Dinosaur!

Hallooo folks,

I was doing some brainstorming last week, and I had a shocking thought. It occurred to me that I had never painted a dinosaur. Whaaa?!

I've drawn dinosaurs, of course. I've done random sketches and doodles, drew a handful in preparation for a sea-monster piece, aimlessly doodled t-rex's and stegosauruses along the margins of notebooks... but all in pen or pencil. The last dinosaur I did in full color was a pastel drawing for a friend years ago. YEARS?! Seriously? Years? How is this even possible?

I didn't waste any time...



Next gaping hole to remedy: robots.

Yes, life is awesome.

May Memorials

Halloo there blog readers,

I posted earlier in the month about Maurice Sendak, but between stitches and life keeping me busy, I didn't have a chance to write about a couple of other May memorials. May was a sad month for the children's book community.

In addition to the loss of Maurice Sendak, on the 15th, Jean Craighead George passed away and on May 26th, Leo Dillon. 

Jean Craighead George (picture courtesy of Books of Wonder)

Not sure how many of you read Julie of the Wolves or My Side of the Mountain, but George was responsible for both of those titles and over 100 others. I remember reading My Side of the Mountain outside in my backyard. I was enchanted, pulled into Sam's world, where you could escape suburban and city problems. It was the kind of book I just couldn't put down. Imagine it! Living in a tree! In the woods! On your own!

I also remember reading Julie of the Wolves; Julie was required reading in school, but I also read it with my mom. When I was little, my sister and I would burrow up against my mom on her bed at night, and we would read together. Sometimes we would take turns reading from the book-of-the-week, others, my mom would read to us. (She also did voices!) Nights spent reading with my mother are some of my favorite childhood memories. There were a handful of special nighttime moments when we would come to the end of the chapter, and I would look at my mom, knowing it was already waaaay past bedtime. She would look back at the book and flip ahead counting the pages. "Well, just one more," she said before plunging back into the story. Pure magic.

Leo & Diane Dillon
Leo & Diane Dillon (picture courtesy of Books of Wonder)

I actually had the pleasure of meeting Leo Dillon last year at an event at Books of Wonder. He was an inspiration. I'll never forget how encouraging he was when I told him that this - illustration, writing, work for children - is my life's passion. With his wife, he illustrated over 100 titles, including my dog-eared version of A Wrinkle in Time. 

Maurice Sendak
Maurice Sendak (picture courtesy of Books of Wonder)

Though so unbelievably sad, it comforts me to know that I will always be able to find all three of these children's book greats, pulling Where the Wild Things Are or Why Mosquitos Buzz in People's Ears from my bookshelf or curling up with My Side of the Mountain.


New work!

Hey there everyone,

My thumb's on the mend, and I was approved for some light drawing and computer whatnot by the doc last week. Getting back to work has been wonderful but slow. Though I can still draw, it takes longer to warm up. But! The stitches come out on Thursday, so with a little more care, I should be back to normal work soon. (Side note... This week I also adjusted my lastest to do list with a new number one slot: become ambidextrous. If you're feeling ambitious, try showering one-handed and lefty. Ooof.)

But I digress. Because I was okayed for some light work, I took some time to put the finishing touches on a piece I was working on pre-injury.

A sample spread of Randall and Euphoria.

Mother's Day

Happy mother's day to all of the excellent mama's out there!

I've been a bit quiet of late and will be taking a forced break from making things for the next few days... I had an unfortunate run in with a mason jar on Wednesday night. Two and a half hours and x-stitches later (I don't actually know how many... I wasn't looking when the doc stitched me up), my thumb looked like this:


Which means I've been working lefty, and this is pretty much what I can manage right now...


Happy Mother's Day!

Birthday

Busy, busy day today... but still plenty of time to do a wee birthday painting for the best sister a girl could hope for.

Happy birthday D!


Chomp

Halloo everyone,

You might have heard the news already - one of the most influential illustrators in the world of children's illustration passed away today. Maurice Sendak inspired so many of us, igniting our imaginations and feeding our creative spirits. Where the Wild Things may just be the perfect picture book. I, for one, remember the first time I heard those delicious words, Let the wild rumpus begin. Pure magic.

But rather than provide my own longwinded obit (there are plenty already out there), in honor of Mr. Sendak, I give you some new work, a giant alligator who may or may not end up eating someone. (The manuscript for Randall and Euphoria Jones' adventure is still in progress, and that naughty plot twist has yet to be determined...)



RIP Maurice Sendak

More new things!

Halloo everyone,

I've been playing a bit lately, using a few new characters to experiment with technique and composition. This one just recently came off the drawing board. It's an illustration for a story I've been messing around with. You might recognize the oversized alligator from here. Since that post, the story has undergone some major revisions, so Randall - our large green friend - is mostly unchanged, but Euphoria has had a bit of a makeover. Alas, she is no longer pith-helmeted. She does, however, sport a spiffy spike-y sweatshirt. I'll get my sketchbook pages scanned in and show you some of the character prep work soon. Until next time!


