‘Tis the Season

Ho Ho Ho and Merry Christmas to everyone! The decorations are up in the Vecchi household and I’ve been feeling festive ever since. It certainly is the season to be jolly, as the old song says, but it is also a season of reflection for me and many others. January brings in a brand new decade, as well as a brand new decade of life for me, as I turn 30 in March. (It’s still weird to see that written out.)

I have high hopes for 2020, and my 30’s in general! I haven’t been actively posting lately, but my dedication to pursuing an illustration career has been amping up again after a few months’ hiatus due to an injury I sustained over the summer. This autumn has been filled with illustration podcasts, a trip to the University of Findlay’s Mazza Museum (formerly the Mazza Museum of International Art from Picture Books), and even a decision to pursue the most intimidating project to which I’ve ever challenged myself! But more on that later.

Since it has been months (and months) since I last wrote, I decided to do a bit of an art dump so you could see the few things I’ve worked on this year. It is slightly saddening to look back on it and see how little there feels like there has been, but I have been trying to live with giving myself some grace for difficult seasons and just double down moving forward. I really didn’t do much over the summer as I recovered and rested, but I did get a few drawings done for #Inktober this year that I really enjoyed!

I also tried to rework a piece I had submitted for my SCBWI chapter’s yearly calendar contest with the theme of “family.” I had really liked my idea, but was unhappy with how I had executed the piece for the actual submission. I went back and inked my initial sketch, threw some grayscale shading in it and asked some of my kidlitart friends for some critique. They had some helpful bits of insight for me! I flipped the orientation, did away with the secondary wall, and cleared up my silhouettes. I tried something more bold with my coloring, but I’m not completely pleased with it yet. I’m sure I’ll figure it out eventually.

 

As we were nearing December, a short series of events led to me cranking out a few wintertime animal portraits of myself and a few friends. I now have a few more in the works, and I’ll try to remember to post them when they’re done! Here are the ones I have done so far.

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The first of the animal portraits. Tyler, the penguin.
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Leah, the arctic fox.
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Me, the lynx.
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Matt, the polar bear.

And now, back to the aforementioned intimidating project I have given myself! Earlier this year, I was struck with a story. It literally started as a dream I had that I just couldn’t stop thinking about. I told my hubby that I thought it would make a great book, talked the idea over with my lunchtime walking buddy at work, and began to flesh out the dream into an actual storyline in my head. I even wrote two chapters of my first draft that I planned to finish, revise, and eventually try to take to a publisher.

In the past month, I have begun listening to Three Point Perspective, a podcast for illustrators by Jake Parker, Lee White, and Will Terry who work for The Society of Visual Storytelling, which I plan to join in the new year (if not before then). Listening to them talk about their work and the benefits of creating your own content really had me thinking about my novel idea. Matt had suggested I make it a graphic novel, but I had quickly dismissed it by saying I didn’t have the right “style” for this kind of story. Now that I have given it some more thought, I’ve decided to give it a go! I’m realizing that there are plenty of graphic novels that don’t look like your stereotypical “comic book superhero” style of art that are still taken seriously for their content and what they are able to communicate.

It is going to take years of work to get this idea off the ground and out into the world, but I’ve already started! By having some of the work done towards making it a book, I have already begun developing a cast of characters and a basic plot, though it definitely has a ways to go. My first goalpost I have set for myself in all of this is that by the end of December, I will have the major components of my storyline mapped out. How do all the major characters come into play? What key scenes lead up to the main conflict? How does the main conflict play out? How are the outstanding issues resolved? My plan is to have this basic framework done by year’s end so that I can begin filing in the gaps between the main points and connecting all the dots until I feel it is ready for me to start drawing up story boards for how it will be paginated and such.

I am totally stoked to get into this project, although I feel quite overwhelmed. As I work on my plot, I am planning to be reading graphic novels from other authors who tackle supernatural, fantasy, or sci-fi themes in conjunction with using more cartoon or stylized illustrations. I am definitely looking for recommendations! I did pick up the first of the Bone series by Jeff Smith from the library tonight, which I hear is excellent. Please comment and let me know of any other titles that might be useful for me to look at!

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!

February Daily Drawings

For the month of February, the #kidlitart community ran a challenge called KidLitArt28. For each day in February, we were do a drawing. The theme this year was “Things you love,” and I am proud to say that I managed to keep up with the challenge! I liked the idea of having all of the pieces somewhere together, so I am posting them all here. Most of them were simply black and white, but I did venture into color for a few.

Overall, I was very pleased with the results. I had a lot of positive feedback from people, which was really encouraging. It was good to get back into the swing of things. I have a few commissioned pieces I will be working on for a bit, but stay tuned for more to come! I’ll plan to do another update before two months have passed next time. Boy, life is really moving this year!

Feeling a little witchy…

Happy Halloween!

Ok, so it is still a couple of weeks away, but I have been seeing a lot of Halloween/spooky art on my Instagram feed lately, and it inspired me. I cranked out this little witch over the last week, and was pretty pleased with the result!

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I’m not much for things that are overly scary or gory, so this little witch clocking some practice hours on her broomstick is right up my alley for some holiday art! I have an idea for a trio of images that are werewolf based, but I am still in sketching mode for that. Werewolf anatomy is escaping me, and you can’t exactly look that up easily. There are so many different takes on what a werewolf would really look like! Hair covered? Mostly fleshy? Lanky and skeletal? Muscular and hulking? I’m leaning towards hair covered and bipedal, but pretty middle-of-the-road as far as body build. Hopefully I’ll come up with something I’m happy with soon so I can move forward with the rest!

