The Wonder At The Well

Illustrations for Redemption Press
1 of 18

I recently finished a series of illustrations for a book titled The Wonder At The Well by Vicky Wedel for Redemption Press. By the publisher’s name, you can guess this is a story for the religious market. It tells the biblical story of the Samaritan woman who met Jesus at the well and was so moved by what He said that she immediately went to bring most of her village to come listen to and learn from Him.

Nothing against the story, but it’s not the most visually interesting tale. It’s basically just people talking in every panel. Talking about something that a Christian audience would find very important and inspiring, of course. But still just talking.

However, there was one interesting challenge. I’m sure you’re all aware of the controversy about how to best depict Jesus in art today. Historically, most cultures generally depicted Him as looking like themselves. So, in Asia, He looked Asian. In Africa, He looked black. And in America, He’s usually depicted as white. That’s not necessarily a problem except that, unfortunately, at least in the US, there’s been a lot of White Nationalism that’s become attached to the image of White Jesus. To avoid the stink of that, many Christians here now prefer a more historically accurate Brown Jesus. But not everyone.

To sidestep the whole messy issue, the author on this project decided she just didn’t want His face shown clearly in any of the images. She wanted all back views and obscured views. Nothing straight on with any clear details to his face.

So, the unique challenge for me was to illustrate this story so that it’s not just a series of back views of Jesus. To be clear, there are some back views of Jesus. It couldn’t be avoided. But I’m very proud that I managed to make sure it wasn’t all back views.

Here’s our first one. It shows Jesus’ back, but also the narrator, townspeople, and the town in the distance.

A cartoon illustration depicting a narrator introducing the opening scene in the story.  She is in the foreground gesturing to the people behind her.  In the distance, Jesus sits on the edge of the well while people travel by foot up and down a narrow road that leads to a walled town.  All people are wearing Roman-style clothing from the time period of Jesus' life.  One of the people approaching the well is the narrator, a woman carrying a vase.

Another thing to note is the speech bubble. This project is drawn using comic book elements including speech bubbles and panels. This panel is a two-page spread with a quarter-inch bleed. I’m not including the text of the manuscript in these art samples, only the art.

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.

Hidden Picture – Hiking Trail

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 first of two a hidden picture puzzles. Can you find all 8 items? There’s a soda bottle, a drink cup, a flip-flop sandal, a chip bag, a soda can, a plastic fork, a deflated balloon, and a set of 6-pack rings. The hidden items were chosen because they’re items often found during the organization’s cleanup events.

This image is a version of the illustration that was used as the cover image. The cover image was in color and without the hidden items. But it still has the same expansive view and variety of wild animals.

Windy Picnic

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 depicts four children on the shore of a river or lake. They were trying to have a picnic, but it’s too windy. The wind blows trash from their lunch along the shore. One boy chases a plastic bag. This illustration is meant to show another way that trash can get loose and into the environment. It was fun to draw all that mischief the wind got up to.

Two Children and a Dog

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 introduces two characters that will appear in the next illustration. The characters ae both wearing Fish for Garbage hats, work gloves, and mesh bags for collecting garbage. The dog was an afterthought requested by the client to make the image wider to better fit the layout. The client told me that some participants have trained their dogs to find and fetch trash to help with collection during cleanup events.

Lunch in Reusable Containers

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 was a small spot illustration depicting a metal lunchbox and reusable water bottle. The illustration is used to show an example of reusable containers for lunch that contribute to unnecessary trash in the environment. The water bottle has stickers for the Fish for Garbabe organization and a related fishing organization.

Overflowing Trash Bin

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 was a small spot illustration depicting an overflowing trash bin. It will be used to illustrate one way trash can get into the environment unintentionally.

Wedding Anniversary Invite Scam

First, let me say that I absolutely welcome potential clients, or anyone else who has a question for me, to use my website’s contact form. I have received many worthwhile correspondences from that form, including many that turned into perfectly good private commissions or other professional contacts. I always get a little thrill when a new contact comes into my email from that form. So, please, contact me if you want. I promise not to be too suspicious of you until after you insist on paying me way too much money immediately by echeck without a contract. 

Anyway…

My contact form also brings in scammers. 

A few days ago I received this from my website’s contact form: 

Name: Jason
Email: ROBERTJASON844@GMAIL.COM
Message:
Hello,

Hope this email finds you well? I would love to make an inquiry regarding our Invitation Card Design.

We would love to illustrate and incorporate a picture from our wedding event on our ready made Wedding Anniversary Invitation card design. Please let me know if you are free to take on a project such as this, so I can keep you updated with the necessary information.

Thanks. Regards

Robert

I suspected this was a scam. Why? 

