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Showing posts with label musings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label musings. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Copyright Page Art Notes: A Picture Book Treasure Hunt


Last year I started a long, epic thread on Twitter featuring my favorite hidden thing to hunt for in picture books:
You can click through for the full thread, but here are some favorites I spotted in 2019:
I love hunting for and tracking these notes as I read picture books, mostly to learn more about the artist's process but also occasionally for a little laugh. At the start of 2020, I started a new thread:
Happy hunting! Some early favorites from this year:

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Books Read in 2014

Here we are, halfway through the second month of 2015, and I haven't yet done my annual check-in on the past year's reading.  I didn't realize it until the end of the year, but I actually read very few books in 2014.  Still, there were some good ones mixed in.  My favorites are in bold.  Looking forward to good books (and MORE books!) in 2015.

  • The Night Gardener, by Jonathan Auxier
  • The Ocean at the End of the Lane, by Neil Gaiman
  • The Magicians, by Lev Grossman
  • Wildwood Imperium, by Colin Meloy
  • The Greenglass House, by Kate Milford
  • West of the Moon, by Margi Preus
  • Eleanor and Park, by Rainbow Rowell
  • The Wainscott Weasel, by Tor Seidler
  • Mr. Penumbra's 24-Hour Bookstore, by Robin Sloan
  • Veronica Mars:  The Thousand-Dollar Tan Line, by Rob Thomas and Jennifer Graham
  • The Interestings, by Meg Wolitzer
  • The Family Fang by Kevin Wilson
  • The Interrupted Tale, by Maryrose Wood

Tuesday, November 11, 2014

Previously on... The Creative Life.

It's been a while since I've posted anything here, huh?  Fall is a crazy busy time at work and that can mean my art falls by the wayside for a little bit. But my creative self hasn't been entirely dormant.  A quick round-up of creative world goings on...

My aunt has a professional organizing business called Managed Chaos, and she commissioned an illustration for a brochure she's using to advertise her business. You can see the brochure at the link above-- it was truly a family undertaking, as my sister (with a new business of her own) designed it!
I had a lot of fun with this one since it's a bit of a departure from my usual work.  Makes me want to play around with lines more and see what happens.

Also in October some friends and I busted out the old acrylic paints (seriously, these were leftovers from college... and I just got an invitation for my 10-year reunion, sooooo....) and snazzed up some papier-mache skulls for Day of the Dead.

 

 
I miss painting.

Two weekends ago I attended my second Mid-Atlantic conference for the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI). Some notes (and sketches from the margins of my notes).  Leave it to a room full or book people to turn a phrase / speak in fun little metaphors.
  • One of the agents in attendance (I didn't mark down who, shoot!) referred to the problem of starting a story in the wrong place as "throat clearing."
  • Stephen Mooser quoted Sid Fleischman in describing a character's dramatic introduction into  the story as a "grand staircase."
  • Keynoter Linda Urban refers to the essential essence of a story as its "spine," what you should hold onto.
  • At one point, author/illustrator Pat Cummings said it was harder to be an artist than a lawyer, then later indicated that adventuring was even harder than art.  Which led me to pen a mini infographic: 
In general, I had a great time at my second Mid-Atlantic SCBWI conference!  I pretended I was an extrovert and talked to many people.  And between the conference planners clearly going out of their way to provide more learning and networking opportunities for illustrators (yay, thanks conference planners!) and the fact that I've been writing more since this time last year, I felt like there were more nuggets of wonderful helpfulness than ever before.



Now it's November, and I'm all in on another round of Picture Book Idea Month (PiBoIdMo, the brainchild of Tara Lazar). 
Out of last year's 30 ideas, I now have three (very, very early stage) manuscripts, another close to complete story that's still in my brain until it discovers the perfect ending, an idea that I think might be an early reader or middle grade instead, and a character just begging to feature in a series.  Here's hoping this year is just as successful!

And of course, I still draw from time to time...


Saturday, January 18, 2014

Books Read in 2013

Happy belated new year! Each year I like to take a look back at what I've read this year.  For some reason, I decided a long time ago that I'd only include longer chapter books in my tally over on goodreads, and so this doesn't include the dozens of picture books I read in 2013. I might rethink that policy moving forward, because picture books are pretty awesome.

