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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: childrens book illustrations, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 18 of 18
1. New Projects - Illustrating Children's Books

New projects, a new blog, and back to College I go tomorrow for a new year. The exciting news? I have a whole year in which to work on illustrating for children, and it's all been accepted as part of my work for the course this year, so there's a lot of fun waiting to be had. Just pop over to my new site for a look and follow me there! Just click here: Mariana Black Illustration.

 

2015-BLOG-BANNER

 

I've been working towards this dream for years now, so it's truly wonderful to be sharing this news for you. A lot of visualization and a lot of hard work ... and the possibilities are unlimited. Dream big. Cheers.

 

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2. IF ~ Boundaries

LifeDream
...for this week's Illustration Friday
 
When you purchase an item from MY STORE, 10% of your purchase price will be donated to my favorite animal charities; Last Chance Animal Rescue and Horses Haven, both in lower MI. Which charity the donation goes to, will depend on the item purchased and I will love you forever from the bottom of my little black heart. ...and even if you don't purchase anything from me, you can go to their site and make a donation! They deserve a chance too!
Have a seat in the sun with a sippy and browse through the pages of my website ArtQwerks

3 Comments on IF ~ Boundaries, last added: 9/13/2011
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3. A break

I have been cranking out artwork and clearly not writing in this blog. I was asked to make a 3x5 image about appreciating books yesterday. It will be for the Children's Literature Council of Southern California. I was told to throw in one of my books for PR while I designed something. So, Beautiful Oops snuck in to the artwork.

And now, I'm going back to work!

Adios.




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4. You never know where inspiration will come from

I just finished the artwork for my book, Arlo Needs Glasses. (My dog)
We had a friend come over two nights before I finished painting.
He gave us a book and a small drawing slipped out from the pages.
It turns out a friend's child had given him the drawing and he forgot where he put it.

A cat with glasses. What an amazing coincidence. She had cut wholes out for where the eyes go. I realized after holding the paper over my dogs face that I had a cover design. (Without the funny looking plants!)



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5. Trying something new

I have to or should I say, I 'get' to illustrate a book I wrote about my dog Arlo. I have made pencil sketches, but I always hit this point when it's show time. Water color, acrylic, computer, colored pencil, all of the above? This time, my wonderful editor made a request for this book to have the 'feel' of my book Beautiful Oops. We had done that book together, and this is the next book we are working on. I tried a 'traditional' acrylic picture yesterday but found it was much harder to paint a character on top of all the sloshy paint strokes I used for Oops.

Solution? Cut the characters out and drop them on top of the picture. They pop! It works. It's actually kind of fun to cut everyone out once I've drawn them. I think this book, with the loose feel, should be something I can produce rather quickly, given that these images will not be labored over. Again, it hits me that after all these years of illustrating so many books, I can loosen up. It's very freeing! You know all of those people who say, "I can't draw a straight line..." Well, here's proof that curvy lines are just fine!

Adios.

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6. Take a look at how Children's book illustrator Acicia Padron works.

Nice quick lesson in water color. (If the link doesn't load, paste it into your browser)



Also, check out her website
http://www.aliciapadron.com/Home2.html

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7. IF ~ Cultivate

Cultivate knowledge...

This illustration is from about 10 years ago.
I thought it was appropriate for this weeks Illustration Friday.

When you purchase an item from MY STORE, 10% of your purchase price will be donated to my favorite animal charities; Last Chance Animal Rescue and Horses Haven, both in lower MI. Which charity the donation goes to, will depend on the item purchased and I will love you forever from the bottom of my little black heart. ...and even if you don't purchase anything from me, you can go to their site and make a donation! They deserve a chance too! Enjoy the sunshine while browsing through the pages of my website
ArtQwerks

5 Comments on IF ~ Cultivate, last added: 3/23/2011
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8. Catching up During the Holidays

I've been working on so many different online projects that I haven't visited my blog lately. It seems I use twitter and facebook much more often lately.
I'm at @illustratr4kids on twitter for anyone interested in tweeting together.
I also have a facebook page for my children's illustration biz, for anyone interested: facebook illustration page



Here's hoping you all have a peaceful day, even in the midst of the scurrying and craziness that can come at this time of year. Take a deep breath, find a quiet place to calm your nerves and regroup..then get back to the energetic creative activity and live life fully. That's what I'm planning on doing. <3

2 Comments on Catching up During the Holidays, last added: 12/9/2010
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9. calendars with children’s book illustrations

Do you like children’s book illustrations? (I LOVE them.) Then you might want to check out these 2011 calenders with art by children’s book illustrators. They might also make a nice gift idea for someone you know.

