Spring is in Bloom!

Spring has been official in Ohio for about a month now, but it is now solidly displayed around me! My cherry trees are in full bloom and their scent fills my nose when I walk out my front door. My sidewalk isn’t quite lined with flowers yet, but the greenery is up. It’s been inspiring me to spend a lot more time outdoors! I’ve been taking walks during my lunch time at work, and even spending some time on my newly-scrubbed deck furniture which I bought covers for this year because this is the year I get my life together like an adult. You know, before I turn 30 next year. Ha! Ok, maybe my life will not be entirely together. But I have taken some good steps forward, at least! Just look at my deck furniture- safe from rain and bird poop.

Anyways, all this time in the outdoors has been great for my mood, but not so much for my productivity. My drawing time during lunch is now spent on the walking trail. This doesn’t mean that I haven’t been doing any work, though! I’m still putting some work into a commissioned piece that is taking me a while, and I finished two new pieces for SCBWI things. The first was a coloring page to be used at the Ohioana Book Festival in Columbus, Ohio this weekend. I was pretty pleased with how it turned out!

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I did a bit of the digital inking at my son’s t-ball practice and gained myself a friend. A tiny younger sister of one of the players came right up to me and sat down to watch me work. Her mom gave her a phone to watch Bubble Guppies, and she came back with it to settle in once more against my side. So sweet!

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Last post’s little man.

The next piece I finished out was one for the Draw This monthly challenge put out by SCBWI. April’s challenge word was “Bloom.” I thought about using my little guy from my last post, but decided to make something new.

I wanted something that showed a literal bloom of spring, but also tried to reflect the internal bloom I had been feeling with the change of the season. I ended up coming up this little girl.

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I have a booth reserved at a Women’s Expo in my hometown here in a few weeks where I hope to get some leads on more commission work and make a little bit of money selling some small prints. The expo itself is helping raise funds for a Relay For Life team headed up by a friend of my mother and myself who has battled cancer multiple times in her life. She does so much to try to give back, and I was pleased to participate when she approached me about the opportunity.

On a non-art note, I have started some story-forming for a possible YA fiction piece! I have always entertained the idea of being an author/illustrator, but I always pictured that being achieved through picture books. Never would I have guessed that I would pursue something this … lengthy? Haha. Obviously, this will be a project years in the making and I am only just getting started, so there will probably not be too much to share regarding the story for quite some time. I have just been so excited about it that I wanted to at least say that it has been started.

I hope everyone is having a great spring! Get out and enjoy some sunshine while you have it.

 

A challenge of color

Last night I was involved in a #kidlitart chat on Twitter that was really inspiring to me. It was all about color! How do you come up with your palettes? What’s your favorite color to use? Do you plan ahead or just dive into a piece and figure it out as you go? (You can find a full transcript of the chat here.)

As someone who’s work lately has been 95% black and white, I felt a bit out of place to an extent. What is great about this conversation was that it got me thinking about color again! I love color! I just need to work more with it so that my color use can go from run-of-the-mill to radiant.

When I was a child, I wanted my drawings to look like what I thought was real. 3D people. Green leaves. Blue sky. Red apples. As I matured and learned to really see the world around me, I learned that leaves come in all sorts of shades and colors, skies can be literally almost any color of the rainbow and then some, and even apples come in varying shades and gradients. And the world is all the better for it!

The next step forward from where I am is trying to learn how to manipulate color and use it more deliberately. I have been saving pictures and possible color palettes to a board on Pinterest for a long time, but not doing anything with them. I’ve decided that I will start picking a palette I’ve saved and making a piece with those colors. I don’t have any certain time frame for them, since I’m working on a few other projects right now as well, but I figure I will use each piece as an experiment. I’ve already made my sketch for my first palette! I tried to pick something a little spring-y since Spring is finally here, at least according to the calendar.

Blythe posted this helpful example for me after I asked about what people meant when they talked about doing color comps for projects. I have never done one before, and I think it will be super helpful.

