom, especially the colours. It’s been a long time coming, but worth every minute.
And now, as a small bonus treat, here’s some inks from a future page which appeared in my monthly newsletter recently. (Subscribe now to see more early previews etc.) Yes, there’s space adventure and corridor battles against mysterious creatures, but what else is important in Rock Bottom?
Yes, you guessed it, weighing rocks.
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March 3, 2020
Worrywart logo – Worrywork continues
Coming deceptively soon to Kickstarter – new me-written comics one-shot Worrywart, a fantasy-goblin-orc action story about the struggles of living up to your supervillain mother’s expectations and getting by in a hellish dystopia.
I first dropped news of this comic’s existence a couple of weeks back, along with some spiky demon designs by artist Ryan Foust.
Ryan’s pressing on with the drawing, so seemed a good time to introduce our next member of the team – Lettersquids on, well, letters.
Very excited by this – he’s worked on a lot of the one-pagers I wrote for The Comic Jam, including this early team-up with Ryan, along with classics such as the weird horse-cowboy one, the elderly Batman one, the cute-yet-disgusting Halloween special and this dead-serious Roman conspiracy theory.
As you can see just from those, Lettersquids always brings a lot to the words and I’m looking forward to seeing what he does for the demons of Worrywart.
For a small preview, here’s the excellent logo he’s designed for the project, with all the orc-tastic flourishes you’d want – plus a few panels of Ryan Foust’s uncoloured art from the first page.
So far, we’re at the cute early stages of demonic development. Adulthood will come all too quickly.
But for now, since Ryan posted it on Twitter, here’s another art preview, just as adorable as the last.
I mean how cute is this little guy??? #Worrywart coming soon(ish) from me and @NickMB pic.twitter.com/WhMViEtGvV
— Foust (@RyanFoustART) February 20, 2020
A version of this article first appeared in my monthly newsletter – subscribe now to see new stuff first, and get a PDF copy of my Comedy & Errors comic anthology as a bonus.
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February 26, 2020
The Reality Snap – Comic Script Vs Comic Reality
No, this isn’t about Thanos. That’d make better clickbait.
But for that purpose, here’s a picture of him before I talk about my writing process.
Over the last week or two, I’ve been moving a couple of comic scripts into the final stages. There’s still time to see some fundamental flaw, but they’re within a couple of dialogue polishes of being done.
And it’s around now, when the prospect of contacting an artist moves from a vague overhead helicopter to a roaring oncoming train, that I always get a sudden thudding realisation of how it’ll look to an external observer. Like I leave my body and start hovering over the script.
Exactly like before, but somehow different, as I am a disembodied pseudo-reader-mind.
And suddenly, oh my god, that bit doesn’t work. Or, more often, wow, too much dialogue. And then, consumed with this knowledge, I begin whittling it down into what becomes the final form.
It’s sometimes frustrating, as I normally get quite pumped up about the oncoming end, until this inevitably happens and I need to do another pass.
The process is more or less…
Start to think “Wow, this is almost done! How great! So near!”
Look at some artist portfolios, begin imagining how it’ll look.
Revisit script.
Realise “Okay, read as a ‘finished’ piece, this isn’t quite ready!”
And it’s a comedown, but this final polish is normally when the real, genuinely good version of the story makes itself known.
It’s the final stage of the birthing process and it’s good to be there again in a way, as seeing the final comic in my mind is probably a sign it’s almost ready to exist.
Although, not going to lie, I do wish I could force myself to go through all this a few weeks earlier, as although I’m happy with the end result, a chunk of rewriting ends up pointless in the face of this final revelation. A bunch of material I previously “finely honed” gets purged.
Maybe it’s a minor symptom of impostor syndrome – refusing to see my work as a real thing, until it becomes impossible to do otherwise.
But I guess everyone wants that – skipping to the beautiful final version without all the drafting and editing. Maybe I need a way to float out of my mind on command.
Wait, is this how so many creative people get into drugs?
A version of this article first appeared in my monthly newsletter – subscribe now to see new stuff first, and get a PDF copy of my Comedy & Errors comic anthology as a bonus.
Yes, I could’ve found a way to end this calling back to Thanos, but I failed.
Wait, or did I?
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February 17, 2020
The Catalyst – Page 1 – Beginning To End
As 2020 rolls on and I start to spin up production on a few new comics, be a shame to forget the old ones. In particular, I wanted to give a bit more love to The Catalyst, my first full-length full-creative-team comic from last year, published by the good people of Comichaus.