Anyway, here's my 2013 in books, with my favorites bolded. Here's to great reading in 2014! 
  • The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate
  • The Moon Over High Street by Natalie Babbitt
  • Hold Fast by Blue Balliett
  • Doll Bones by Holly Black
  • Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking by Susan Cain
  • The Great Unexpected by Sharon Creech
  • Flora and Ulysses: The Illuminated Adventures by Kate DiCamillo
  • Odd and the Frost Giants by Neil Gaiman
  • When We Were Orphans by Kazuo Ishiguro
  • Flight Behavior by Barbara Kingsolver
  • The Lions of Little Rock by Kristin Levine
  • Wildwood by Colin Meloy
  • Under Wildwood by Colin Meloy
  • The Might Have Been by Joseph M. Schuster
  • BOMB: The Race to Build--and Steal--The World's Most Dangerous Weapon by Steve Sheinkin
  • Jake and Lily by Jerry Spinelli
  • Olive Kitteridge by Elizabeth Strout
  • Mary Poppins by P.L. Travers
  • Code Name Verity by Elizabeth Wein
  • The Incorrigible Children of Ashton Place: The Mysterious Howling by Maryrose Wood
  • The Incorrigible Children of Ashton Place: The Hidden Gallery by Maryrose Wood
  • The Incorrigible Children of Ashton Place: The Unseen Guest by Maryrose Wood
  • Millicent Min, Girl Genius by Lisa Yee

Thursday, October 31, 2013

Picture Book Idea Month


A year ago I debuted Every Reds Hall of Famer, a project to get myself into a regular drawing rhythm and to challenge myself to (a) practice my skills, and (b) finish something.  Well, I did!  And so onto the next challenge.  

My notebook is ready!
My personal challenge for this year is to work on building more narrative and storytelling into my illustrations.  More action than stagnation.  And so I'm participating in Picture Book Idea Month, a project hosted each year by Tara Lazar and undertaken by hundreds of over a thousand creative people across the world.  Every day in the month of November, we're to come up with one picture book idea, for a total of 30 at the end of the month.

If this leads to some writing, great! But at the very least I'm hoping for just enough story inspiration to build up that portfolio with storytelling images. Here we go, November / PiBoIdMo!

Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Notes from my first SCBWI conference

This past weekend I attended the annual fall conference of the Mid-Atlantic chapter of the Society of Children's Books Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI). This was my first time attending this conference, and my
first time attending an conference in this field. While there was a stronger emphasis on the W part of SCBWI than the I part (my part) I didn't mind this too terribly, in the end. Learning about storytelling is obviously useful if I ever decide to write (which I might someday!) and at the very least it can help me build ideas for more narrative, action-oriented artwork, which I've know for a little while now is something I need to work on.

Here are some notes from the weekend, punctuated by some of my notebook doodles:


"Aha!" moments
  • Frances Gilbert, editor at the Doubleday imprint of Random House, in talking about story

    mining, mentioned a phrase that stuck with me: "childhood moments."  She also reminded us that when you write for children, "your customer is 5 years old and has to pee."  (I think her point was that you need a strong hook or something, but I really just wrote that down because it made me laugh.)
  • Draw from life, no matter your style, says art agent Christina Tugeau
  • Authors Mary Quattlebaum and Cynthia Lord both admitted to struggling initially with plot development / story arc. As someone who doesn't walk around with a spring in my step and a story in my heart, this is gratifying to hear. Woo!
  • Agent John Cusick of Greenhouse Literary on the best kind of picture book ending: "surprising, yet inevitable."
  • This one's not from anything anyone said this weekend, but just from being in the room, where (and this is where I try not to call my fellow conference-goers old and fail miserably) I was among the youngest there. And that's

    gratifying in the midst of a perfect storm of (1) turning a round number this year, (2) spending a lot of time wrapped up in the world of baseball, where phrases like "an old 29" and "way past his prime at 36" are not uncommon, and (3) living in a city where seemingly everyone is 24, runs marathons, has a masters degree, and makes six figures as a consultant.  It can be easy to feel time slipping away, to feel regrets about what I haven't yet accomplished.  But I'm pretty sure I'm doing just fine. 
"Duh" moments that were still worth hearing again, from multiple experts in the room 
  • Never stop reading! 
  • Conflict is essential in plot development. There's got to be a problem
  • In a well-crafted picture book, both the words and pictures should be essential to the storytelling. Neither should feel superfluous. Each should feel incomplete without the other.
"Oh, cool" moments
  • Agent Brooks Sherman of Fine Print Literary Management found his first picture book client via Twitter.
  • There's a trend in illustration right now toward simpler art, with minimal background, less details, subtle beauty.  This, I like!
  • Cynthia Lord passed around her Newbery Honor plaque and let us all touch it and make a wish. It was delightful.

Reading list

Children's books



Craft books 


Blogs

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

Attempting a book cover

Update: Turns out Turtle only has one braid.  Which is good, because it tones down the Wizard of Oz feel of the other sketch a little!