They gave my form the name Jason and signed with the name Robert. The email address contains both names, but this seems off. 

Although I can absolutely do an illustration for a wedding anniversary invitation, it’s not typical for me. I’m primarily a children’s illustrator. It’s a little odd that someone would request this from me. Not absolutely unbelievable, though. I do get the occasional legit off-genre illustration requests. I created an illustration for the cover of a rap album once, for example. Odd is not necessarily a scam. But it is a concern. It is a sign that this potential client may not have looked through my portfolio and isn’t actually familiar with any of my work. 

“…so I can keep you updated with the necessary information.” ??? Keep me updated? Weird way to phrase that. How about just sending me the details? Does that seem off to you? 

I’m skeptical, but it could be legit. I do tend to get cynical real fast, but it’s best not to let that tendency scare off what could still very well be a perfectly good client. It’s happened before, someone who seemed super suspicious turning out to be a great client. So, I sent a polite response: 

Hello Jason,

Thank you for contacting me.  Congratulations on your upcoming anniversary. 

Yes, I have time available to do an illustration for you.  What sort of image were you looking for?  You say you want it based on a wedding photo.  Are you looking for a caricature based on the photo or are you wanting me to do layout work, positioning pretty text and decorative elements to frame the photo? 

Sincerely,

Karen B. Jones
Illustrator

https://www.KarenBJones.com

I decided not to include my FULL contact info at this point. If it’s legit, the website will be sufficient for now, and I’ll send more info later. If it’s not, no need to tell the scammer my street address and phone number. 

Robert/Jason responded with: 

Hello Karen,

Thanks for getting back to me regarding this project. As mentioned earlier, we already have a lovely design of an IV card made for us by a Graphic Designer, but we thought of illustrating the image of the hands in a black and white style, as it brings back great memories. 

I’ve attached some pictures in the email, and a PDF  file of the IV Card. I believe you will be able to create something nice based on your level of creativity as an Illustrator. 

If you don’t mind, I’d love the delivery date/deadline for the submission of the designs to be no later than 10th of March, 2024. Also, I’ve already made an arrangement with a printing company to handle the finished work and have them delivered to me. 

Do let me know if this project is doable for you within the above stated deadline?, and my budget for this project is $800.

Looking forward to hearing from you.

Cheers.

Robert

He attached the following two images. Since I don’t know who actually owns these images, I’m not uploading them at full size and I’m superimposing a watermark to spoil them. These are NOT my images. 

Two images.  

On the left is an invitation.  The design is not as professional as one might expect of a custom invitation.  It reads:  
You are cordially invited to celebrate the 10th anniversary of Jason & Rita Robert
17th of February, 2024
11:00 am
1005 Mateo St
Los Angeles, CA  90021

The second image is a photograph of a man and woman holding hands.  The image is cropped to only show the hands.  The woman's hand has a diamond ring.

So, he didn’t entirely answer my question. I guess he wants me to make a line drawing out of this photo to go on the back of this “lovely” invitation he had a Graphic Designer make for them? But he didn’t actually say. For all I know he just wants me to apply a nice black and white photo filter to the photo. 

Notice the invitation says Jason and Rita Robert? I’m not sure if him signing correspondences with his last name is suspicious or not. I have known people who went by their last names among friends, but I don’t think they signed emails that way. But maybe I’m being picky? 

You’ll note the address. I looked that up on Google Maps. This is a real address, but I find it unlikely that they intend to have their anniversary party at CDL Scrap & Metal. (I have no reason to think they’re anything other than a perfectly reputable metal recycling company, and I’m not implying they have anything whatsoever to do with our Jason Robert.)

Also, the date. If the party is going to be held on Feb. 17, 2024, then a due date of March 10, 2024 doesn’t make any sense. But perhaps it was an invitation template without the final details on it. But if they customized it enough to have the right couple’s names, you’d think they’d put in the correct info for the rest of it? I don’t know. Suspicious, but not definitive. 

The hands photo looks… fine. Looks like a stock photo, but it could be a real wedding photo of him and his wife. I did a google image search and didn’t find the image, but that doesn’t prove anything one way or the other. 

He plans to handle the printing himself. That’s fine. 

The real red flag is that he has volunteered a budget of $800. That’s 90% of why I’m comfortable calling this a scam. He didn’t ask me what I’d charge him, he just came to me with a price. And a high price at that. Whether he’s looking for a black and white filter or a custom line drawing, neither should cost $800. Not in any style I have ever posted to my blog or portfolio, anyway. 

He’s hoping I’m greedy enough leap at the prospect of getting $800 to do very little work, but without being at all suspicious of someone offering me $800 for doing very little work. 

