'' use non-traditional art styles. 's have caused controversy. There are several differences between webcomics and print comics. With webcomics the restrictions of traditional books, newspapers or magazines can be lifted, allowing artists and writers to take advantage of the web's unique capabilities.
Styles The creative freedom webcomics provide allows artists to work in nontraditional styles.
Clip art or
photo comics (also known as
fumetti) are two types of webcomics that do not use traditional artwork.
A Softer World, for example, is made by overlaying photographs with strips of typewriter-style text. As in the
constrained comics tradition, a few webcomics, such as
Dinosaur Comics by
Ryan North, are created with most strips having art copied exactly from one (or a handful of)
template comics and only the text changing.
Pixel art, such as that created by
Richard Stevens of
Diesel Sweeties, is similar to that of sprite comics but instead uses low-resolution images created by the artist themself. However, it is also common for some artists to use traditional styles, similar to those typically published in newspapers or comic books.
Content Webcomics that are independently published are not subject to the content restrictions of
book publishers or
newspaper syndicates, enjoying an artistic freedom similar to
underground and
alternative comics. Some webcomics stretch the boundaries of taste, taking advantage of the fact that
Internet censorship is virtually nonexistent in countries like the United States. or the
Catholic League's protest of artist
Eric Millikin's "blasphemous treatment of Jesus."
Format Webcomic artists use many formats throughout the world.
Comic strips, generally consisting of three or four
panels, have been a common format for many artists. Other webcomic artists use the format of traditional printed
comic books and
graphic novels, sometimes with the plan of later publishing books. '' by
Zach Weinersmith makes the user scroll down to reveal further frames.|alt=A web comic with seven rows with one or two frames per row. It is titled "PART 4 OF 5". In the comic a mathematician explains the problem of sphere packing.
Scott McCloud, an early advocate of webcomics since 1998, pioneered the idea of the "
infinite canvas" where, rather than being confined to normal print dimensions,
artists are free to spread out in any direction indefinitely with their comics. Such a format proved highly successful in
South-Korean webcomics when JunKoo Kim implemented an infinite scrolling mechanism in the platform
Webtoon in 2004. In 2009, French web cartoonist
Balak described
Turbomedia, a format for webcomics where a reader only views one panel at a time, in which the reader decides their own reading rhythm by going forward one panel at a time. Some web cartoonists, such as political cartoonist
Mark Fiore or Charley Parker with
Argon Zark!, incorporate
animations or
interactive elements into their webcomics. ==History==