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The Illustrators Journal

The Illustrators Journal

Category Archives: CHILDREN’S BOOK

Hello, It’s 2017

01 Wednesday Mar 2017

Posted by Illustrators Journal in CHILDREN'S BOOK, EDITORIAL

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abstract art, artist as brand, childrens books, digital painting, drawing, illustration, kidlitart


destructo-cubes

Wow…has it been this long since I last posted on this site?? Yes is the answer. Why? Well to explain that would be long and boring. So I’ll skip it and post some art, because while I was in posting hibernation I was busy creating. And that’s the key I have come to see for me. No matter what else is happening I need to create. Those of you who are like me know what it’s like to feel compelled to create something. Whether that’s a sculpture, drawing or painting we have to do it. So I’m back in the saddle and ready to impart new art, insights, article, stories and more. I hope you all will follow because I promise it’ll be an interesting journey.freebird-inky kitty 3-eye-4

Children’s APP is Where It’s At!

14 Monday Mar 2016

Posted by Illustrators Journal in CHILDREN'S BOOK, EDITORIAL

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cartoonist, digital media, digital painting, illustration, innovation, levinland, lon levin


PINK PIRATE2Once upon a time I dreamt of marrying my stories and images to the internet and combining words, music, voices and pictures. Of course that’s all being happening for a while. One of the early adapters was and is Roxie Munro, who I’ve interviewed and talked to numerous times. The article below includes her and beyond. It’s a good article that covers this new form which is coming of age.

Once upon a time, some crazy smart person got the idea of taking a children’s story previously passed down through oral storytelling and turning it into a book. This spawned a whole new tradition, and an industry that has thrived for centuries with a work-flow process that involves several distinct phases and teams that take several years to achieve the goal of creating an illustrated story book.
It works like this:

An author first creates a manuscript that is acceptable to an editor. The editor will then work with the author to bring that story to a point of excellence, at which point this editorial team passes the story off to a design team.

The art designer will select the perfect illustrator, who must then be given ample time to realize his or her vision. The designer then lays out the book, selecting fonts and other design elements, and drops in the finished artwork.

The combined effort is provided to the production team in the form of print-ready galleys eventually to be published. And while proofs are being run to test for color and trim accuracy, the marketing team revs up the process of distributing the book to reviewers just as the sales team works to get it into stores.

It is a proven practice and will remain the preferred method of making an illustrated story book for many years to come. Because it works. For books.

But the job of realizing the electronic cousin of an illustrated children’s book—the story app—requires a very different process and a new cast of characters. It works something like this…

In the digital ecosystem, production speeds up with teams working more in lock step, rather than relay style. New editions are possible with the click of a few buttons, making it possible—even favorable for testing purposes—to publish a work in iterative chunks; that is, not in a fully finished state, but a simplified one that is added to over time.

The author, editor, and publisher tend to collaborate more at the outset to realize a manuscript not limited to a story text, but requiring content for interactive elements, text boxes, navigational instructions, etc., as well. And the creative team expands, adding to the ranks of editorial, design, and production teams, the following contributors:

  • Development, or programming, team
  • User experience (UX) designer
  • User interface (UI) designer
  • Game developer, if the app is to include interactive learning elements and features
  • Animator, if images are to move
  • Educational consultant, to assure that the app is developmentally appropriate to the target age
  • Beta-testers, to ensure that the book and design are intuitive to use

To wit: It takes a lot of people-power to realize a great story app.

Team efforts overlap. For example, in our current process, as author Mary Hoffman and team editor Emma D. Dryden have been working together to perfect the manuscript for In the Footsteps of Giants, I’ve been working with our art, user interface, and user experience consultants to design the look and feel of our future story app.

Mary and I have been preparing a list of image suggestions to pass off to our photo editor, Cynthia Carris Alonso, who has begun the process of researching and obtaining rights to use the visual content to accompany Roxie Munro’s original artwork commissioned at the start of the process.

