2020: A New Decade Dawns (thank goodness)

I’ve been looking forward to writing this post for a few days now! A new year always brings me hope for what is yet to come. There are many possibilities, all unexplored and waiting for me to realize them. I then had the bright idea to go back to last January’s “Merry Christmas and A Happy New Year” post and compare what my goals were with what I accomplished.

Oh man, guys. I’ll keep this brief, because I refuse to let this steal my New Year’s motivation. I FAILED HARD. I had four goals that I identified in that post:

  1. Participate in color collective prompts at least 2x’s per month.
  2. Finish some pages for a book dummy.
  3. Mail out postcards to potential agents and publishers.
  4. Practice with my watercolors I got for Christmas 2018.

I don’t believe I did a single color collective prompt. I did do some sketches for some page layouts for a book, but I didn’t finish anything. The only postcards I mailed were my Christmas postcards I sent to a few friends and family in December. The one thing I came even remotely close to “achieving” was I did a few pages worth of watercolor drawings.

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Isn’t he a cutie? 

I won’t make excuses for my failed goals last year because it is pointless to do so. What is important for me to look at is what I learned from this past year. Here are the things I’ve learned which I plan to take with me into this new decade:

Keep Moving Towards the Mountain

I started listening to the SVS podcast Three Point Perspective late last year, and it has really been educational and motivational to me. They have mentioned a couple times the commencement speech given by Neil Gaiman in which he talked about the need to always be moving toward your end goal, your “mountain.”


And I knew that as long as I kept walking towards the mountain I would be all right. And when I truly was not sure what to do, I could stop, and think about whether it was taking me towards or away from my mountain. -Neil Gaiman


Reflecting on last years goals, I think they were admirable, but I wasn’t zeroed in on my goal. Color collective is great, but will I be better served by cranking out a piece that I’m rushing to finish during a few evenings throughout the week or by spending that same time working on pieces that are perhaps better conceived or will need more refining than a week’s worth of evenings will allow. When working a full-time job and trying to squeeze my illustration time into evenings and weekends, I need to check myself that most of my time is going towards pieces of consequence. Not every moment, but most of it.

Give Yourself Grace When It’s Needed

I experienced a physical set back at the end of summer last year, and ended up taking a break from art for what felt like forever. I struggled with feeling like a failure for not being able to do the work I felt like I needed to be doing. The advice I got from family, friends, and other artists was all the same: let your body heal! Take time to take care of yourself.

There are seasons in life where things get hard. You get sick. You grow your family. You move all of your belongings to a new location. You will not be the same level of creatively productive during these times. You may not even be creatively productive at all! And that is OK. Give yourself the grace to know that this will not be forever, and just get back on that horse when you can. I was off my theoretical horse for months, but I continued to listen to podcasts and think about my ideas I was having during that time. I came back to my illustration with a real fire under my butt to move forward and make something of myself.

Read

Reading is my long-lost lover. I used to tear through books voraciously. Life happened, reading became about getting through text books in college, and reading after having children meant reading the same 10 picture books over and over at bedtime. Now that I am pursuing a career in children’s literature, I have realized the importance of continuing to expand my horizons when it comes to reading. I am reading for myself again. Comics, graphic novels, young adult fiction, science fiction, picture books, and even professional development books are all on my “Want to Read” list on Goodreads, which I began using last year.

I rediscovered the joy of my public library last year, and look forward to my visits! My most recent trip included picking up War of the Worlds by H.G. Wells, illustrated by Edward Gorey.

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Reading is very important for someone wanting to be an author/illustrator, but reading also important for anyone, ever. Really! It helps you see the world in different ways, learn about topics you might not have known about, and grow your creativity. I challenge you to pick up a book or two this year and learn to love to read.

Onward to 2020

In my last post, I mentioned setting a goal for myself regarding my graphic novel idea that came to me last year. The intention was to have my main plot figured out by year’s end so I could begin fleshing it out further and then storyboarding. What ended up happening was a bit more detailed writing of plot than I had originally intended for the initial run, so I have not yet finished the whole thing. I am getting very close to the end, though, and am very happy with the progress that I have made on that front!

In preparation for undertaking the largest project I’ve ever attempted, I have decided to set about making a shorter comic as a trial run. I will use one of my favorite personal anecdotes and retell the story in graphic novel format, albeit a short one. This will allow me to focus mainly on format and execution instead of laboring over a plot for a long amount of time. I began storyboarding for this project last month, and am probably just under halfway through my first draft.

With all of that said, here is my official list for me to refer back to come next January (or late December, if I’m feeling like an overachiever.) Some of these are not art related, but I wanted to have one master list in one area.