I'm working on overhauling my portfolio website (finally! stay tuned!) and have decided I'd like to have a shiny new illustration to feature. One of my aspirations as an illustrator is to do book covers, so I figure I should have at least one book cover sample on the site for art directors to see. 

The Westing Game is my favorite children's book, and probably my favorite book of any genre, if I'm being honest.  A few years ago, I drew mini portraits of all the main characters (here and here).  I re-read it at least once a year. But I've never been wild about the book covers it's been treated to over the years. It's a tough one--a big ensemble cast of characters, a mystery without many of the usual trappings of mysteries, a limited setting, scenes that are more dialogue-driven than visual. It's no wonder the buildings and/or the motifs (money, Americana imagery, chess pieces) become the stars of the cover.

But for me, the book's not about money, and it's not about chess, and it's not about the 4th of July. It's about the people. I considered doing a cover that introduces all of the heirs somehow but got overwhelmed by that.  So I decided to zero in on the one character who's the closest thing to a main character (and the closest thing to a proxy for young readers) 13-year-old Turtle Wexler. And I chose the scene where she's visiting the Westing house on Halloween on a dare, right before finding Sam Westing dead in his bed.  I'm including some subtle motifs (the American flag, a sunset, a chessboard-inspired hill) that fans of the book might catch and appreciate, but they're secondary to Turtle and to the scene. 

Some notes:
  • The lines in the sunset and the grass won't be so stark in the final art. Those will just be blocks of color, a more subtle background than the sketch implies.
  • At the moment, this image is big enough to include the front cover and the spine of a book. I haven't yet decided if I'll just limit the image to the front cover or attempt a full wraparound.
  • I might put some purple in the smoke coming from the chimney, to get a "purple waves" effect. :)

Any Westing Game fans out there?  Any opinions about this as I keep working on it?

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Step by step

This is the SlydePress 2013 Redleg Annual, an eBook previewing the 2013 Cincinnati Reds.   I created the illustration for the cover, and lots of wonderful writers contributed articles.  It's available for purchase at redlegannual.com


Today I thought I'd do a post about my process, because, well... I've never really done that before.  We start with a thumbnail, a tiny quick sketch to just map things out:



At the thumbnail stage, the editor hadn't settled on exactly what image he ultimately wanted illustrated, so I also created a thumbnail at the same time for a drawing featuring hitters.  Even though we moved forward with the pitchers, I liked that hitter one enough that I went ahead and finished it for my own personal use.  Anyway, back to this illustration.  So after we settled on that thumbnail, I started working a little larger, and at the same time tightened up and refined the drawing a little bit:


At this point, we need some introductions for the non-baseball fan readers, as I'll be referring to these guys by name.  From left to right on the sketch above, that's Mat Latos, Aroldis Chapman, and Johnny Cueto.  So after seeing this sketch, the editor suggested switching Latos and Cueto, because Johnny Cueto is actually quite a bit shorter than the other two, and it would be awkward for him to be leaning on Chapman like that.  Hence, the next sketch:



I originally tried out smiling Cueto, because he really is quite smiley in real life, but it wasn't right for the intensity of this image.  So, goodbye smile, hello funky eyebrows: 



I should mention that I make liberal use of tracing paper throughout my drawing process, from thumbnail to final sketch, so I don't have to completely re-draw the image every time I make a small change.  

At this point the editor pointed out that we had another height issue:  Latos is actually taller than Chapman.  Instead of retracing the whole thing at this point, I just used some Photoshop trickery to stretch Mat a little bit:

I cleaned it up a little in the last drawing I did to get ready for color.  I transfer the drawing by completely covering the back of my last, best, neatest tracing paper drawing with pastels.  The color I choose is different every time depending on the colors I plan to use in the drawing and the color of the paper I'm using. This time I went with brown, which showed up quite well on the white paper. I then tape that on top of my drawing paper.  I use Colourfix coated pastel paper, which has quite a bit of tooth to it, almost a sandpaper-y feel.  It's able to hold up to several layers of pastels:


 Next, I trace over my own lines on the top shet with a pencil, and when I remove the tracing paper, voila! I now have lovely brown pastel outlines on the Colourfix paper to guide my drawing from here on out: 


At this point I'm working on my awesome turquoise drawing desk, which my parents found at the World's Longest Yard Sale several years ago and very kindly bought for me.  I'm pretty sure it was handmade by someone, so therefore I'm pretty sure it's one of a kind.  Which is awesome.  Anyway, I tape up a version of the drawing next to me for reference, in case I traced anything badly or lose any of my lines as I work:


