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Wasn't sure where to ask so I thought this sub-forum would be the best.
Is there any story writers here willing to do a small piece for me as long as the rates are sensible? how do you usually find someone for this.
They absolutely will.
People'll pay for everything. A drawing, if you can draw, a story, if you can write. Think of it the same way that you may think about on-demand videos that cam girls make. Sometimes, you just want to see/hear/read something particular, a fantasy that you have. And you can pay to make it true.
For example, I can't draw, and there're some fetishes that no porn can be made of. But I can pay an artist to draw a smutty image for me if I need to. Right now I'm looking for an artist to do just that for me.
But for them to want to pay you for writing - you should promote your writing somehow. Just saying you can write is probably not enough.
Why do you think stories are any different? Just look at the "Story Ideas" section and see how many people have hot ideas that they want others to put into a story.People will pay other people to draw because they don't have the skills to put what is on their head on paper
Don't have time right now to read/reply to the entire post - must run.
But...
Why do you think stories are any different? Just look at the "Story Ideas" section and see how many people have hot ideas that they want others to put into a story.
It's the same thing. In a way, the story may be even more engaging than a drawing. And in a way, it's much harder to pull off, because you can learn to draw well, but it's much harder to write in an engaging manner that will captivate your readers and fully immerse them for hours.
I can't draw, but at least I have a clear understanding how would I go about it if I wanted to learn. There are lots of tutorials and styles like manga make it more simple to draw good images.
But if I had no clue how to write a novel? Man, I wouldn't know how to start practicing, really.
I singled out manga because it has a number of expressive techniques that are rather simple to reproduce, yet yield strong emotional result.
Manga characters are often quite a bit more basic when it comes to drawings - they don't have to have complicated shades and a lot of detail on their faces to look like emotional human that an observer can empathize with.
When you are reading manga or watching a well-drawn anime, those characters feel REAL, even though they are very far from being photorealistic. In compariosn, western Marvel and DC comics often feel less real even though the drawings are much closer to having the right human proportions.
Why's that?
There's a concept that you may be familiar with, called "Uncanny Valley". This concept basically says, that when you add human characteristics to an abstract object, it becomes much more relatable and well-received by an observer. Add two funky eyes and a smiley face to a robot, and it becomes much prettier to look at.
But if you keep improving the realism and bringing your robot closer and closer to human, there comes a moment when the positivity of reaction DROPS almost to the rock bottom. Think of japanese human-like robots and how they feel creepy rather than nice. Wall-e looks much more relatable than them! Or think about Pixar characters - they are all stylized, and feel relatable because of it.
This effect happens because at some point we stop seeing a robot with human features, but start seeing a human who has something very wrong about him. That's how our mind processes images. It's wired to recognize humans.
Then, if you STILL keep improving the realism, you step over that uncanny valley, and the user reception soars again. That happens when your robot (or drawing) becomes so realistic that we see a relatable human behind it - perhaps even a glorified flawless version of human.
Back to manga - it doesn't strive to realism. Instead, it finds a spot just on the edge of uncanny valley - human enough to look good, but stylized enough to not drop into the valley.
You can write some smut on google docs for free using the basic skills you got in your federally mandated English class. That's why it shocked me that people would pay for it. I've done all three of these things and all writing costs you is time, and like... it's literally a skill you can learn for free. I mean you can take advanced writing classes and shit, but OP isn't talking about hiring a published author who has credentials, they're talking about hiring an amateur. Even amateur artists and camgirls/boys have to buy their tools. You charge a fee even as a beginner or amateur because you're trying to make back the money you spent- you can justify it.
But for someone like me to charge to write some shit down and make it read all pretty like is fucking bizarre to me. What right could I possibly have to ask for payment for that? I write on some sites that have a donation button because yeah, if you feel like it's worth anything throw me a coffee, but to actually have the arrogance to say, "This is worth money" is insane. It costs nothing to start and I can't guarantee they'll get a product they want, so that's gonna be all paypal disputes and bullshit and revision after revision and me with absolutely no ability to say they can't because I don't have a leg to stand on.
I have literally been begged to write more smut, offered money, once even ordered by a Mistress.
I just can't. Can't produce anything under pressure. I don't have a logical explanation. The well is shallow for me to begin with. Supposedly my writing is quite good, which would be shameless bragging except that I'm using it to highlight the tragedy of the fact that I'm an artist who doesn't art.
I very much appreciate those who can.
I personally don't view it as pressure but as a fun challenge. People ask me to write a certain scene and my imagination starts going around their request, thinking of how to dress it up the way I like it.I have literally been begged to write more smut, offered money, once even ordered by a Mistress.