In case you’d somehow forgotten, this was a comic about an android called Guy who works as an instigator (or, yes, a ‘catalyst’) for other people’s stories across a range of fictional genres, a gig that often gets him beaten up, because that’s life in a lot of tales. Eventually he starts to just want more, y’know?
The Catalyst was written by me, drawn by the fabulous Robert Ahmad, coloured by David Cooper and lettered by Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou, with an additional short bonus story on the end filling out one of the fantasy worlds Guy passes through (colours/letters there by Emily Brady and DC Hopkins).
I’m hugely fond of this comic. Loads of fun to work on, plus it got lovely reviews – some of which you can see on the book page – and tied off 2019 beautifully with an appearance at #36 in the Pipedream Comics top 50 of the year. The comic started life with me noticing how versatile Rob Ahmad was at changing his style across genres and trying to write a script which fully exploited that. Happily the rest of the team joined in, with David and Hassan both tailoring their work to the hops and leaps I took.
As a little peek behind the curtain, I thought I’d run through the opening page process, show off the development of the art and get a little into the weeds of how multiple creators build a story between them. I did something similar for one of my Comic Jam one-pagers a while back and that was fun, so let’s go again!
PHASE ONE – Script
The opening scene of the story takes place against a noir crime backdrop – a nice clear aesthetic which I allocated a few more pages to than others. The genre’s all about atmosphere so plays out well with the extra space, plus Rob is really good at it.
Full disclosure – this is the part of the post where I’m gonna spare my blushes a little. As well as the creators listed above, I also sorted out an editing pass over this script by the fantastic writer John Lees, and he pushed me particularly on the opening pages to make it distinct, show more of my hand to hook the reader in, whereas the first draft skewed towards Generic Noir Scene.
All of which is to say – I’m not gonna show you that original draft. Sorry. But this is why editors are good.
We’ll start instead with the version I sent to Robert:
Hopefully that’s legible.
As you can see, I’ve stuck to a four panel layout, to give Robert space for any big towering skyscraper in the rain backdrops he fancies to establish the scene/genre/mood.
Cut forward a few days of nervous excitement to…
PHASE TWO – Pencils
I check my email, sooner than expected because as well as being good, Robert is also scarily fast, and we see:
As you can probably work out, that’s a seven panel page rather than the scripted four, which is a decent-size expansion.
Rob here opted to set the scene by flashing through different aspects rather than filling the page with a single big shot and I think we’re all the better for it. I’m certainly not gonna stop him.
Also note how Rob places the dialogue on the page at the early pencil stage, which I think is a useful step because:
ensures there’s space
helps avoid tricky situations where the balloon tail can’t reach the character
Obviously, in this case the panel count has changed so I’m gonna re-write the lettering a little anyway, but still, I like this step.
So anyway, there were other pages where we had a little back and forth and made changes at this stage, but I’m pretty sure this one went straight through to…
PHASE THREE – Inks
A moment’s respect for Rob’s beautifully rendered clean lines.
He works traditionally, so I have two original pages from The Catalyst ready to go up on my wall as soon as my long-running house redecoration finally ends.
For now, they look like this. Mild spoilers – at some point, Guy travels into fantasy, western and vampire genres.
PHASE FOUR – COLOURS
At which point, excellent colourist David Cooper gets involved and does this:
As you can see, he’s nailed that noir mood with the blacks and purples, whilst setting up a greyish undertone that runs through the whole story. And he also crushed it on all the other genre sections, though you’ll need to buy the comic to see that.
Met David at Thought Bubble 2019, where he described The Catalyst as like a “one-comic portfolio”. Happy to provide that service.
PHASE FIVE – Lettering
Finally, it goes to Hassan Otsmane-Elhaou to add the words – of course, I went back and rewrote the exact lettering once I’d agreed the new seven panel layout with Robert.
Although really the changes were pretty straightfoward. Hass laid the dialogue out without seeing my new script, just to show us an example of style, and independently made the exact same choices as me.
Which brings us to the final page…
As you can see, we’ve got grey boxes to go with that general throughline I mentioned, as well as a clear evoking of that all-important noir theme.
Not that this first page contains the best chances for Hass to show off – there’s a panel later on involving smashing a glass tube where he pulled off an absolutely beautiful effect.