One of the cool things about pastels is how easily they blend and smear together.  But that's also a challenge.  In other media, you can work all over the page at once, in whatever order you like.  With pastels, you want to avoid smudging the parts you've finished, so you have to be very intentional about moving across the page.  This doesn't mean you can't go back and make little changes here and there afterward, but you need to be very careful.  Since I'm right-handed, I always start on the left/top and work my way to the right/bottom:


I use a mix of chalk pastels sticks and pastel pencils.  The flat pastels are Prismacolor NuPastels.  The pastel pencils are an unholy assortment of brands, picked up in sets and as individuals over the years, including General'sContéStabilo CarbOthello, and Faber Castell Pitt pastels.  I generally use the sticks for laying in large swathes of color and the pencils for details.


 So at this point, we're just trucking along, working left to right.  This piece actually came together quite easily, compared to others.  But not every illustration is this easy.  Lots of times, I reach at least one if not several points of abject frustration, completely ready to give up.  I don't understand people who can do live drawing demonstrations, who willingly invite an audience into the behind-the-scenes process of their art-making.  Because even when everything's going as planned, there are stages when everything looks utterly ridiculous and terrible.  For instance, especially when drawing people, I start by laying in an underpainting of sorts, to deepen and make richer the regular colors that will go on top:


After the above, I went over the whole face with a more appropriate skin color, blended everything, then used a lighter color (or two or three) to pull out highlights for a little depth.  

I also really love lines and tend to grow attached to them in the drawing stages.  I'd hate to discard some of those lines even after I have color that gives my image shape and form, so I always work with some kind of outline in the finished piece.  I also like to add depth with a little stray crosshatching or other pattern. The outline's not always as dark as this.  Often, I use lots of different colors from elsewhere in the image (examples herehere, and here).  

Anyway, we're almost done now.  Once I get to a point where I'm happy to step away (sometimes I have separation anxiety and want to keep working on it, perfecting the littlest details for way too long) I then scan the illustration and do a little color and value correction in Photoshop to make sure everything's good to go.  And there you have it!  Finished:


If you made it this far, congratulations!  You win a cookie.  And I hope you enjoyed your peek into my process.


Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Work and play

After wrapping up a few big projects recently, my "studio" (okay, FINE, the corner of my room with the art desk in it) was sorely in need of both cleaning and cleaning up.  (Seriously, you would not believe the places pastel pencil shavings can end up.)  When I went to organize/neatly stack my chalk pastels, a few tiny leftover bits found themselves homeless:


As a last hurrah, I took them out for a spin on another of the mini pastel boards I bought a few years back.  Voila!


As an illustrator, I tend to pay such close attention to the process of drawing.  I like to think I've learned to loosen up a little bit in my work lately, but even still it's essential to make sure I have a strong composition in place as a guide, so I know pretty well what I'm going to be doing when I finally get around to laying down color.  It's liberating once in a while to skip right to the "painting" part, no planning at all beforehand, just diving right in with pastel.

Tuesday, February 12, 2013

The storm clouds are gathering.

Fine art prints available at Imagekind
Every year to mark the start of the Cincinnati Reds' spring training (noted by the day pitchers and catchers are required to report to camp) I do an original baseball-themed illustration.  This year I've re-imagined an old team photo using four of the 2013 team's top hitters.  It seemed appropriate since I've been doing portraits and focusing so much on the team's history this offseason.  Here's the original:

Image courtesy of ebay. I don't know who took the original photo
but let me know if you do, so I can credit a photographer!
For those not well versed in the Cincinnati Reds, introductions are in order:



So why do I celebrate this every year? Why do baseball fans get so excited about a day that's pretty meaningless? Why do we mark the start of over a month of practice and exhibition games?

There's a scene in an early episode of the late, great TV show Sports Night where new producer Jeremy is cutting his first highlight segment for the show, a routine review of a routine baseball game. Problem is, he can't bear to cut anything.  Every moment is important to him. So he ends up with an 8 minute highlight reel. Anchor Casey tries to help him out, and we get this scene:
Casey: Okay, this section here where the batter taps dirt off his shoe and spits four times...
Jeremy: We can't cut that!
Casey: Jeremy.
Jeremy: No! The storm clouds are gathering.
Casey: [sighs] All right.  Just out of curiosity, what voiceover would you have me write for this moment?
Jeremy: What's wrong with "the storm clouds are gathering"? 
That's spring training for me. The storm clouds are gathering. The pace of baseball is uneven. I know that. It's sometimes all about waiting. There's lots of getting ready, of settling into stances, of positioning yourself in the field, of winding up to throw.  But if you know the game, you know the value of those slow times.  You know who to watch, and what to expect, and what to wait for.  And then... something happens.

