Let’s Learn About Hispanic Heritage

Interior Illustration 8 of 18
A couple performing a Mexican folk dance.

These two dancers are performing the traditional Mexican Hat Dance. It is Mexico’s national dance and is often performed during Cinco de Mayo celebrations. Again, this is a very small illustration. That’s why the faces are mostly featureless.

Let’s Learn About Hispanic Heritage

Interior Illustration 7 of 18
A couple salsa dancing surrounded with music notes.

Salsa dancing is a very Latin American tradition. This illustration is actually very small on the page, so that’s why the dancers are mostly faceless.

Let’s Learn About Hispanic Heritage

Interior Illustration 6 of 18
Potato chips spilling from a bag, cardboard dish of French fries, and two potatoes.

Potatoes are a Latin American food. They originated in the Andes Mountains of Peru. Here’s potatoes, fries, and potato chips.

Let’s Learn About Hispanic Heritage

Interior Illustration 5 of 18
A bowl of tortilla chips, bowl of guacamole, and half an avocado.

Here’s another example of a Latin American food for this book project. Chips and guacamole with a half avocado.

Let’s Learn About Hispanic Heritage

Interior Illustration 4 of 18
A cocoa pod, several cocoa beans, and a chocolate bar.

A chocolate bar next to some cocoa beans and a cocoa pod. I hadn’t realized how big these things were until I looked them up. This illustration appears in the book next to a paragraph about chocolate being an example of a food grown in Latin America.

Let’s Learn About Hispanic Heritage

Interior Illustration 3 of 18
A broken pinata being hit by a stick and spilling candies.

To get the full effect on this one, imagine it is hanging from one of the letters in the page header. It was tied, if I remember right, to the bottom of an “E”. There are three different depictions of pinatas in this book, all of them star-shaped.

Let’s Learn About Hispanic Heritage

Interior Illustration 2 of 18
A headshot of a boy smiling.

This one is a very simple, and it was very small on the page. Just a smiling boy.

Let’s Learn About Hispanic Heritage

Interior Illustration 1 of 18
Two kids holding a banner reading: ¡HURRA POR LA HERENCIA HISPANA!

Here’s the first interior illustration for Positive Promotion’s Hispanic Heritage book. The original art specs called for this illustration to read “Hurray for Hispanic Heritage” in English, which was also the header for this page. I thought that seemed a little redundant and missed a good opportunity to show some Spanish language in an otherwise completely English manuscript. It seemed appropriate given the subject.

Since I don’t speak Spanish, I used Google Translate to find the equivalent phrase in Spanish and gave the client the option to have me use that phrase instead. To be safe, I also warned the client to double-check whether my translation was correct, but I think it’s right. They didn’t correct me, anyway. 🤞

Let’s Learn About Hispanic Heritage

Cover Art
A cover for a children's workbook about Hispanic Heritage.  The title reads, "Let's Learn About Hispanic Heritage," and is located in a circle at the center.  In the top left corner is a scene of three children, one of which is blindfolded and trying to hit a star-shaped pinata with a bat.  In the top right is a cartoon drawing of the Earth as seen from space, with the Americas turned to the viewer.  Along the bottom is a scene depicting a Cinco de Mayo celebration.  It includes traditional dancers (3 women), A man grilling and making tacos, 2 kids eating tacos, and two smiling children in the foreground. In the background there is a couple walking in front of some shops along the street.  The dancers are lined up in front of a sidewalk with palm trees behind them.

I completed an illustration project for Positive Promotions. I provided illustrations for a children’s workbook about Hispanic Heritage. It’s the sort of thing that might be used in an elementary school for Hispanic Heritage Month or a Spanish language class. This isn’t the final cover, but a mockup based on the draft layout with my illustrations inserted.

Next, I’ll post the line drawings for the interior pages.

Hidden Picture – River Bank

I recently completed a project for Utah-based Fish for Garbage, a nonprofit organization that mobilizes communities through waterway cleanups and watershed education. They commissioned me to create a series of illustrations for a children’s activity book.

This image is the second of two hidden picture puzzles. I saved this one until last because it’s my favorite. That’s the same duck from several pages ago. Having him visible both above and below the waterline really sold the idea that he was floating on the water and what was underneath was the underwater view. And just look at those duck feet! So cute!

I’m really not an expert at drawing fish, but I work from references and do my best. The client said the one brown trout I drew had a longer snout than the other, which is actually called a kype and is sought after by fishermen. I don’t really know enough about them to do that intentionally, but I’m so glad it turned out to be a feature and not a bug. Serendipity.

Can you find all 8 items? There’s a cigarette butt, a tin can, a plastic spoon, a plastic drinking straw, a deflated balloon, a deflated inner tube, a plastic bag, and a flip-flop sandal. The client said they find a surprising number of uninflated inner tubes at their cleanup events.

I will say that, between this one and the previous illustration, I spent SO much time drawing little circles for all that gravel. But it was worth it!

A hidden picture puzzle scene showing both underwater and above water views of a river bank.