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10. FINISHED!

I don't remember having so much time to illustrate a book.  I usually have a very short turn around time to create picture book art.  For my latest, Would You Rather Be a Princess or a Dragon?  my publisher gave me ample time to work.  If you were to look at my original sketches, you would understand why three publishers were interested in the manuscript, but not my illustrations.  When I ultimately sold the book, I sent in a manuscript without my drawings.  After they wanted to story, I had to go back and re-think what I had drawn.  After reworking the entire dummy for the book, I finally sold both the story and the artwork.

I finished working on the book Friday night and downloaded all of the artwork on to two DVDs.  It was strange seeing all of that time and effort, reduced to two disks!  I'm sure there will be tweaks here and there, but it's now Monday and I need to go out to my studio and clean up so another book can begin!

1 Comments on FINISHED!, last added: 10/28/2010
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11. Beautiful bOOks


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12. One book opens.... Another needs finishing!

While still promoting Beautiful Oops, I have been swamped with the quickly approaching deadline for my next book.  Would You Rather Be a Princess or a Dragon?  It's due on the 18th of this month.

While I was patting myself on the back for figuring out a way to add textures to my paintings in Photoshop, I was unaware as to the tedious process of making each image work.  I paint the pictures in acrylic and scan each one in to the computer.  Now, I have become a slave to the computer.  The artwork is very loose and freeing and after I scan the art I am finding the digital process is much more precise and time consuming.

That said, I still love the 'look' of the artwork.  I'm attempting to create images that don't look like they are computer generated and I am attempting that with the use of a computer.  Good trick!

I'm hoping that there is a learning curve and that the next time around, I'll be a bit speedier!  Back to work!

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13. San Francisco Illustrators Day

Spent the day in San Francisco, speaking at the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators conference.  Met really lovely people and saw some amazing portfolios.  In a time when so many people are worried about the future of books, it was inspiring to see so many people who are interested in writing and illustrating books for children.


I'm working on my own illustrations for spot drawings.  Drawing the same characters over and over in different scenes.  I talked about how one needs to show a character with different emotions doing different things, so a prospective editor will know you are a true contender to illustrate an entire book. Keeping the consistency up is the hard part!


Adios for now.



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14. I started early...

I am speaking on the 11th of September to the San Francisco chapter of SCBWI. (The Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators)  I dug out a sketchbook from when I was little and scanned in some of the images.  Given the condition of the paper, it's a good thing I am preserving some of the drawings.

It occurred to me as I saw these drawings, that I have been seeing things differently all of my life!

(This is a bit hard to see, but they are both surfers.  The one on the right is a skeleton.  The copy says, "Say, how long have you been waiting for a good wave..." Alphabet turned into things....

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15. Let the painting begin

I have been making 'finished' pencil sketches for weeks now and today, I will start painting my book, Would You Rather Be A Princess or a Dragon?  (Tricycle press)

When I first sent this book around, publishers loved the story but were not interested in me illustrating the book.  I sold the manuscript and 'then' showed them my drawings.  My editor wanted me to illustrate the book.  Looking at the dummy, I realized why other editors wanted someone else for the artwork.  It took months or 're-thinking' what I had originally drawn.  I am so grateful I had the time to push this book.
I will post some things along the way.

Adios.

Here's a 'test' illustration...

Barney

2 Comments on Let the painting begin, last added: 8/23/2010
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16. IF ~ Undone

These two have a love for the holidays and for each other that cannot be undone.

OH OK!!!!! I've been away for a week or so, so I'm playing catch up by posting fairly early (for me anyway) for the current Illustration Friday. I'm somewhat discombobulated with the time, as I'm sure we ALL are during this hectic holiday season, so instead of using this illustration that was supposed to be for Entangled two weeks ago (or last week, or whenever it was), I'm now using it for Undone THIS week. It works if you hold your head right. I'll just consider this a Christmas present to myself because there's so much to do, what with all the holiday busy-ness between now and next week.

Merry Christmas Everyone!

When you purchase an item from

ArtQwerks Store (I know of a great book that would make an awesome present for some adorable someone on your list), 10% of your purchase price will be donated to my favorite animal charities; Last Chance Animal Rescue and Horses Haven, both in lower MI. Which charity the donation goes to, will depend on the item purchased and I will love you forever from the bottom of my little black heart. They deserve a chance too.

