Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

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Flora

January 30, 2014

I am super crazy happy excited for my friend Molly Schaar Idle, who just won a Caldecott Honor, for her book Flora and the Flamingo!!!

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You can read all about it at this link here. Then go out and buy all of her books.

I turned to Molly for help last year when I was making a poster for a show called Plastic Things and Butterfly Wings, and despite being a very busy and high demand illustrator, she still took the time to give me a ton of great advice, which really helped me to improve the poster. I wrote all about it in this previous blog post.

I met Molly in college when I joined up with her and several other talented folks to try to start an animation company. The company didn’t last, but it was a great experience, and the friendships I made there (which also include artists Jessica Hickman, Michael Petry, and Molly’s husband Steve) are still going strong after some 15+ years.

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Creative Cafe

January 24, 2014

Sometime last year my husband and I decided to make a point of hanging out on the couch together for a couple hours every Sunday morning. We drink (the good) coffee and either read to each other, work on a project together, or just hang out near each other while working on our own projects separately. We call it Creative Cafe, and yeah it sounds kinda dorky but deep down you know it’s cool.

For the past few weeks my Creative Cafe project has been to do these funny caricatures of Richard in pen and Tombow markers. Here is the one I did last Sunday.

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This one is my favorite so far because of how the hands turned out. I was having a real hard time at first getting them right — partly because I was sitting so close to him that it distorted the angle, and also because I couldn’t decide whether to make the size of his hands match his little body, or his giant head. Anyway, after a few do-overs and lots of erasing I finally came up with something I liked.

By the way, our back wall is not actually pink. I just colored it that way to make his face pop.

By the way, part 2, I used that very iPad to take the photo of the sketch posted here. I am pretty much done with scanners. The iPad takes better pictures than any scanner or digital camera I ever had.

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Thievery

July 27, 2013

For inspirational books geared toward creatives: Steal Like an Artist is the best one of all.

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It’s basically a creative manifesto that every artist/ writer/ musician/ performer/ whatever needs to read because every single word in it is true.

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It’s also short and fun and has lots of little visual things, so it’s great for us ADD types.

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The author, Austin Kleon, also did a Ted Talk that gives a general overview of the ideas he presents in the book. Just watch it, okay? It’s only eleven minutes.

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NYC circa 1999

July 8, 2013

As promised, here are some cringe-worthy sketches from my Fall of 1999 sketchbook. These are all from the first time I ever visited New York City. I was 22 years old, an art student at ASU, and had been carrying a sketchbook for less than a year. I was traveling with my friends Satin and Kevin. We only had 24 hours in the city and were determined to cram every single NYC experience into that time.

Now it’s time to play… “What the heck is that???”

Ah, the perfunctory interior airplane sketch. The first of many that I would do over the years. I still have a hell of a time getting those seats right. I see that I’ve made sure to note that “Cookies Fortune” was the inflight movie. Obviously I felt that was an important detail and feared that the image I drew on the video screen would not make this clear.

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Next up we’ve got another scene from inside the plane. What, this doesn’t look like the inside of an airplane to you? Please note the carefully rendered tray tables on the right. That heap of scribbles in the middle is my college pal Satin sleeping under a blanket. And to help capture the essence of the moment, I’ve skillfully added some “ZZZ” above what is quite clearly the top of her head peeking out of the blanket. IMG_0315

Okay now it is approximately 11:50 PM on Friday night. We have arrived in New York and are at the rental car place where we’ve just learned that we are 3 years shy of being able to legally rent a car. Which means that we have no way of getting to the hotel we had reserved in New Jersey.

That big scribble on the left is Satin. I was a big fan of the cross-out method in the early days. My pre-2K sketchbooks are full of X-heads. In the middle is Kevin at the counter talking to the Hertz employee. And over on the right side of the page we’ve got Satin using an ancient relic we called a “phone booth”.

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Eventually we got a cab and wound up at a no-tell motel in Queens somewhere around 2 AM. We had to BEG the manager to let us rent a room for the entire night because this was normally a rent by the hour type of establishment. We crashed out for a few hours, then took another cab to Manhattan. When the driver asked us where, specifically, in Manhattan we wanted to go we just shrugged and said, “wherever.”

So he dropped us at the Empire State Building. We went to the top and I sketched pigeons while Kevin took pics with his new camera and chatted up the ladies.