But I’m getting ahead of myself. That was how five separate people created page 1 of The Catalyst. Imagine nineteen more rounds, and you’ve basically got the comic, and I’ve not even mentioned the logo design by Joe Stone. (It’s good.)
It takes a village, in short. And I’d like to thank everyone mentioned above, even though I’ve already done it. I hope you enjoyed a break from me emailing you.
The Catalyst remains a comic I’m super-proud of, I think Guy’s emotional journey is a fun yet strangely affecting one, and if you haven’t read it, I’ll throw in one last imploration to consider buying a copy from Comichaus or reading it on their very good Netflix-style all you can eat app. There’s a free trial and everything.
Or, of course, I’ll have it at conventions if you’re coming to see me.
Thanks very much. I hope this inspired you to go and make comics as much as it has me. (Seriously, I’m getting down to work over here.)
If you want to receive similar articles by email, along with news of my comics and sometimes TV/film/comic reviews, you can subscribe to my monthly newsletter and get a free PDF comic anthology download as a bonus.
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February 11, 2020
Worrywart – Dark Designs
For the first time in what I admit is a while, art for a new comics project! Me and Ryan Foust, an excellent artist who I worked with on a couple of Comic Jam one-pagers, are reuniting for a whole one-shot!
(Which one-pagers? Specifically, this one about Mysterio and this one about a tragic superhero.)
I enjoy Ryan’s style a lot, he’s got a nice sense of messy fun to his work while always keeping the storytelling clean and clear, so I’m hoping to play to his strengths with this.
We’re headed into a chaotic world of warring demons and internal politics, with a comic called Worrywart. Ever wanted to know what makes a demon tick? How they cope with the constant stress of demoning i? And what awful things they’ll do when the prospect of happiness is dangled in front of them?
This may be the comic for you. I’ve seen Ryan’s layouts for the first few pages and they’re looking lovely. But for now, let’s start with a glance at his designs for one of the main character outfits, as debuted on his Twitter the other week…
And who lives in a house like this? How many spikes do they each have on their body? Well…
Several spikes, is the answer.
More specific details coming soon, and maybe even some plot. What exactly… is a “Worrywart”?
A version of this article first appeared in my monthly newsletter – subscribe now to see new stuff first, and get a PDF copy of my Comedy & Errors comic anthology as a bonus.
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January 8, 2019
MOONFRAME – New comic entering orbit!
In the course of 2018, I wrote (and endlessly re-drafted) the scripts for three standalone one-shot comics. The first of these was The Little Deaths of Watson Tower, which came out in October and seemed to go over well. I won't list every reaction, as that's what my Twitter is for, but ending the year by placing #48 on Pipedream's indie comics top 100 list was a lovely capstone.
Anyway, that comic is still available, but I've now got the second one ready to go and it is called...

In the near future, the moon has been pressed into service as a warehouse for the vast data archive created by our constant internet use.
But now those billions of cat memes come under threat from a computer virus. Two astronauts must travel through this strange landscape to save them, completely alone apart from the passing thoughts of everyone.
This is a new twenty-page sci-fi/horror one-shot, atmospherically illustrated by Lucas Peverill (Futurequake, Sliced Quarterly) and lettered by DC Hopkins (Star Trek, Accel, Trespasser).
It's a spooky, darkly funny and ultimately emotional story combining Black Mirror's dark tech satire and The Martian's sincere battle for survival in space.
For anyone interested in reviewing the book, you can email me at nick@nickbryan.com.
The comic debuts at the True Believers convention on February 2nd 2019, marking my first ever table selling at a comic convention. So if you're around Cheltenham that weekend and fancy buying some stuff, come on along.
And for anyone not in Cheltenham, it'll be on sale on my Gumroad shop in print and digital forms as soon as I get back from True Believers and press the go button.
If you want to see how convention prep is going, here is a sweet picture of me preparing my sales pitch. (And for anyone curious about the third of those one-shot scripts, you can see an art snippet by Robert Ahmad on the left of that banner.)
October 18, 2018
The Little Deaths of Watson Tower – OUT NOW!
Exciting news, universe! Mere days after my announcement post (as the printers were very quick), you can now buy The Little Deaths of Watson Tower, a new standalone comic written by me and drawn by the sensational Rosie Alexander!
If you want to see more info about the comic, there’s a dedicated page on the site with some talk, a bigger cover image and a three-page preview of the excellent interior art.