New work!

It's been a busy couple of weeks with loads of new work. There have been paintings, drawings, new layouts, new mailers, new faces and some familiar ones...

Oscar on the farm


Birthday

Halloo everyone!

As some of you might know, I seem to be marking a significant number this year. I've been thinking a bunch about growing up this year and made a recent (albeit fairly obvious) discovery - you can grow up without becoming a grown up! Woooah! Amazing.

So I made a little birthday list. 


Now take a closer look... At one item in particular...


I got home late last night, just around midnight, and walked in to find that my apartment looked like this:


My ever-amazing bf had filled our ENTIRE apartment with balloons!



I thought it was amazing...


The cat, however, wasn't convinced.


Cards: Clubs


Halloo all!

So finally, FINALLY, I had some time a few weeks ago to finish the last suit for N's deck of cards. Clubs!

As with the previous suits, I already had a series of easy templates, so I quickly subbed the clubs for spades or diamonds or hearts.




Again, I moved onto the Ace next, using the Spade and Diamond and Heart motifs...


For the royal cards, I decided to do another set of birds. I had two sets of mammals - rabbits and foxes - so I decided that there ought to be two sets of birds, one song bird - Sparrow/Spades - and one set of birds of prey... owls


So after my owly sketches, I tackled the Jack, who I wanted in profile like Sparrow Jack, though a bit less mischievous and more dangerous.


I imagined the Queen to be rather bored with it all, though still a dangerous royal lady, and I modeled her with a decorative headpiece, like the Rabbit Queen.


And finally the King, who like his Lady Owl would also be rather royal, somewhat bored, but still a dangerous old bird.


Like the suits before, I made it a little package, but, alas, I forgot to photograph the actual printed cards. So, until next time!

Freelance for the Forward

Hey there blog readers!

Exciting things. I recently did a job for the Forward (or פֿאָרווערטס , for the Yiddish speakers among you). Because it's the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic, loads of news sources are running articles. The Jewish Daily Forward ran a bunch of interesting pieces, and one in particular about two passengers on the ship, Isidor and Ida Straus. Straus, a NY resident, was co-owner of Macy's department store. On the night the Titanic sank, both Isidor and his wife refused places in the lifeboats and were last seen sitting on the deck together. In addition to a place in Woodlawn cemetery, there's a memorial park dedicated to the couple on the Upper West.

My favorite part of the job was doing some outdoor sketching uptown at Straus Park. These are my two favorite sketches from the afternoon.



I also spent some of the afternoon following around older folks along Broadway.


Once I had some decent reference, I went home and started playing with possible compositions. These are five of the samples I sent in.






Once we settled on a sketch, I did a tightened version so the folks at the Forward had a place-holder as they worked out the section layout. 


Before starting in on the final illustration, I inked a small sample, just to play around and loosen up.


Ink!


And finally, color.


Exciting things, indeed.

You can check out the full article here.

Many thanks to Dan Friedman and Lil Swanson at the Forward and Liz Marcus for putting me in touch.

Bunnies!

Happy spring holidays everyone!


Sketchbook Thursday: Miscellaneous characters

Hey folks,

I have a couple of big posts in process. Soon soon!

In the meantime,  here's a bunch of silliness from the ole sketchbook.








Sketchbook Thursday: Owls!

Howdy folks,

Just posting a couple of owly warm-up sketches from earlier this week.





Have I mentioned that I LOVE owls?

Because they're pretty great.

Fun With Paper

Hallooo all,

Work life has been busy of late. I recently started freelancing in-house at HarperCollins a couple of days each week doing design work in the children's department. Awesome stuff. It's nice to add some variety to my work week. But it does mean less free time for updates and random projects. Much of my painting time these days is for freelance jobs.

I did, however, have a little time in the past few months to make a few birthday cards for a couple of friends who live across the country. My camera is behaving a bit wonky right now (it may, in fact, be time for a new one...), so I only have one of the cards documented. And some of the images that I do have are only so-so.

Anywho, for the holidays, N sent me an AMAZING paper-cut chicken (which will soon be hanging in my kitchen), and inspired me to play around a bit with paper. I had an idea of what I wanted, but I knew it was going to be fragile.

The first card I made was paper-cut text glued onto a solid piece of construction paper. For this second card, I decided to get fancy and do a couple of paper-cuts layered together. First, I cut out the main text.


And the different sets of secondary text.

birthday text in process

birthday!

instructions under construction 

instructions!

And because this one was a bit more fragile, I decided that it needed a case.

I'm a sucker for birds, and I just happened to have a bit of old wrapping paper lying around. It wasn't quite big enough, but with a few construction paper additions, I had myself a shmancy looking custom case.


Once I had the case and all of the text cut out, I got to gluing. I love the smell of proper paper paste - it reminds me of sunny, dusty libraries and old books. No photos of in-process gluing - I didn't want to get any glue on my poor, malfunctioning camera. It certainly didn't need anything else gumming up the works.

Ta da!