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Then we went to Central Park where we said, “I can’t believe we’re in New York” over and over again. As you can see, the sketch below is something of a montage of the Central Park experience. We’ve got Kev using one of those new-fangled cell phones at the top, a homeless person on a bench in the middle, and some light reflecting on the pond in the lower left there.

Actually, that was the first time I had ever (somewhat) successfully rendered the surface of water. Also, according to my notes at the bottom, the quote of the day was when Satin pondered, “I wonder if there is such a thing as a genius duck.”

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Here is another scene from Central Park. A mom and some kids yelling at the (possibly) genius ducks. Across the pond we’ve got some painstakingly rendered foliage.
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From there we ventured into the subway. Here is Satin on the subway platform singing “On broadway!” It’s hard to tell from my sketch whether she is crouching, or sitting, or if her legs are just broken.
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Next stop, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, where I was way too busy talking Satin and Kev’s heads off about 19th century European paintings to do any sketching.

(Side note: that crash course in art history later proved useful when Kevin used his new found knowledge to impress a woman he met on the plane ride home. You’re welcome Kev.)

After the Met closed we found this cool-looking restaurant called “Jekyll and Hyde.” We decided to go because we like monsters. And also because we were starving and exhausted. I did this sketch of the building as we waited in line to get in. What? This doesn’t look like a building to you? Come on people, use your imagination.

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Here’s my attempt at sketching the interior of the restaurant. It had this awesome haunted house theme and I really wanted to capture all the cool details. I may have overdone it just a tad. When I showed this sketch to Richard the other day he said, “Oh my god.” As in “oh my god, my eyes, they’ve been over-loaded, they cannot take in all this information at once, remove this from my view.”

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Here is another attempt. This place was so neat I really wanted to remember it. And I totally do. That’s one of the reasons sketching is better than photos. It really forces you to take time to look at things and notice details. So even though I was unable to convey the awesomeness of this place through my sketch, the act of sketching it imprinted those details into my memory. And when I look at this scribbly mess I can remember everything.

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Check out these pics on the restaurant’s website to see what it’s really like.

After dinner we hung out at a bar in Times Square for a while, then headed downtown. We had a bit of a snafu with the subway, hence Satin’s confusion re: the E train.

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Somehow we managed to get down to Battery Park and then took a midnight ride on the Staten Island Ferry, where I did this final sketch. Hey check out the reflection on the water. Look familiar? I learned how to do that at Central Park.

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When the ferry landed in Staten Island we got off, then turned around and got right back on. The three of us stood at the front of the boat as it skimmed across the water toward Manhattan. I can still remember the cold October air on our faces, the city lights twinkling as we approached, and Satin calling out “I’m flying Jack, I’m flying” as our amazing 24-hour adventure came to a close.

Epilogue: A few months later Kevin’s nifty new camera–which contained ALL the pictures from our trip–was stolen. Which leads me to reason #2 of why sketches are better than pictures. Without my sketchbook, there would be no evidence of the trip at all. Without my sketchbook I would have completely forgotten about the eyes that moved behind the portrait at Jekyll and Hyde’s, and the reflections on the pond at Central Park, and the E train, and the pigeons and the genius duck. All the details of one of the greatest days of my life would have eventually disappeared, and I would have never EVER remembered that Cookies Fortune was the movie on the plane. And that would have been a damn shame.

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Pub Sketchin’

April 9, 2013

I’m not a big fan of bars – the noise, the crowds, the socializing – that’s not for me. Unless I can sketch people without being noticed, in which case, don’t worry about me, I’m fine, go about your business. Every once in a while the stars will align and I will be at a bar where they have those little cardboard coaster things, and one side will be blank.

Those things are perfect for sketching – small enough to draw on without anyone noticing, but big enough that one mistake won’t totally ruin it (as is generally the case with the back side of a business card). And if they are a square that makes you think a little differently when making a composition, because most  sketchbooks and drawing papers are rectangle shaped.

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The best part is that because they are this little throwaway thing, you have this freedom to just draw and not worry about trying to make it good. With a sketchbook I sometimes get intimidated by that perfect blank page – a whole world of amazing possibilities that I am about to destroy when I make my first mark. But here it’s just the coaster and a ballpoint pen. There’s no sweating the small stuff. Or the big stuff. Or any of the stuff. Just start drawing and see what appears. I don’t know why, but it’s so much more fun.

Maybe if those coasters were available everywhere they would lose their magic. But since they’re so rare, they’re like this awesome gift. Next time you’re at the bar and you see one of these coasters, don’t waste the opportunity. Draw on it. Or save it for me.