Jun 11, 2023
BY Chloe Hughes
Arigato Travel has recently had the pleasure of meeting with Nao Yazawa, well-renowned manga artist, best known for illustrating Wedding Peach, and creator and teacher of Manga School Nakano. With her classes helping us get closer to being able to draw Manga like her, we just couldn’t wait to introduce Nao san to our readers.
I’m Nao Yazawa, a Japanese manga artist. I debuted as a shonen manga artist (worked for a magazine for young boys), then later moved to Shōjo Manga magazine. So I know about both shōnen and shōjo.
Around 11 years old, I believe. I had drawn a lot before then, but they were just doodles. It was the first time I started to draw a kind of story with panels on notebooks in pencil. But they were never concluded, since I drawed them without any plan. I became stuck and gave up.
When I was 14 years old, I read a How to Draw Manga book (Manga-ka Nyumon by Isinomori Shotaro). The book focused on the composition part of manga creation. I was deeply impressed, and it allowed me to create my first one shot manga. I created the story from start to finish, drew a storyboard (Naime/name in manga jargon), and inked it with manga pens – then finished it, somehow. It was extremely primitive and childish, though.
Nao Yazawa san at her studio – Credit: Nao Yazawa
Mnn, difficult question. Books, movies, music, manga – everything stimulates your mind and they inspire me, whether conscious or unconscious.
Again, difficult! I enjoyed drawing them all. But if I had to choose one, Naoya Saotome, from “The Isolated Zone/Shinku Chitai”. It started off as a Dojinshi, self-publishing manga. That means it is a very personal work and I put a lot of myself into the series. I really like him – not a bad guy, but not a good person either – I feel like I know everything about him.
Within my major work, it would be Yosuke Huma and Scarlet Ohara from Wedding Peach. I would describe Yosuke as my ideal boy, the right hero ;), and Scarlet has an interesting personality, because of her past. I enjoyed drawing them very much and wanted to do more.
When I feel that they are enjoying drawing.
Nao Yazawa san with guests – Credit: Nao Yazawa
One day, I happened to get an email (in English) from a German publisher. They knew my contact via my website. They wanted to talk about my work which had been released there. So I went to an English convocation school once a week and signed up for some correspondence courses to communicate with them, since I hardly spoke English at that time! Eventually, they invited me to German conventions, and I kept using English to communicate with overseas publishers and attend some conventions. It brought me here, teaching manga in English. You never know what happens next!
Not specifically. But I need coffee, definitely.
Not sure – maybe everything I’ve seen and heard. They stimulate me, both consciously and unconsciously.
Nao Yazawa san’s drawings – Credit: Nao Yazawa
Draw a lot. It’s almost the same as sports. Challenging difficult subjects, studying them, there are many important things there, they are nothing without many drawings.
Manga class – Credit: Nao Yazawa
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