Grab a cup of coffee and take a long luxurious gander at my website


ArtQwerks

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17. One Illustration Reverie; Two Real Deals


What does this short animated clip have to do with John Singer Sargent  or children’s book illustration?

A quoi ca sert l’amour,  a short animation by Louis Clichy, with thanks to illustrator  and animation/game artist Amanda Williams for finding this.  She called  it “brutal and adorable.”

If a child-friendly story had illustrations with these lines — and visual characters as memorable as these,  and color the way John Singer Sargent used it in his painted scenes, it would be some picture book, right?

I’m assembling my fantasy football — I mean  illustration project  — team here.

So, starting with the cartoon: What makes these stick figures tug at your emotions as they do?

The honesty? That we know these people? And been these people?

The “simple” (but oh-so-sophisticated) graphics with their varied perspectives and 360 degree “camera revolutions”?

All the fast cutting and surprise transitions?

The song? Edith Piaf’s and Theo Sarapo’s singing?

The subject?

Could some of this aplomb be translated into picture book illustrations?

Are these enough questions for now?

OK,  so let’s add some color and texture.  John Singer Sargent had a knack  for these.


Thanks to Chicago based painter Raymond Thornton for finding this.

I know.  Sargent is the painter who gives all other painters inferiority complexes.  We don’t now a lot about how he made his palette choices. (We know that he looked carefully.)

So enough with dream teaming. We’ve got some housecleaning items today.

Two powerhouse chapters of the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI) have announced their 2010 pow-wows — both set for early next year.

It’s Time to Mingle in Texas

Awesome Austin

Austin SCBWI comes first with Destination Publication featuring  a Caldeecott Honor Illustrator and Newberry Honor Author, along with agents, editors, more authors, another fab illustrator, critiques, portfolio reviews and parties.

Mark the date – Saturday, January 30, 2010 from 8:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m.  Get the full lowdown and the registration form here. Send in your form pronto if you’re interested — more than 100 people have already signed up. Manuscript crtiques are already sold out. But a few portfolio reviews are still open at this writing!

Destination Publication features Kirby Larson, author of the 2007 Newbery Honor Book, Hattie Big Sky and Marla Frazee, author-illustrator of A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever, which received a Caldecott Honor Award, and more recently All the World penned (all 200 words of it) by Austin’s own children’s author/poet Liz Garton Scanlon.

Frazee teaches children’s book illustration at Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, CA.  She and Scanlon plan to talk about their collaboration. You can read wonderful essays by them on this very topic here.

All the World" by Liz Garton Scanlon and Marla Frazee

"All the World" by Liz Garton Scanlon and Marla Frazee

The  faculty also includes: Cheryl Klein, senior editor at Arthur A. Levine Books/Scholastic, Lisa Graff, Associate Editor at Farrar, Straus and Giroux Books for Young Readers, Stacy Cantor, Editor, Bloomsbury USA/Walker  Books For Young Readers, Andrea Cascardi agent with Transatlantic Literary Agency (and a former editor), another former editor, Mark McVeigh who represents writers, illustrators, photographers and graphic novelists for both the adult and children’s markets,  and agent Nathan Bransford.

The conference also features authors  Sara Lewis Holmes, Shana Burg, P. J. Hoover, Jessica Lee Anderson, Chris Barton, Jacqueline Kelly, Jennifer Ziegler, Philip Yates,  and illustrator Patrice Barton.
Read more about everyone here.

Happenin’ Houston

Houston SCBWI has announced the (still developing)  lineup for its conference just three weeks after Austin’s:   Saturday, February 20, 2010.  Registration is NOW OPEN.

It headlines Cynthia Leitich Smith, acclaimed author of short stories, funny picture books, Native American fiction, and YA Gothic fantasies,   Ruta Rimas, assistant editor Balzer & Bray/HarperCollin, and Patrick Collins, creative director at Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. Collins art directs and designs picture books, young adult novels and middle grade fiction.

Among the recent picture books he has worked on:  Baby Bear, Baby Bear, What Do You See?, Old Penn Station and Rosa, which was a Caldecott Honor book.

The conference also features Alexandra Cooper,  senior editor at Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, Lisa Ann Sandell,  senior editor at Scholastic Inc., and Sara Crowe, an agent with Harvey Klinger, Inc. in New York.

