If you mean as the artist, just work in high resolution in the first place.
If you mean using AI upscaling on someone else’s webcomic that’s already been shared several times and lost quality along the way before reposting, that’s because it can cause aberrations and sometimes looks uglier than a low quality webcomic. Better to reverse-search it with tineye to find the original, which should be in good quality.
I upscale comics content pretty regularly, but it’s almost never webcomics, but graphic novel content where I haven’t found anything better-quality online. But yeah-- “Waifu2” and others can indeed fail pretty hard depending on your source. I’m still kinda experimenting with all that, and probably need to break out GIMP more often.
I have no problem with people calling out “Beep” for the chronic thing he does, but just in case someone is actually curious about the OP, I wanted to add that yes, it’s a real and useful option sometimes when your source is tiny and/or full of graphics artifacts.
If you mean as the artist, just work in high resolution in the first place.
If you mean using AI upscaling on someone else’s webcomic that’s already been shared several times and lost quality along the way before reposting, that’s because it can cause aberrations and sometimes looks uglier than a low quality webcomic. Better to reverse-search it with tineye to find the original, which should be in good quality.
I upscale comics content pretty regularly, but it’s almost never webcomics, but graphic novel content where I haven’t found anything better-quality online. But yeah-- “Waifu2” and others can indeed fail pretty hard depending on your source. I’m still kinda experimenting with all that, and probably need to break out GIMP more often.
I have no problem with people calling out “Beep” for the chronic thing he does, but just in case someone is actually curious about the OP, I wanted to add that yes, it’s a real and useful option sometimes when your source is tiny and/or full of graphics artifacts.