I’ll check back in with a finished piece after it’s done!

With A Chick Chick Here…

I completed my first full size chicken portrait this past week! I was quite happy with the results, and was even inspired to open up requests for pet portraits for the gift-giving season coming u. I’ve even had a couple inquiries! Granted, one was from my mom and I’m going to do it as a gift for her for her December birthday, but I’m still going to count it as an inquiry.

So on that note, I am taking requests for commissions, either of pets or of any animal you desire for decor or for gifts! I can do shipping of an archival-quality giclee or delivery of a digital file for you to print as you wish.

I’ll hang up my salesperson hat and put my artist hat back on.

Since my mom has officially said she wants a piece done, I am going to start doing some work on it a bit at a time so I have it in time for her birthday! She wants a piece made with her two horses, Blue and Cree. Blue was a rescue horse that they took in over a year ago. He has improved leaps and bounds! Cree is a retired barrel racing horse who moved in with my parents to live out her golden years just relaxing in some nice fields. Although she grew up on a farm, my mom never kept horses until now, and she has loved taking these horses into her care. I am looking forward to finishing this piece for her!

Have a great week, everyone!

Exciting News!

My favorite season is truly upon us! Cooler days have started to roll in, along with cooler nights. Boots and sweaters beckon to me from my closet, and pumpkin spice and squash are working their way into my food choices.

With this change of seasons has come a flurry of busyness with my day-to-day happenings, so I find myself weeks away from my last post yet again. However, I have not totally idle! I have exciting news to share:

My work was selected to be part of a calendar published by my region of SCBWI!

I am super proud. I worked hard on this piece and was quite pleased with the end result. The theme for the calendar contest was “Around the World.” It was judged by Nancy Brennan, an art director for Viking Children’s Books.

My new focus is working on character development for a personal project I am doing with a friend. It involves chickens, which I’ve never spent much time drawing, so I have been doing some practice sketches and gathering photos for reference. Luckily, I know several chicken owners who are happy to have their girls model for me! I plan to try to do some sketching from live chickens here before too long.

The 2018 SCBWI Summer Conference

Now that it has been a full week, I finally have time to blog about what an amazing experience I had this past weekend!

Technology astounds me, sometimes.
The Atlanta airport had what appeared to be a crystal-covered fishing net. Very pretty!

I arrived in LA either very late or very early, depending on your frame of reference, and got to my hotel around 1:45am. My friend and roommate for the weekend, Cynara, was already in the room and was surprisingly still awake! So, naturally, we decided to stay up for 2 more hours talking and catching up.

The view from my hotel window!

Morning came soon, and we made it downstairs in time for coffee and registration. We went to the first workshop together, where we got to hear Brian Pinkney talk about his creative process. It involved a lot of naps. I wish my creative process involved naps.

I went to lunch with a group of people who were gathering from my region (and some people who came along because they like us). I got to meet my region’s illustrator coordinator for SCBWI and two of my Twitter #kidlitart chat friends!

The Illustrator’s social was Friday night, and I met many people and saw some beautiful portfolios. I was so caught up in everything, I missed dinner!

SCBWI Illustrator staff

So many business cards and postcards of talented people!

Author/illustrator Debbie Ridpath Ohi (on the left) and author and occasional illustrator Kathy Ellen Davis (on the right) were both super friendly and wonderful to meet.

Saturday was busy. I met lots more new people. Tried to find some familiar faces at each session. The portfolio showcase was beautiful, but we weren’t allowed to take pictures. My portfolio has a far way to go to be on par with some of those, but I am trying to not feel too down about it. It was my very first conference, after all. Baby steps!