You can download Houston conference info and registration sheets from this page.

No, you don’t have to be Texan to register for either of these big events. You just have to be willing to get here for them.

Remember that just about any SCBWI conference or workshop is a great education for a very modest investment.

* * * * *
Speaking of  great educations for a very modest investment,  Mark Mitchell, author of this post and host of this blog  teaches classes in children’s book illustration at the Austin Museum of Art Art School and online. Learn more about the online course here — or sample some color lessons from the course here.

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18. The Breathtaking Collages of Ed Young in “Wabi Sabi”


The collage illustrations of "Wabi Sabi" by Mark Reibstein, illustrated by Ed Young, had to be redone at the last minute.

Collage illustrations

 
A cat’s journey to find the meaning of her name leads her from her Kyoto home to the pine trees at the foot of Mount Hiei.

And there from a wise Zen monk-ey, our questing cat learns ‘a way of seeing’ that is at the heart of the culture of her land. 

Wabi Sabi, the Japanese and Tao zen concept that is also the cat’s name, ”finds beauty and harmony in what is simple, imperfect, natural, modest and mysterious.”

“It can even be a little dark, but it is also warm and comfortable.”

Wabi Sabi, by Mark Reibstein and renown illustrator Ed Young (published by Little Brown and Company) was named one of The New York Times “Ten Best Illustrated Books” of 2008.

A native of Tientsin, China who was a child in Shanghai during the World War II years, Young  came to the United States in the 1950s and worked as a graphic designer before turning to children’s book illustration. He has illustrated 8o books, several of which he has written.

He has worked in many mediums, from authentic Chinese paper cuts to the soft, bright pastels of Lon Po Po, his 1989 telling of a Chinese “Red Riding Hood” fable, in which three sisters outwit a wolf who comes to their house.  The book published by Viking Penguin imprint Philomel won the Caldecott Medal.

How To Be A Children’s Book Illustrator  recently interviewed Young about his pictures for Wabi Sabi.

Here, Young employed standard and some not-so-standard collage techniques.
“I’ve always used it in doing other mediums, because it’s easier to lay out compositions and make decisions with collage,” he said from his home in Hastings on the Hudson, New York on a Saturday morning in early November. 

(A collage is a work of art created by gluing bits of paper, fabric, scraps, photographs or other materials to a flat surface, often combining the imagery with painting and drawing. Young has cited the collage designs of Henri Matisse as a major influence on his work.)  

“It’s easier to change around, nothing is permanently pasted down,” Young said. “It’s flexible and alive. With other mediums you often get tight too quickly, then you get attached to it and it’s hard to change. Collage was something I used for sketching in the past. Now I use it to finish my work.”

Conversely, he drew pencil thumbnails in his sketchbook to get the idea formation process going for Wabi Sabi.  When he begins to work on an actual collage illustration, Young will place an item such as “a piece of bow” on the paper, and adds from there. For this he keeps several boxes of scraps, ribbons, colored tissue  — arranged in color schemes.

“I work flat until they are arranged in a way that’s satisfactory, then I’ll fix them to the paper with a little dab of Gluestick on the corner so the pieces won’t fly all over the place.

“It’s really play. You don’t get down to make something firm until the [pieces] start to talk to you.  Then you listen. “

Interior illustration of Wabi Sabi the cat is cut paper -- a color Xerox, actually, that Ed Young made of an iron portable stove.

“Illustrating children’s books is like making a movie,” Young said. “You’re making a series of pictures that tell a story. Those pictures are also like words made by you to lay out the moods.

“When you have the pictures together it’s like phrases. The phases have their own spirit and that becomes a poem of some sort — if they hang together right. But it’s very different than making a singular picture.

“In the concept stage, I am placing things down to start telling the story. Then several stages down the line, I introduce the colors. I play around with colors when the composition is right.

“These [colors and shapes] shift around. They have to work with the page. They have to flow from one to the other one so that when you flip the page, you’re either surprised by something, or staying in the mood for the next picture.”

The sequence is something to behold in Wabi Sabi. The viewer does indeed  feel like he’s moving from mood to mood, experiencing all the contrasting sights and emotions, epiphanies and wonderment of this cat on her journey to find who she is.

The story behind the illustrations should be made an epilogue to the book in the second edition.
Young’s first set of illustrations,  which took him two years to complete, mysteriously disappeared after he dropped them off on the front porch of his agent’s house.

