Another colour_collective. This time they chose a colour that I use all the time. This dark blue features heavily in my work. Trying to decide what to do felt odd because I've never noticed how much I use it before. To do something specifically with this colour felt like pressure had been added. Anyway, I like the beaver.
Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birds. Show all posts
Friday, 19 March 2021
Book Nook Blue
Another colour_collective. This time they chose a colour that I use all the time. This dark blue features heavily in my work. Trying to decide what to do felt odd because I've never noticed how much I use it before. To do something specifically with this colour felt like pressure had been added. Anyway, I like the beaver.
Friday, 26 October 2018
Stranger by the Sea
Here's my entry for the Observer/Cape/Comica graphic short story prize 2018.
It was shortlisted and is on display at Orbital Comics until November 18.
Labels:
birds,
comics,
friendship,
illustration,
seagulls
Thursday, 1 March 2018
Pigeon P.I. paperback publishes
My second picture book Pigeon P.I. is published in paperback today. Hooray!
Complete with a snazzy new blue cover, the lovely people at Andersen Press have managed to cram all the nice little details from the hardback, including the secret cover underneath the hardback dust jacket, into the paperback.
Available from all lovely bookshops today!
And to celebrate there are now some pigeon based prints in my SHOP.
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TOTES! |
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And prints! |
Sunday, 26 February 2017
Pigeon P.I. cover
My second picture book is publishing this week so here's a post about how the front cover was made. Don't worry, I've spared you the gazillion colour choice screenshots I took!
Back covers are one of my favourite parts of a book. They have all the fun of the front cover with none of the responsibility. I usually leave the back cover until the very end and so far they've always been great fun to do.
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The back cover means more room for silly jokes and shenanigans. |
For me, the front cover is the hardest part of any book I make because it's the first thing that people see. It has to invite readers in and tell them a little bit about what they'll get inside but not everything. You want people to want to pick it up, to be able to see it across a room and equally to be able to read it when it's tiny on their computer screen. This is probably the part of the book that my art director and I spend most time discussing, sending ideas back and forth, usually over a period of a few days, refining as we go.
This was an early idea we had but it never made it any further. We wanted to make sure we introduced both Murray and Vee (pigeon and canary respectively) and also had a little bit of a narrative. I particularly liked how Vee's shadow put her on the poster beside Murray, foreshadowing things to come. I forget why we chose not to use it, but I still like it.
Here are some sketch ideas. I tend to send every little doodle. I find that drawings I'm not sure about can often spark ideas in other people and we can end up using them for something somewhere.
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This was the sketch we thought worked best as an idea.
This image made its way onto the case cover beneath the dust jacket.
We tweaked the image a few more times to make it into this. We wanted to keep the noir feel and the implication of danger whilst showing through Vee that this would also be a really fun, silly book too.
The hardest part of this cover was the font. Compared to Life Is Magic this looked like quite a simple book lettering-wise. But with five separate character fonts, the background posters and adverts plus my simple* endpapers, there ended up being a lot more.
(*My endpapers were simple. I wrote this in an email to my editor. I forget how simple they were, but at some point I had a great idea which turned out beautifully and was by no means simple after all.)
Anyway, the cover went through several rounds of hand-lettering. I do a lot of typography for someone who is still very much learning as I go, so my way in is a little like that part in The Shining where Jack Nicholson is typing 'All work and no play make Jack a dull boy' over and over. Like so...
Once I see something I like I'll do my best to refine it. We actually settled on a font, a perfectly nice one, but decided it wasn't strong enough.
Back to the drawing board one more time and we cracked it. I'm so glad we re-did it. The final lettering turned out really nicely, especially with the shiny gold foil finish.
So shiny!
Pigeon P.I. publishes on March 2nd. |
Monday, 20 February 2017
Making Pigeon P.I.
Since my second picture book Pigeon P.I. is published in but two weeks, I thought I'd put together a little how-it-was-made.
Pigeon P.I. started life as a flash of inspiration. I was working on ideas for my second book and I already had a pretty good one. I wasn't sure if it was THE idea but I liked it. With about a week to go before my meeting at Andersen Press I had an idea I was far more excited about: I was going to write a film noir picture book and call it Pigeon P.I. It sounds so simple when you say it out loud but ideas are like that, they're exciting and instant. It takes a lot of work to make them into something more.
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Is it a mystery? The words 'private investigator' should've been my first clue. |
I started to draw using Humphrey Bogart as inspiration for Murray, my pigeon (apologies to Mr. Bogart)
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The first Murray. Sadly, 'you filthy corn husk' didn't make it in. |
Faye Dunaway from 'Bonnie and Clyde' helped inspire my canary Vee. Apologies to Ms. Dunaway but I wanted someone who looked great in hats and there's no denying that she does.
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First sketch of Vee |
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One of many test drawings of Vee |
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The final Vee |
I didn't have a story yet but I had most of the characters and a world I wanted to build. Most importantly I had an idea I was passionate about. It was THE idea. Here's some of the sketches I prepared for my meeting.
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I make a lot of notes. |
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This neon colour test didn't make it in but I still like it. |
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I was watching Chinatown at this point.![]() From the final book. |
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A little joke about a spin-off series |
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Take a peek under the dust jacket to meet Penguin P.I. |
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First sketch of the police, who nearly didn't make it when my first draft came in at 50 pages |
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Sadly the night watch don't feature. They're biding their time. |
Luckily, the good folks at Andersen Press liked this idea too and we spent our meeting discussing character motivations and all things noir. With all sorts of wisdom imparted, off I went to sit with my sketchbook to see if these characters really had a story to tell. It's funny to look back and see how many stages a book goes through when you write it.
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This pie-as-an-escape plan is one of my favourite drawings that never went anywhere |
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Only I could think a pile of abandoned newspaper is a 'filing system' |
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Murray and his filing system |
I'm pretty excited about the way this book turned out, it's very different to Life Is Magic but I think they've got some things in common, namely an excess of hand-lettering and background characters.
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A note to myself |
What I wanted to create was a satisfying mystery in picture book form, to pay homage to the detective books I've loved all my life but to make sure that I was writing it for a picture book audience, that this was a satisfying world and story in itself and not just a parody of something I loved. I hope I've managed to do that.
Tuesday, 29 November 2016
Cut out conga
Some of those clever Twitter peeps are doing a #cut_out_conga and I was asked to join in. Each participant adds a cut out and posts it along to a new illustrator. The incredible Nikki Dyson posted them on to me. It was a lot of fun to do as I very rarely paint anything so it was nice to dust off my watercolours. We're talking serious dust, I've had the same set since high school.
Here's my cut out in progress.
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sketch |
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outline. I'm a coloured pencil girl. |
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painting |
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cut out |
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The gang altogether and posted on to Bethany Christou |
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