Showing posts with label middle grade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label middle grade. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

AL Demo - stage two

Whew. Well, got to stage two during the demo at the LI Art League--answered loads of interesting questions about process and materials and also WHERE to purchase materials since Long Island has but ONE art supply store--thankfully it's DickBlick. I'm like a bull in a China factory when I see that place--must arrive with strict list!


Friday, August 29, 2014

Demo during reception, demo during reception (now ten five times, fast!)

I'm preparing to give a demo at the Art long Long Island and picked out this sketch to be the one I'll transfer to canvas and paint in oil. I'll be there for several hours, so we'll see just how far I can take it since I'll be starting with the bare bones of a drawing on canvas.


The exhibit + demos
September 6
Art League Long Island

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Parse's Process

I'm a fan of audio books and fell under the trance Davina Porter's voice as she spun me through the story of Splendors and Glooms by Laura Amy Schlitz.


It's important for me to keep all sketches for individual projects in one place. When they don't all fit on a large sheet of paper, gathering them on a disk shape gives me a quick sense of what to pluck out of the lines.




I knew I wanted the boy to clutch his marionette. As I listened to the story I felt them an inseparable team-- even if one was an inanimate object. A cleaned up sketch told me more about the character of Parse and I thought of my little neighbor whose features and size were just right for the character. 



With a little coaxing my neighbor jumped into the role, suspenders and all. 

I used transparency paper to work out values. The advantage of good tracing paper (not the stuff that wrinkles while working) is that it's easy to erase and lines can be shifted as you go along.



I made more adjustments when transferring the image to canvas then scanned it to create a color study. I knew the scene was going to be dark, so the addition of cooler colors helped limit the danger of the characters disappearing into the background.



With the drawing on canvas, I referenced my value sketch to put down a first layer of water-miscible oil using Winsor & Newton olive green.



Here is the final painting of Parsefall clutching Clara.



Wednesday, June 11, 2014

Carriage Crime


I doodled about with this idea of scoundrel recognition. What would you do in the same carriage car with a recognized felon?



I thought a set of wolves in one of those never-ending forests might be necessary. (You can tell I'm still thinking about the Wolves of Willoughby Chase, yes?)



But then a suggestion was made. "Add me as witness," said the seagull.


And so, I did. He's getting a bit more revision in paint, but this gives you the idea.



An early stage of the painting with some reference.

the final.



Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Remember the Child Catcher?

I only felt a little better about this character when I discovered that Roald Dahl was his creator. He was a film addition to the Ian Fleming book Chitty Chitty Bang Bang, and he terrified me. It wasn't just the elongated nose and weedy hair. It was his whole unseemly being--no child should be near the fellow. He'd stop me breathing, and I'd bury my head in my hands.


Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Piccadilly Peril

  
Inspired by The Enola Holmes Mystery series by Nancy Springer,  I imagined the character of the Lady Blanchfleur del Campo into more contemporary times. The original character disappears into the tunnels of the Baker St. Station, but isn't the word Piccadilly just too fun to say?


In an early sketch I'd tangled Lady Blanchfleur's hair with a partial map of the London Underground.

   

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

30 Shrieks sketch

What do you do when your oh-so-warm, nourishing library begins to alter itself?







This is an idea I've been playing with for a while - the loss of local libraries as centers of knowledge and community. Some have adapted, many are just disappearing...

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

I'm a HUGE fan of Joan Aiken's work. A scene from her book The Wolves of Willoughby Chase was trapped in my head when I began sketches to what eventually became Hot Air.


All of the adult characters in this story had admirable quirks, and I had a solid idea of what one of these characters looked like.

Friday, January 10, 2014

Propel

More illustrations for 'Propel'


When I decided to add drawings into the mix I wanted to use paper that was neither slick nor choppy and remembered I'd saved several sheets of Fabriano that sadly, so, so sadly, is no longer made. I'm never sure why manufacturers decide to nix good products--that goes for foods too.



Monday, July 1, 2013

Propel drawings

These were thumbnail drawings I expanded on as they appeared to have good ol' graphite drawing potential





This was a cover idea for Propel and has a touch of sepia added to the background
Another thought for Propel

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Propel

The original painting I'd done of this character for Propel, my thesis work, wasn't as grounded as I liked. I reworked it keeping in mind that it might be used a cover image and not just the first page in the book. This meant it needed to be simple and clear.


After I finished it up last night, I couldn't bring myself to scoop up excess paint and make a happy gray out of it, so my morning miniature happened quickly late evening.

Monique and the Cell--10min


Wednesday, January 23, 2013

A Stranger at the Door

In continuation of hero saves little girl and goes off in search of safe place theme:

This one went through a million revisions and is less elaborate than originally planned. Even though we remind ourselves that simplicity is key, we (I) can forget it in a heartbeat.

Saturday, January 5, 2013

There is more sky in the original which works for text space, but I've cropped it here from the top because I like the impact created by a horizontal format.


Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Steampunk

The peculiar storm of snow and ice we're having tonight, immediately after the hurricane, has left many trekking through all sorts of waters and asking all sorts of questions. I'm hoping things will pan out for everyone soon enough.

The Steampunk illustrations I'm working on focus on humans risking environment for profit. After chemical red sludge moves through villages and rivers, the steampunk traveler and her small companion, investigate the aftermath.


Wednesday, October 10, 2012

Steampunk cover from behind

I came into the studio the other morning and was surprised to see how clear the 
image was when looking at the canvas from behind.


This is the illustration with a little more paint and right way round. This still has many more hours needed to complete, but you're beginning to get the idea?



Thursday, September 27, 2012

Steampunk

 Slightly more refined drawing of previous ideas--still playing with the placement of planes
I've already begun the grisaille and have a day of two before I'll have to stop tinkering with details.


Friday, September 21, 2012

Steampunk

I'm having trouble with Blogger not allowing me to move text or images and nearly gave up on it--trying again.  Sorry for delay in between postings.


Working with sketches to drawing to changes on canvas for beginning of thesis work: 






Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Cirque Mardu

I'd been reading about life under the Big Top and the daily routine of some of its kids--sounded dreamy, no matter the demands. I'd always wanted to join the circus--maybe they'll take me on as a promising new act? My daughter Dunia and her friend Margo spent the evening posing for me for this one - there's no end to the faces those two are capable of pulling.


Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Sketches for 8.5: a Steampunk Anthology


 After deciding on characters and composition it's amusing to go back and look at some initial thoughts:



Sunday, November 27, 2011

Steampunk Cornelius

Two images going into 8: A Steampunk Anthology

When young Cornelius looses his parents he begins a quest to find there whereabouts. But has he entered a maze without end?