(While taking his wife to the hospital, Young had dropped the bundled illustrations in an envelope at the agent’s doorstep, but they never showed up at the N.Y.C. office of his editor Alvina Ling. The agent never saw the package. Police and parcel delivery services were called. Locations were scoured to no avail.)

A few months later, when everyone came to grips with the idea that the art truly was lost, he had to start over with only weeks until his deadline. In the meantime, his wife had just died of cancer.  “I was in crisis mode,” Young said.

He had already cleaned out and re-organized his studio. The brightly
colored paper and tissue scraps and slivers that had been the raw materials for his pictures were gone. He had also tossed all of his visual references — except for some angled, distorted  snapshots that Ling had made of the collages in his studio.

By now, though,  Young knew that in his second go-around he would take a radical approach.
The look of the book would be quite different.

“Wabi Sabi is a term used for celebrating the common things that people overlook and seeing beauty in them,” Young said. “When I did the first round, I used beautiful new things, many done from scratch. And fresh things, although the pictures were beautiful, didn’t really develop the idea of wabi sabi.

“So when I started my second version, I decided to use wabi sabi materials.

“Wabi Sabi does not occur when something is newly made because it hasn’t got to that point where the soul is revealed. New things don’t have stories to tell.

He would have to work very fast. He recruited his 12 year old daughter to help him.
“In the end papers, you see cat foot prints, for example. When they were pouring concrete on my garage driveway, the cat actually walked on it. I wanted the images because that said something about the journey. So I had my daughter photograph that.”

Pine needles that Young’s daughter brought home from summer camp clump and adorn the trees of the forest on the book’s back cover and elsewhere in the pages. (In the original first set of collages, the pines were merely tree stem shapes cut from colored paper.)

The tree bark texture is actually from a large weatherworn outdoor thermometer in his back yard.
(Young is fond of this artifact.)

The autumn leaves on pps 17-18 are … autumn leaves, collected by Young and his daughter.

Other bits of photographed foliage and nature and urban scenes were –in time honored collage tradition — clipped from the covers of Smithsonian and other glossy magazines.

The bamboo leaf shapes are scissored from real corn husks.  A rug mat the cats in the story sleep on is made of lint scraped from the Youngs’ clothes dryer. The speckled cover of a college composition book provides the textured background for our cat heroine in one of Wabi Sabi’s epiphany moments near the conclusion.

The mottled brown pattern of the cat herself throughout the book comes from the rusted surface of a portable cook stove Young owns.

All of these materials  — the leaves, the pine needles, the dryer lint, even the big thermometer and the stove! –were  taken down to a neighborhood copy shop, layed on top of the glass of a color Xerox machine– and photocopied!  (”It probably isn’t something you could do at Staples,” Young offered.) Then he and his daughter merely cut around the myriad shapes and patterns in the color copies — to create the images for the story.  

“I try to take the time to find the soul of a story I illustrate,” Young said. “And, well, Wabi Sabi gave me the theme I needed to make use of that challenge,” Young said. “We were using things people have discarded, things people don’t want to celebrate. And I was reminded that this — and everything — is part of a process.

“With illustration, it’s no different. If I lose this set, I’m not the same person any more — so I’ll do another set.  One round is one telling. The next round is another  telling. I’m just finished for this round.

“The lesson is that nothing is frozen. If the book is ever to be made again, it can be retold by another person in a different way.  And it could be just as good, or better.”

                                                               * * * * *

 The missing set of originals have been alluded to in press releases, a review in School Library Journal  and other sources. I got additional details from Mr. Young and a video he loaned me of a talk he gave this fall at the Hastings on the Hudson Public Library.  The talk was in conjunction with an exhibit of the Wabi Sabi artwork at the library — All the art, Both sets!.  The once-missing original pictures showed up almost a year after they disappeared — in a Lutheran church where Young teaches Tai Chi classes!

“I’ve had Individual pieces of my art that were lost before, and even whole sets of illustrations.
But I never had a set of illustrations that was lost — and then found!”  Young told his appreciative library audience. 

                                                                        * * * *

My warm thanks to Mr. Young,  Tara Koppel with Raab Associates Inc. and Celia Holm, Children’s Librarian at the Spicewood Springs Branch of the Austin Public Library for their help with this article.  Mark Mitchell

Lon Po Po (inside illustration)

Lon Po Po (inside illustration)

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