Yes, Opening Day isn't until April. But baseball is being talked about, and soon it'll be played, and then it'll be played and will count.  I'm so excited, I can't stop smiling. Happy pitchers and catchers report day, internet!

[Memory lane:  2008200920102011, 2012]

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Books Read in 2012


Happy 2013!  2012 was a good year for book reading-- dare I say, a wonderful one? (Seriously, check out all those titles below with "wonder" in them.  What will this year's literary buzzword be?)

Here's what I read in 2012, with my favorites bolded:

  • Year of Wonders by Geraldine Brooks
  • Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
  • Mockingjay by Suzanne Collins
  • The Mighty Miss Malone by Christopher Paul Curtis
  • Dead End in Norvelt by Jack Gantos
  • The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman
  • The Art of Fielding by Chad Harbach
  • Everything on a Waffle by Polly Horvath
  • Mudbound by Hillary Jordan
  • Inside Out & Back Again by Thanhha Lai
  • Moneball: The Art of Winning an Unfair Game by Michael Lewis
  • Wolf Hall by Hilary Mantel
  • Wonder by R.J. Palacio
  • Run by Ann Patchett
  • State of Wonder by Ann Patchett
  • Here Lies the Librarian by Richard Peck
  • The Teacher's Funeral: A Comedy in Three Parts by Richard Peck
  • I was a Rat!: Or, the Scarlet Slippers by Philip Pullman
  • The Wednesday Wars by Gary Schmidt
  • Okay for Now by Gary Schmidt
  • Wonderstruck by Brian Selznick
  • The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer
  • A Tree Grows in Brooklyn by Betty Smith
  • Penny Dreadful by Laurel Snyder
  • Liar & Spy by Rebecca Stead
  • Breadcrumbs by Anne Ursu

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Notes from an evening with Barbara Kingsolver

My favorite author (of grown-up books, at least) is Barbara Kingsolver.  If you ever scroll all the way to the bottom of this blog, you'll see a quote of hers about artmaking.  I think she's utterly brilliant, and love the not just the stories she has to tell, but the way she tells them.  I've read everything she's ever written, including novels, nonfiction, and poetry--well, all except for her first book, about women mine workers.  Haven't gotten around to that one yet.  My favorites are The Bean Trees and Animal Dreams.

Photo credit: The Baltimore Sun
I also haven't yet read her newest novel, Flight Behavior, but it's right there at the top of my reading list.  She recently kicked off her book tour here in DC, at the Washington National Cathedral, and I went to see her.  She read a bit from the beginning of Flight Behavior, then did a little Q&A.  A few minutes into the conversation, I pulled out a pen and started scribbling on my program.  This was stuff I wanted to remember.  It's been several weeks, so some context might have been lost, but at long last I'm transcribing my notes.  I figured this was as good a place as any to keep them, in case others might be interested, too.

On fiction as a change agent
Her best response to the issues of the day is to write a novel.  Nonfiction reaches those who are already convinced of the importance of something, but fiction reaches a different audience.  "It doesn't just tell you what to think; it asks you what you think." Stories enter through your heart not your brain.

On how we learn
"We think we're rational, but we absorb our truths from people we trust."  We all do it. So cultivating trust is the key to productive conversations.

On being a scientist who writes novels
She feels her scientific education serves her well as a novelist, and sets her apart as a fairly unique writer.  Structuring an experiment can be easily compared and translated to structuring a novel.  In some ways, creating plot is like performing experiments on her characters.

On fiction writing in general.
She starts with an idea, some truth she wants to talk about, then comes up with a plot.  After that come the characters, followed by their backstories. "Fiction is made of details."

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Batting Average Joe, or Flying Pygmalion, or Choose Your Own Baseball Adventure

This guy started out as one of my Reds Hall of Famers (I'm up to 17 portraits over there, hey hey!) Somewhere along the way he stopped looking anything remotely like the intended player.  But I just like him too much to lose him to the giant Discarded Mistake Pile in the Internet Sky.  I like the drawing itself, for one (I've really come to love cross-hatching, haven't I? When did that happen?) Also, I think the man himself is quite handsome.  Definitely easy on the eyes.

So what tales can be told here? Anyone care to give our Player to be Named Later a name? A position? An OPS and/or WHIP? Just don't try to steal him for another team. The wishbone C is non-negotiable.

Side note: "Batting Average Joe" could be a decent nickname for Joey Votto. "On-Base Percentage Joe" might be more accurate, but it doesn't have the same poetry to it. That being said, not much could top "The Say Eh Kid" in the Votto nickname department. 

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