In the meantime, our marketing team, including Dan Blank and his team at WeGrowMedia is already strategizing plans in anticipation of a June launch. And I am now on the hunt for vocal talent that can record and send to us raw files that we will then engineer with added sound effects. (If you’re interested in auditioning, contact me here.)

We couldn’t do any of this without at least a draft story to work with. But neither did we need a completed manuscript to begin production. Indeed, the first and last piece of the puzzle to be signed off on will be the manuscript, for it will likely change again once we are inside the recording studio.

Which is why I say that creating a story app is a team sport, and a highly collaborative effort at that!

Laura Carlin : Children’s Book Illustrator

18 Monday Jan 2016

Posted by Illustrators Journal in CHILDREN'S BOOK, EDITORIAL

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art director's club, Bologna Ragazzi Award, ceramic art, childrens books, design, illustration, innovation


In an effort to find and spotlight the finest and most innovative children’s book artwork, the Illustrator’s Journal will bring to our readers the IJ Children’s Book Spotlight. 

Presented here is the artwork of Laura Carlin.

carlin_lge_03

Laura lives and works in London. She graduated from Buckinghamshire University and the Royal College of Art, where she received a Masters and won the Quentin Blake Award. During her MA she was also awarded the Uniqlo Fashion Illustration Award, which enabled her to travel to Shanghai and Tokyo. The drawings from her Tokyo trip were published in a book entitled Ten Days in Tokyo.

Laura has illustrated many children’s books for Walker Books, including The Iron Man by Ted Hughes, winning a V&A Award and an honourable mention in the Bologna Ragazzi Award. In November 2014 another Walker Books title illustrated by Laura ‘The Promise’ was selected by The New York Times as the best illustrated title of 2014. For The Folio Society Laura has illustrated four collections of Anton Chekov stories and Le Grand Meaulnes by Alain Fournier. She illustrates a weekly column in the Financial Times as well as being a regular contributor to Condé Nast Traveller, The New York Times, The Guardian and The New Statesman. She has worked on advertising campaigns for American Express and British Airways as well an identity for The Dorchester’s Coworth Park Hotel.

laura-carlin-page-23In addition to her commercial work, Laura currently works with Quentin Blake in advisory role for the development of the House of Illustration.

Laura has been voted, by the Art Director’s Club of America an ADC Young Gun, one of the 50 most influential creatives under 30 years of age.

Alongside her illustration career, Laura also works as a ceramist. Her work is for sale at The New Craftsman and Yorkshire Sculpture Park as well at privately hosted sales.

In October 2014 her book A World of Your Own was published by Phaidon, her first work as an author. Using a gentle chronological narrative of one day, the book encourages looking, drawing and making – initially from life and then from imagination.

For more info or to hire Laura click here http://www.lauracarlin.com

Interview with Ted Lewin

17 Sunday May 2015

Posted by Illustrators Journal in CATCH-ALL, CHILDREN'S BOOK, INTERVIEW

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art, artist as brand, childrens books, creativity, Ted Lewin


As I move forward doing more “realistic” illustration I am fascinated and I relate to perhaps one of our greatest contemporary artists, Ted Lewin. Here in this interview Ted talks about his a children’s book about Gleason’s Gym in New York. The paintings are superb. His mastery of watercolor makes the imagery vibrant and alive. More of Ted’s work can be found here http://www.tedlewin.com

Tomie dePaola: A Children’s Hero

21 Saturday Mar 2015

Posted by Illustrators Journal in ARTICLES, CHILDREN'S BOOK

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artist as brand, illustration, illustrators journal, innovation, Tomie DePaola


550b9458bf5d7.imagehttps://youtu.be/7epT0qUaaX4

Posted: Friday, March 20, 2015 9:45 pm | Updated: 11:51 pm, Fri Mar 20, 2015.

By Will Broaddus Staff Writer

Children’s book illustrator Tomie dePaola grew up with “a mother who read to me every night of my life. “She read what was available then,” he said, “which were the folk tales.”