Or, if you’re the sort of good, nay, great person who buys all my stuff cos you know you’ll like it, you can go straight to Gumroad to buy the PDF, or also the print edition pictured to the right!
As I said in the other post, we’d love you to get this spooky bit of skeletal comics in time for Halloween, but if you want the print edition by then, we’d recommend ordering pretty soon.
If you’ve any interest in reviewing/covering the book somewhere, or stocking it in your shop, do get in touch! Either via one of my many social medias if you have them, or email nick@nickbryan.com!
October 14, 2018
The Little Deaths Of Watson Tower – COVER REVEAL! COMING SOON!
So, to my lasting excitement and terror, my first full-length comic as writer is on the verge of happening.
This is The Little Deaths of Watson Tower, illustrated by Rosie Alexander, and you probably know that already, because your eyes went straight to Rosie’s gorgeous cover below rather than reading this blurb first.
This is a fun, slightly strange comic about a bunch of kids dealing with death, skeletons, and the great unknown. It’s funny, sad and curiously uplifting.
All of which is enabled by Rosie’s art, which is luscious, evocative work and sells the comedy and emotion every bit as well as it does the ghoulish antics. She’s definitely going places, and I’m thrilled to have joined in at this early stage.
Here’s the first couple of panels…
It’s twenty pages, black and white interiors as above, with a colour front and back cover, and since it’s got skeletons in it, we’re hoping to get it to you by Halloween.
At the very least, the PDF should be on sale by then. If everything goes flawlessly wonderfully (i.e. if I haven’t made any mistakes in my print set-up), we may even manage to post out print copies to reach you for the big day.
So if you want to keep on top of ordering it when it comes out, you can follow me on Twitter, Instagram, sign up to my mailing list or I suppose I also have a Facebook page.
Oh, and you can also follow Rosie and her work on Instagram and also Twitter, and you should as it’s good. Thank you. More soon.
September 12, 2018
Late-2018 Anthology Comics Extravaganza!
In one of those weird coincidences that might later turn out to be a conspiracy, it appears every short anthology story I’ve written in the last year or so is coming out within the same few months. I’ll add all these to the ‘Other Work’ page as well, but if you’re here looking for the latest hot updates, her’s a tasty wedge (with a bit more ramble about each one).
Something Wicked 2018
I’m a big fan of the team at Futurequake Press, as they made one of my first published comic stories happen in the form of The Half-Baked Sacrifice, now available both in the relevant issue of Something Wicked and in my quickly homemade anthology Comedy & Errors.
So it’s good to be back there this year with a new story called ChitChatChum, which I wrote last year, and if you head on over to FQP’s blog, you can see a snippet of the lovely art by Mike Walters.
I wrote this quite a while ago, so I was pleased to revisit the finished version and discover that, yes, I still find it enjoyably grim. Particularly if you enjoy some Black Mirror-esque tech/body horror, this might be right up your alley.
You can buy the anthology from FQP’s website here, or their table at Thought Bubble if you’re going that way.
‘Work’ Anthology from Work In Progress comics
Beginning around the start of this year, I’ve been going to the Meetup group Work In Progress comics, where a bunch of London comic creators meet up to chat about comics, creation and their feelings about both.
It’s been a great group to get to know, thanks especially to the excellent Joe Stone for his work running it, and as luck would have it, this year they put together a group anthology which I was able to get into.
This is a collection of stories on the theme of ‘Work’, and I contributed a two-pager called Retirement Plan with art by A.I. Miller, who I met through my work with The Comic Jam. I like our story a lot, it’s got some strong robot melancholy, and I also think it’s a really strong anthology as a whole which is definitely worth your time.
I’ll add the buy-online link when I have it, or, again, if you’re at Thought Bubble, Joe should be selling it form his table.
If Anthology – ‘Horror’
Lastly, I’m also in the 2018 If Anthology, collecting a group of stories on the theme of ‘Horror’.
For this story, I decided to reunite the 2017 Christmas story team of myself, artist Robert Ahmad and letterer DC Hopkins for a five-pager about the dark underside of cute-seeming internet cats called Jenny & Max.
It’s a story which threads the needle between adorable and scary in a way I’m quite pleased with, helped by the art really selling the cute kitty and DC Hopkins going above and beyond to make the fiddly mock-Instagram layouts work.
I’m aware it’s part of a much larger anthology, but if you want to grab the book to read my story, it’s up on Amazon, or you can order it from your local comic shop using the info here.