Goals for 2020

  1. Work on storyboards for my GN and refine my story line.
  2. Publish my practice comic online by the year’s end.
  3. Track books I read on my Goodreads account (where my reading challenge is 50 books for the year. It’s going to count picture books, so I’m pretty sure I’ll blow this goal out of the water.)
  4. Participate in another 5k.
  5. Finish out our new master bedroom.
  6. Buy our home (which we’ve been renting for years.)

My next steps for moving forward with my GN will involve finishing my plot notecards. I hope to have those done in the next week. After that, I will be getting some feedback from friends on how the story progresses and see if any major plot points need adjusting before I progress with the story.

As for the practice comic, the next step will be finishing my thumbnails by the end of this month and beginning to revise where necessary. I will plan to check back in at the end of the month with an update on my progress! I will need to keep on track if I am to finish this on schedule.

The topic of schedules reminds me that I am looking into becoming a bullet journalist. I love lists, and have always loved journaling, but found that writing everything out in my journals took too much time out of my evening after I had children. I think I might try out a bullet journal and see if I can figure out a way to make it function for me. So much more effective than my piles of loose note pad pages that I carry around with my notes on them. I did start using one notebook just for story ideas last month and have been super pleased to have that all in one spot. Now I can do that for my whole life (in theory)!


I am moving into 2020 with hope and expectations for a great year. I hope you all take some time to make goals for yourself as well! And if you feel as though you’ve botched your goals or been a failure at any point during the year, just dust yourself off and try again.

I would love to hear from fellow writers/artists with big goals for 2020. Let’s encourage each other and keep one another accountable! Also, hit me up if you bullet journal and know how to make it effective. Beautiful pages are great and all, but I need functionality.

Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!

I started a post on December 20th, and here I am finally getting something posted. The holidays are behind us, and although we had a good Christmas and New Year celebrations, it has also been a rough time as we dealt with an ongoing illness with my youngest son. Three trips to the doctor later, we were admitted to Nationwide Children’s Hospital with a diagnosis of pneumonia. We spent the weekend in the hospital watching him slowly improve and we got to come home for New Year’s Eve. He is definitely doing much better now!

As many people do, I have been looking to the new year and wondering what it will have in store, as well as reflecting on 2018. This past year was a great year of firsts for my illustration journey. I began this blog, I started my Instagram account, I got involved with SCBWI and the kidlitart chat community on Twitter, I even travelled to Los Angeles to the SCBWI summer conference! I produced dozens of illustrations throughout the year, made lots of new friends, and felt my confidence in my abilities increase.

In 2019, I plan to get back swing of doing colour collective illustrations at least 2x per month, as well as get a few sample pages for a book dummy complete. My biggest step forward that I’m going to work on is mailing out postcards. For real, guys, postcards are going out this year. With a less definite goal in mind, I’m also going to be giving some use to some Christmas gifts I received: some watercolors and a watercolor sketchbook! I have missed traditional media and look forward to getting familiar with a new medium.

What this means for me is compiling my mailing list! I am going to try to go back to what Giuseppe Castellano suggested: add three names to your list per week. We will see how many I can come up with.

The near year holds a lot of opportunities for us all! What are some attainable goals you have for yourself? Don’t be afraid to dream big!

Artist Postcards

Hello, friends! It’s been busy these past few weeks, and I finally have a moment to catch my breath. I just finished laying out a booklet celebrating the work of a Dayton, Ohio-area DJ who has now been in the radio business for 50 years! I volunteer design services for his current radio station on occasion, but this project was the most involved piece I have worked on for them. It is a relief to have it finished!

With my plate slightly more clear for the time being, I can turn my focus back to building my portfolio and preparing for the SCBWI Annual Summer Conference in August. My mini assignments from Guiseppe are coming along nicely. I have 6 art directors on my contact spreadsheet and I have begun to make more changes to the website, beginning with the actual web address. No longer am I encumbered by the WordPress branding! It feels more official this way.


I’ve been giving some thought to postcards lately. Illustrators generally send out postcards showcasing their work to publishers around May and September: the peak hiring times for the year. With the first big round of mailing coming up, my #kidlitart chat friends on Twitter spent last Thursday sharing postcard designs, postcards in process, and asking/answering questions about mailing them out.

I won’t be ready to send out cards in May, but I plan to design my postcards and have them printed by the end of July so I can take them with me to the SCBWI conference in Los Angeles this August. Having them there with me will allow me to hand them out to fellow illustrators with whom I want to keep in contact as well as potential agents, editors, and art directors. Also, since I will have them ready by then, I will plan to send my first mailing in September of this year!

A quick side note about #kidlitart chat: I am so glad to have found these people. The information I have gotten has been very helpful, and they really made me feel welcome from day one. I speak up more now than I did at first, but no one ever made me feel like an outsider. I’m looking forward to meeting some of them face-to-face at the SCBWI conference!

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!

Happy Birthday.