The Artist and Writer’s Ball was Saturday night! What a blast. The theme was to dress up in homage to your favorite author or artist. I was inspired by Roy Lichtenstein’s pop art figures. It made me late to the party, but I felt pretty good about it! They had a variety of sliders, a taco bar, and free dessert trucks! The cupcakes were to die for. I can’t remember the name of the truck, but I do remember seeing something on it that said they had won some Food Network cupcake challenge thing, which won them points in my book! After eating, I proceeded to dance the night away with a new found friend. I hung out with another of my new friends, Guy Kopsombut of 4am Shower fame, and his regional buddies after the party was over. I managed to “catch” the mythical white stag (as seen in “King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table” and The Chronicles of Narnia). She granted several of us each a wish. I wished for diligence in improving my craft. She actually gave some very helpful advice!

My dancing buddy, Shawna.

White Stag!

Sunday came all too quickly. We got to have a “luncheon with Lois Lowry” (author of The Giver and so many many other things), and it was amazingly interesting! I added a few more books to my growing list of things I want to read. I am thinking of picking up audio books so I can “read” at work!

When it was all said and done, they had an autograph party where the faculty were set up to sign books they had for sale all weekend long. I spent more than I expected to on books, but I was so excited to bring them all home! My boys already love them all, and I’m loving the YA novel I bought as well! I caught up with a few friends as we were wrapping up and got to say goodbye. I even got to have one last dinner out with some friends before catching a Lyft to the airport,

Me with Guy Kopsombut, comic artist and aspiring illustrator
Chase Woolner, puppet artist extraordinaire and aspiring illustrator
Cynara, my friend and hopefully co-author before long! So excited for our project together!
Amy O’Hanlon, Sandra Salsbury, Rubin Pingk, and Guy at my last dinner in LA.

I wish I could have stayed for the illustration intensive course on Monday. Next time, I will. My main takeaway from this conference was KEEP WORKING, but don’t let it become work. If you don’t enjoy the process, your work will suffer for it. It has made me excited to get back to work!

This whole thing has been such a learning experience. I am already looking forward to the next time I can go!

Speaking My Piece on Stolen Works

I have a love for webcomics. By the time I graduated college, I read anywhere from 20-30 different comic series each day. As I got older and my life filled with other responsibilities, I had to prioritize my time and I stopped checking many of them, but there are a few which I continue to follow. One of these is the comic Lackadaisy, by Tracy J. Butler. It follows the story of two rival speakeasies in St. Louis during Prohibition, but portrayed by cats. Don’t let that turn you away! It is so much more than anthropomorphized felines. Her story line is interesting and funny, her attention to historical detail is astounding, and her artwork is beautiful! Seriously, you should check it out.

HOWEVER, her wonderful web comic is not why I am writing my post. Earlier today, my sister (another avid reader of Lackadaisy) sent me a message saying that she saw one of Ms. Butler’s non-comic pieces for sale on Amazon as one of those newly-popular “diamond cross stitch” pieces. Both of us thought that it seemed suspect, and my sister reached out to the artist to notify her about the product and ask if it was legitimate.

It was not.

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Tracy J. Butler’s original illustration of her cat, Ivy.
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Product for sale on Amazon.

Seriously? Also, this image does not lend itself to a diamond cross stitch. Anyone who did buy it would be severely disappointed in the result.

While we were glad to be able to help notify her of what was going on, I couldn’t help but be depressed thinking about it. She could reach out and tell these sellers to cut it out or cut her a check, but pursuing these issues is usually fruitless and/or costly, once lawyers get involved.

Since I began following several children’s illustrators on Twitter, I have heard of two other cases of this sort of theft. Both involved stores selling ripoff products without the consent of the artists. The first was a case against Francescas regarding enamel pins ripped off of a variety of artists.

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The second was against Old Navy for using Lili Chin’s adorable dog illustrations on pajamas.

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And Old Navy is denying that this is copied! Unbelievable.

So what can I do? I’m going to make this post. I’m going to post about it on every social media platform I use. I’m going to ask you to do the same. Talk about it. Spread the word! Personally, I will not be shopping at Francesca’s or Old Navy again. I don’t think they have handled these cases well, and it is a slap in the face to artists.  I want the world to hear that artists deserve credit and control over their works.

Please, support the artists you enjoy, and speak out when you see a case of art theft.