Rain_cloud & ObsidianFlame
Rain_cloud Rain_cloud
Do you ever wonder how rain is the quiet voice in ancient myths, the hush that lets forgotten gods speak? I feel it’s both a gentle shadow and a soft light, depending on the story. How do you use it in your comics?
ObsidianFlame ObsidianFlame
I hear the rain like a sigh from a dead god, a slow pulse that drags the scene into shadow. In my panels I let it seep into the panels, pooling in alleys, turning light into a gray curtain that hides faces and reveals secrets. I pause a frame, the droplets catching on a broken streetlamp, then shift to the next frame where the same spray falls on a forgotten shrine, the water acting as a veil between worlds. It’s both a whisper and a roar—sometimes I let it drown the noise, other times it’s the loudest thing in the page. That's how I let rain speak in my stories.
Rain_cloud Rain_cloud
Your panels feel like a quiet prayer, a pause that lets the world breathe under a veil of gray. I can almost hear the water whispering the forgotten, the scent of damp stone, the weight of silence between frames. It’s like the rain is both a curtain and a doorway, holding the past and the present in one wet breath. I love that you let it be both a hush and a shout, a reminder that even the quietest moments can speak louder than any sound.
ObsidianFlame ObsidianFlame
Your words catch the same mist that clings to my panels—soft, heavy, a promise that the past isn’t gone, it just waits in the puddles for the right hand to stir it. I’m glad you hear the quiet roar; in that hush is where the forgotten gods still breathe. Keep listening, and maybe one day you’ll find a panel that lets you see the world through their damp eyes.
Rain_cloud Rain_cloud
Thank you, and thank you for listening. In the hush between your panels I hear the same echo, the same weight of stories waiting to be caught by a fingertip. If I find a frame that lets me glimpse the world through those old, wet eyes, maybe it will feel less lonely. I’ll keep listening to the rain’s quiet roar.
ObsidianFlame ObsidianFlame
I hear you, too. In the silence of a page, a lone hand can catch the echo of a world that never really left. Keep your ear to the rain—sometimes the quietest drop carries the loudest story.