I just can't. Can't produce anything under pressure.
IMHO, "I need to eat and somebody values this thing I can make" is all the justification needed to charge a fee. "It only costs time" is an argument used by people who want somebody else to work for free - time is a limited resource! Artists of all stripes ought to avoid internalising that attitude.
Right now, I have two different contacts who both want me to work for them ASAP. Both of them are offering decent money, but there's only one of me; I can't take both jobs unless they can shuffle their schedules around, and whichever job I take, it's going to cut into the time I have for hanging out with friends and other fun stuff. So I absolutely do need to treat my time as something valuable and limited, and writers should do the same.
That still happens to professionally trained artists, though. I know a few people who went to art school and did commission work, and they still have to go to trouble to avoid that sort of thing - payment up front, portfolios online so the customer knows the kind of thing they're paying for, written agreements about revisions.
No matter how much or how little you spent on learning your craft and on the supplies you need for it, there will never be a shortage of people ready to trash your work and tell you it's not worth a cent. You can go to school for decades and be a fuckin' climate scientist or a doctor who vaccinates kids against polio and there will STILL be people who think you're a fraud who shouldn't be paid for what you do. As an artist of any flavour, it's not your responsibility to make the case that those people are already making; you have the right to offer your work for money, and if somebody likes it enough to pay for it, never feel guilty about that.
Yeah, you're right. I think, in retrospect, the reason it shocked me so badly was because they came to Lit and cast that wide of a net. Lit is a place where anyone can post, even someone like me who has never had any real training, never had anything published, has only the basic grasp of writing as a craft, etc. That's what threw me off so bad. To me, a place like that is somewhere one would be like, "Here's a story prompt if anyone wants to write it for free".
I think you actually have books published and stuff, so it makes perfect sense that you would charge for your work.
There are real authors on here. But there are also amateurs who have no business charging- if you want to be an ethical person it really isn't as simple as, "someone is willing to pay for it so I charged them money" because that's what scammers do. You have to set a quality standard for yourself, because no one else is going to do that for you. Just because other people are willing to buy shit doesn't mean you should sell it to them.
I mean, I do art commissions and I still put up free shit- because I'm not going to charge someone for shit, and sometimes a piece just doesn't turn out the way you wanted regardless of how much time you put into it. Because that's the ethical thing to do. And I've been to art school and whatnot. They're absolutely not paying for your time, they're paying for a product. People who think people are paying for their time are the kinds of people who lose clients real fast and watch that patreon dwindle to nothing. You sell your piece for what it's worth and make up the extra doing the lifestream of you making it, the speedpaint that you made from that livestream, and prints/designs from somewhere like redbubble or etsy.
Because if you're really charging for your time, you're talking like... hundreds or even thousands of dollars. Especially if they want a lot of revisions. I've spent five days just sending sketches back and forth before, on a project that honestly wasn't worth more than like $20 bucks because it was a fanart wedding sampler- Kirby fanart. I'm not charging somebody $300 for a pink circle in a top hat. Because I'm not a monster and also because that's insane- even though altogether it took me about a week because this dude did not know how feedback worked. Literally just kept saying, "MAKE IT PINKER".
And I'm sorry I derailed the thread to go on an art rant.
In my defense, the two things are tangentially related and I know more about how art commissions work, but it was still off-topic at the end of the day.
If that customer contacted you again, asking you to do the same kind of project again for the same money, would you take the deal? Twenty dollars, knowing that it was going to chew up five days of your time?
I didn't quote the whole thing because you're absolutely right about pretty much all of it, and it would just be me going, "True dat" a bunch of times. So I'll cover it all in one collective "true dat" but I wanted to address this because I feel like it gets to the core of what I was talking about.
Yes, I absolutely would work with him again.
This dude was a pain in the ass, no doubt. But it was for his wedding, and I get being a pain in the ass about something you're giving your husband on your wedding day. I have a hard time faulting anyone for that.
And he was super polite and grateful. AND he apparently screened the speedpaint to pretty much every single person he knew, so I got the ad revenue from that AND sold a bunch of duplicates from my etsy- so in the end I've more than made my money back. He absolutely did not have to do that- I wouldn't even do that.
For context, this wasn't just a digital painting, I also do textile art, so it was the painting, the pixel art, and an embroidery pattern. I'm selling those patterns. He could have just shared the one he already had. He absolutely did not have to tell people to buy it- but he did tell people to buy it, and he talked me up. I made a contact that brought in increased passive revenue.