Hailing from New Zealand, Li Chen is the creator of Extra
Ordinary Comics (or Exocomics) which is a weekly slice-of-life
webcomic based on her life with her partner Jordan, and her cat
Shoelace. With her fun and quirky comics, she has gained a
steady following of fans and supporters and has published three
collections of her work.
Full shownotes: http://yourcreativepush.com/li
-How many children love to draw but eventually lose their
passion, but she just kept going.
-How and why she started Extra Ordinary Comics.
-Patreon and Kickstarter and how they helped her to release her
collections.
-The notion of authority figures that we envision as the
gatekeepers that hold us back from doing what we want to do.
-How she still sometimes feels like an imposter who just found
herself in this situation.
-How her style has changed over the years and how looking back
at the older comics sometimes makes her cringe.
-How she is grateful that, when she was starting out, she was
somewhat ignorant to the amount of improvement that she would
undergo in the next few years.
-Her process of creating a comic and how long it takes her.
-How she likes to go to a local park in order to get ideas, and
how she sometimes has to trick her brain into thinking it is not
there to do work.
-The inspiration and knowledge that we can learn from
children.
-What it's like to have Jordan in her corner.
-Her initial hesitancy to start a Patreon campaign and what it
has been like for her since starting it.
"I always thought that I'd have to wait until someone with
authority would contact me about it."
"It was a really amazing and challenging year of my life, going
from never doing anything like that before to having published two
books and then actually going to a library and seeing them."
"The idea of just quitting my day job without knowing what's
coming next was very scary."
"I think the thing that has always held me back is my mindset
about the so-called "authority figures" or people that can tell me
that I can do the thing that I want to do."
"When I look at my old comics it makes me cringe."
"If I knew then how bad I think it would be now, I don't think
that I would have continued. I definitely had a very nice
force-field of stupid protecting me."
"For my whole career, I definitely want to look back at my work
and cringe, because it can only mean that I am progressing."
-Yotsubato!
Vol. 1 (Amazon)