Hmmm… Let’s give him just a little more rope. 

Hello Robert,

The deadline would be fine.

To be clear, you want me to make a line drawing of the hands pictured?  In a style that would go with the custom invitation you already had designed? 

Karen B. Jones

And he responded: 

Hello Karen,

I must say it’s my pleasure to work with you on this project. 

For better Clarifications, below is the deliverables the printer is looking forward to;

  • 5×7 Inch 300 DPI
  • Silver Color Palette
  • AI or Source file / PDF
  • Send with Bleed

Moving forward, I would appreciate it if you proceed to the project as soon as possible. I’m okay with a deposit payment of $400 to kick start the project, and the balance once the project is completed.

At this time, the easiest way for me to do that is via E-check. I can easily prepare the check on my Tab and have the PDF file sent to your email. All you need do is to open the file and deposit via your mobile banking app by taking a picture of the check.

Let me know if that is doable for you, and please provide your full name or payable name to proceed with the payment.

Thanks. Regards

Robert

I must say, he still hasn’t verified what, exactly, he wants me to do. A line drawing, I assume, but he has yet to say. I do know the size and color he wants. But… that’s not quite what I asked, was it? 

I will say that it’s odd that he’s asking for 300 dpi for an AI file. AI. Adobe Illustrator. Vector graphics. Almost as if he doesn’t know the difference between pixel and vector art. Now, not all potential clients that come to me would know this. That’s fine. If I still thought this might be a legitimate client, this is where I’d be happy to explain the terms and the pros and cons of each. But I don’t really want to take the time for that since he’s clearly a scammer. 

Funny he hasn’t asked about a bid or contract, while being very specific about the payment method he wants. And exactly how to do it. Kudos to him for refraining from asking for my bank account information yet. He’s also considered that throwing the full amount at me right off the bat is going to look suspicious. (No real client is going to pay me the full amount upfront, before any work has even started.) So, he’s offering half. For a project that size, it really should be half after the sketches are complete, not up front, but he’s trying to look normal. I’ll give him that. 

Let’s see what happens if I tell him, like I would any real client, that I don’t accept echecks. 

Robert,

I’m sorry.  I only accept payment through PayPal for most private commissions.  It’s safer for both parties that way. 

Thank you for sending the specifications on the size and file format.  However, you haven’t confirmed that you’re looking for a line drawing of the holding hands image. 

Karen

So, I’ve waited several days now, and I have not received any further responses. Sad. I guess he decided I wasn’t going to fall for it and cut his losses. Too bad. I kinda wanted to read how he tried to wiggle out of paying me with PayPal. 

Anyone else receive a similar scam email? What did they tell you? How did you respond? I hope no one lost anything but time. 

If you’d like to read other posts I have about scams, you might look at Scam Alert for Artists and Another Scam Alert for Artists.

Stay alert and good luck! 

1/29/2024 UPDATE:

I heard back from him last night. He sent this message through my comment form: 

Name: Karen
Email: roboertjason844@gmail.com
Message:
Why are you so stupid ?

So, clearly, we’re dealing with a very mature individual. 🙄

Number 150 of 150

This is the last one! 150 characters, isolated on white, created for a large project for Learning A-Z.

Here’s Abraham Lincoln, 16th president of the United States (1809-1865). He was president during the US Civil War and was assassinated on April 15, 1865. He is best known for abolishing slavery in the US. More about him here.

A cartoon illustration of Abraham Lincoln, isolated on white.  He is standing, one hand holding his top hat.  He is wearing a black suit with a vest and long coat, a white shirt, and a bow tie.  

The image is watermarked with the artist's logo and a line of text noting the client's copyright as, "Copyright (c) 2022 Learning A-Z.  All rights reserved."
Abraham Lincoln

Number 149 of 150

Here’s former US President Barack Obama in a tan suit. I drew this as part of a larger project for Learning A-Z.

You might remember that there was a brief, silly controversy about President Obama wearing this tan suit because on a slow news day some people thought it did not look presidential. Originally, this illustration had him in a black suit, but the client was concerned that the project had too many historic figures in dark suits already. They wanted a little more variety, which was somewhat challenging since men’s formalwear is not really particularly varied. But then I remembered the silliness about the tan suit and I thought this would be the perfect solution. More about President Obama can be found here.

A cartoon illustration of Barack Obama, isolated on white.  He is wearing a tan suit, white dress shirt, gray and tan striped tie, gold wristwatch, and black dress shoes.  He is standing with his arms crossed.   

The image is watermarked with the artist's logo and a line of text noting the client's copyright as, "Copyright (c) 2022 Learning A-Z.  All rights reserved."
Barack Obama