I turned 28 this week. It is not a particularly remarkable age, and my birthday was not a particularly remarkable day. Highlights included birthday breakfast with the ladies at work and dinner out with my husband that night. (I love food.) Lowlights included a baby diaper blowout in the wee hours of the morning and forgetting to leave an ice scraper with my husband who then had to take our son to the eye doctor in the car that he scraped clean of snow and ice with his bare hands. (Side note: it is the end of March and it is still not done being winter yet! So over it.)

I’ve never thought of myself as someone who is opposed to getting older. It is the progression of life, and I have always tried to embrace the changes it brought. Yes, even when family genetics blessed me with my first gray hair before I graduated high school. As more have come in over the years, I have been keeping my fingers crossed that I’ll develop some sweet gray streaks at my temples. That is where most of them have come in, but it’s honestly more like this:

For some reason, though, thirty has become increasingly intimidating. It’s like taking a ramp with a sled. Approaching the ramp is fun and exciting, but it’s that last little stretch where the ramp actually starts and you are about to leave the earth when your brain starts sending out alarms. These last two years of my twenties are like that ramp, lifting me off into full-blown adulthood. Not that I don’t think I’m an adult now, but I feel that there’s greater pressure associated with being in your thirties. When I hear that someone is “in their twenties,” I usually picture someone young, maybe inexperienced, finding their way into adulthood. Mistakes happen because you’re still learning and that’s ok! If someone is successful, it’s impressive because “they’re only in their twenties!” “In their 30’s,” on the other hand, brings to my mind images of established professionals, confident in themselves and their careers, managing households and enjoying life like they have themselves together. The bulk of my children’s childhood memories will be while I’m in my 30’s, and I want to be remembered as that strong, confident, organized person enjoying life that I picture in my head.

The good news is, I feel like I’m on my way there. I definitely don’t have it all together, but I am becoming more confident in myself and pursuing my dreams more actively than I ever have. Even if my house isn’t always clean and my career isn’t established, I think I’ll be able to be happy and confident in who I am, and that is memory of me I think will matter most.

The Beginning: Part I

As those who follow my twitter already know, I am terrifically excited to share that I have officially scheduled a video chat portfolio review with Guiseppe Castellano, an art director and illustrator with years of experience!

I began typing this post to talk about how I found the opportunity and more about the review in general, but in doing so I found myself starting at the beginning of how I got to where I am at now. It seemed difficult to separate the two topics, but it was too much for one post. So, welcome to The Beginning: Part I!


Almost a year ago, when I first made the decision to start acting on my desire to illustrate professionally, I decided to write down a plan. Though it was not public, it was something concrete I could review to hold myself accountable. It currently reads as follows:

END GOAL: finished portfolio submitted to publishers/companies/agents by May 2018

What I’ll need:

  • Website of work
  • Physical portfolio
  • PDF portfolio
  • Artist card (optional)

10-15 solid illustrations

  • 3 character designs
  • 6 color full page designs
  • 3 b&w full page designs
  • 1 set of sequential drawings (2-3)

I had a plan in place, but I still wanted to be better educated in the ways of the industry before diving in. Education for this busy professional came in the form of podcasts. There are parts of my day job that allow me to listen to music while working, so listening to podcasts instead allowed me to learn more while still getting things done!

My first find was Chris Oatley’s Artcast. It had great reviews, so I gave it a shot. I was hooked right away! I would get so excited about what I was hearing that I would spend the better part of my lunch break excitedly jabbering to my husband about “this guy in my podcast who” <insert awesome thing here>. This podcast was so motivating to me. Listening to artist after artist tell their story made me realize that these people (for the most part) were not just blessed by God with talent that would drop you to your knees. They set a goal for themselves and worked hard. They tried again and again, even after being denied. I began to believe that although the industry is fiercely competitive, with the right combination of skill, persistence, and people skills, you can make a career out of doing what you love!

Through the Artcast, I discovered Stories Unbound, a children’s literature-specific podcast hosted by Shawna JC Tenney. Since illustrating children’s books plays a huge part of where I see myself in the future, I began to spend my time listening to Shawna and her varying co-hosts interview artists, authors, and editors. I would take note of the names I was hearing so I could look them up later, trying to learn who’s-who in the #kidlit world and expose myself to established, successful artists. I have gone through all of the episodes that exist, but will probably go back through them over time. I feel like listening to her podcasts makes me all the more excited, and even somewhat prepared, for the road ahead of me.

Pregnancy and several months of adjusting to life with two kids meant I pushed my efforts to the back burner for a while last year. Even so, I think I may be able to achieve my goal by the end of May this year! That being said, my goal may change in about a month. My upcoming portfolio review has the possibility (and probability) of changing what I think is necessary for me to have in my portfolio as I begin. More on that in The Beginning: Part II!