Here’s an illustration for Hart McLeod for a third grade textbook. It goes along with a poem where the vacuum ate the cat.

Here’s an illustration for Hart McLeod for a third grade textbook. It goes along with a poem where the vacuum ate the cat.

Here’s an image illustrating some instructions on how to make a pop-up greeting card. Created for Hart McLeod for a third grade textbook.

Here is my entry for the Tomie dePaola Illustration Award given by the SCBWI. The prize is a trip to New York to attend the SCBWI winter conference, lunch with Tomie dePaola (he’s been an illustrator for over 40 years and illustrated nearly 250 books), and some sort of little award presentation.
The prompt was:
Visual sequence is key to conveying feeling, action, storyline, interest and character, especially in children’s book illustration. One of the hardest things to do is to know your character so well—what he, she, or it looks like, how they move, how they project emotion, and at the same time to make the character immediately recognizable and consistent —all without resorting to a generic depiction, but making sure your character has charm, individuality and special qualities that make young readers fall in love with them. All of this is the same whether your character is human, animal, and yes, even vegetable! (Maybe inanimate as well) The task is to create a six-panel sequence that has a beginning, middle and an end that is obvious, featuring a character of your own invention. It can be funny, sad, dramatic or ordinary, but interesting and with lots of invention and finesse.
So, this piece was designed to be a bit of a sampler. It has close views and distant views, a variety of expressions, a couple of challenging poses, a consistently drawn character (I hope!), and a bit of humor in an otherwise ordinary daily routine.
The girl is biracial because biracial children are under-represented in children’s literature and it allowed me to have her really fighting with her hair in panel 3. Two birds, one stone.
The monster is there because I had some empty space in the panels and it added humor and complexity. And I was a little bored. Hopefully, though the series has a clear conclusion, you’re still left wondering, just a little, what’s the deal with the monster?
This is merely round 1 of a two-part contest. The second part won’t be announced until the 10 finalists are chosen. Wish me luck!
Update:
I didn’t get into the semi-finals, which is disappointing. They showed the semi-final entries, and I think most of them were better than most of the ones for last year’s prompt. So, congrats to everyone who entered and made it into the second round!
For future reference:
I think this competition is looking for illustrations targeting the preschool age range and he likes humorous, whimsical illustrations. I think I should have entered a reformatted version of this or a colored, more finished version of this and I might have done better.
Just a quick, sketchy thing…




A few days ago I was in the mood to take requests. Elaethyra asked for a mouse sitting on a mushroom using another mushroom as an umbrella. Well, the rainy April weather’s been particularly inspiring for that sort of piece, so here you go.

I was playing with Kyle’s Real Watercolor brushes, which are rather impressive Photoshop brushes.
Here are some photos of some sunflower seedlings I took just before I planted them last week.

I got this shot the other day when I was playing with macro photography with my reversing ring on my Nikon with a 18-55mm lens. I manually held the aperture open about halfway with a piece of cardstock.
Actually, it’s a composite of two shots because the focal area is ridiculously short. Most of it is one shot but that area right at the bottom of the pistil at the junction of the petals is the second shot.
This little flower is actually a pretty little weed in my yard. I’m not sure what they’re called my husband’s cousin says they’re a type or veronica (also called speedwell). I’ve got tons of them. They’re so little, though, you hardly even notice them at all.
Here’s a lousy, over-exposed shot that’ll work for a size reference. The coin is a dime.