In non-art news, I got to go to the Ohio Renaissance Festival yesterday with my hubby! My mother-in-law kept our kids for a few hours so we could go and wander the shows and shops without wrangling small people. We had a great time, split a turkey leg, and bought some stuff. I added to my Moroccan-style lantern collection (just starting, so now I have 3). We also celebrated hubby’s birthday this weekend, so we spent the whole weekend with my in-laws and had delicious food and cake. Good times were had by all!

Have a great week, everyone!

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.

Spring Weather Has Me Singing!

Happy Wednesday, friends!

Spring weather has finally graced Ohio with its presence, and life has been good lately. I think we may be on the verge of getting my baby boy to sleep more. As any parent can tell you, this is tremendously exciting news. However, we are also about to transition him to his own room, since his crazy mobility means the bassinet in the bedroom isn’t going to cut it very much longer. Those transitions are always rough, so I’m not expecting to really see more sleep for some time longer. Time will tell, I suppose.

I spent part of the weekend at my parents’ farm, which was nice. We hadn’t been down in months, and we couldn’t have picked a better weekend for it. Sunshine and farm activities drew us outdoors. We even got to meet a new baby goat from a nearby friend!


May is shaping up to be a busy month, but I am trying to stay on target with my illustrations! I have kept up with colour collective challenges so far, and am also making progress on a piece that I am excited to finish.

As a child, I always thought the woods seemed magical. Something about the speckled light filtering in through the green leaves overhead made me feel like I was in a story book. I loved a good forest, but the thing that really made me fall in love was finding a stream, creek, or river running through the woods. I could spend hours there taking in the sounds of the water, watching mini-waterfalls, making and breaking tiny dams made from leaves and twigs, and (on warm days) splashing my feet. There was a colour collective challenge a few weeks back that was green. I roughly sketched out this picture before deciding that the green from the challenge was not the right color for this image in my mind, but this drawing really spoke out to me, even in sketch form. I kept the sketch, knowing I’d come back to it eventually. I have now officially started work on it! Here is the work in progress:

The boy in the drawing is inspired by my kids, whom I hope will one day find the imagination-stirring wonder that I found in these kinds of places. I hope you find it too! In the midst of our busy lives this month, let’s try to take time to put ourselves in nature and take it in. It’s good for the body, and good for the soul. If you’re reading this, I would love to see the places you take yourself this month! I’ll post mine on Instagram with #natureplace.

Happy venturing!

The Portfolio Review

If you’ve been here before, you may notice that I have made a few changes to the site since last time. This is part of an on-going project for myself to really flesh out the site, so expect to see a few changes here and there over the next few months. I actually wrote the bulk of this post a week ago, since my review was actually last Thursday, but here it is!

I finally got to do my portfolio review with Giuseppe Castellano last night! Quick shout out to my husband for getting my video chat area set up for me and taking over putting the kids to sleep so I could have my meeting in peace.

We started right on time with introductions, and I gave Giuseppe my background leading up to now. We discussed why I wanted to do illustration (combining my love of art with my love of entertainment and kids) and my long and short term goals. After he got a feel for where I was coming from, we dove into the actual review.

He had my work pulled up in Photoshop to screen share while we discussed it. The first part was the feel-good portion where he told me all of the positive things I had going on in my work. Overall, he said he was glad to see that it was apparent I was “tapped into” my own signature look in my work. That’s something many new artists struggle to find. I was glad to hear it was there, because I wasn’t sure if I had found it yet! Apparently it carried through, even though they were not all done in the same style. There were a few pieces he pointed out where he really loved my line work!

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My frog from my Careless Magic piece was his favorite thing in my whole portfolio, he said. The lines that made him were “loose, but informative.” He also said I had really good shapes making up the frog. Another piece with good shape was my chubby mouse. I told him those two things were two of my favorites as well! We talked about how his pear-like shape was a “believable” one as opposed to “realistic.” Not all art needs to be realistic, but believability is important.

Chubby Mouse

There was a lot more to our conversation (we went 40 minutes over our scheduled hour), but my improvement areas came down to this:

  • Use reference more often (more like 60% of the time than 10%)
  • Draw instead of outline
  • Watch color value throughout a piece
  • Pay attention to texture

These are things that I know I can do, I just need to do them consistently.

Now what?

I want to go back into a few of my pieces and make the tweaks and changes we talked about to improve them, but he also gave me a couple of mini-assignments to help me reach my goals!

Mini assignment #1:

  • Make my portfolio site. This is going to involve making my landing page more portfolio based and fleshing out some more pages.
  • Continue working on portfolio.
  • Create postcard/physical card giveaway to have on hand at the SCBWI Summer Conference in LA. I told him I was attending. He encouraged me to put my portfolio in the portfolio showcase if I felt it was ready, saying it is really helpful because so many eyes see it!

DUE DATE: Before I leave for the conference at the beginning of August.

Mini assignment #2:

  • Create a spreadsheet of Art Directors and their information. Add 3 new Art Directors to the last every week for the rest of the year!
  • Have a fully functional, beautiful portfolio site that I keep updated with work.
  • Aim for one new illustration monthly. If I like it better than something on my site, switch it out. Keep site curated this way.
  • Send out postcards and emails to the AD’s on my list on a regular basis.

DUE DATE: End of the year.

I love having these tangible goals, and I am so grateful for Giuseppe and The Illustration Department for this opportunity!