DePaola’s own books have been bringing parents and children together for 50 years, and have been honored with a Caldecott Medal, among many other awards. He will be at the Wenham Museum on Sunday as part of “Draw Me A Story,” an exhibit of illustrations from children’s books that will be on display until April 27. “The exhibit is in the lobby, and there will be a book signing there,” said Cynthia Novotny, merchandise manager at the museum. “In the Burnham Hall area, there will be art activities.” Other illustrators in the exhibit include Jesse Watson, Lisa Cinelli, Katia Wish, Elizabeth Wolff and Cyndy Szekeres Prozzo, several of whom will be present on Sunday from 1 to 3:30 p.m.main The event is being held for the fourth time, and celebrates the important roles that books play in children’s lives. “We thought if we could show the original work and have parents and children meet the illustrators, it makes a better connection for them” with books, Novotny said. The connections that parents and children can make, over the pages of a book, can last a lifetime.

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Ebola Exposed: How I surf the net and found something relevant

27 Tuesday Jan 2015

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artist as brand, Ebola, illustration, illustrators journal, Nigeria, this week in digital media on blogtalk radio


e17679939e7bf20037b9d11a13fa9869I couldn’t sleep this morning so I got up and surfed the net and came to a site run by an illustrator named Olusola Akinseye who hails from Nigeria. Interested I look at his work and was struck by the cultural differences as well as the similarities to my work in the children’s area. As I probed further I found that Olusola had illustrated a presentation for Ebola Exposed! It is a free illustrated publication commissioned in the wake of the West Africa Ebola outbreak.

The goal of the booklet is to provide basic information about the Ebola Virus Disease using colorful cartoon illustrations. According to Olusola the initial awareness is cooling off but sadly there is still need for care and concern. So I’m passing this info along because it literally illustrates something important to everyone in a clever and inviting way. Check out the Eboloa Exposed

In addition check out Olusola’s art on Behance. Look art cuts across countries like a hot knife thru butter. The look might be different, the colors may take on different combinations and the content may be regional but the creativity behind the art is the same. We artists are all trying to use our visions to illustrate our point-of-view about the world around us. Check out this terrific piece of art below created by Olusola.1

Posted by Illustrators Journal | Filed under cartoon, CHILDREN'S BOOK, EDITORIAL

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Aside

Happy Holidays

25 Thursday Dec 2014

Posted by Illustrators Journal in CHILDREN'S BOOK, EDITORIAL, illustration

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artist as brand, artwork, cartoon, cartoonist, childrens books, Christmas artwork, innovation, Kwansa, New Year's artwork, Saint Nick, Santa Claus


HOLIDAY'15

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Introducing “The Barefoot Buccaneer”

30 Sunday Jun 2013

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anne bonnie, artist as brand, blackbeard, buccaneer, digital painting, illustration, illustrators journal, innovation, jean Lafette, levinland, lon levin, pirate, pirates of the carribean


COVER1-suggestion

Posted by Illustrators Journal | Filed under CHILDREN'S BOOK

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Harryhausen Special Effects/Stop-Motion Genius

08 Wednesday May 2013

Posted by Illustrators Journal in cartoon, CATCH-ALL, CHILDREN'S BOOK, FANTASY/CONCEPT ARTIST, PASSINGS, PHOTOGRAPHY, REVIEWS

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artist as brand, Avatar, Cameron, Harryhausen, illustration, illustrators journal, innovation, levinland, lon levin, Lucas, Nazis, nude sketch, power rangers, Spielberg, stop motion, suicide girls


Suicide Girls, Avatars, Transformers, Power Rangers, Star Wars…all inspired by Harryhausen in one way or another.

I remember seeing The Seven Voyages of Sinbad when I was a little kid and it terrified me and at the same time fascinated me. It was one of those seminal moments in life when you say I want to do something like that. The creator of that movie along with many other magical films and programs was Ray Harryhausen, who died yesterday in London. He was 92.

I saw this article by Oliver Gettelli in the LA Times this morning and felt the need to express my thanks to Harryhausen for scaring me and inspiring me to create art. There are thousands of us who looked to him as an inspiration including Lucas, Spielberg and Cameron so celebrate his life and spend a little time getting to know his work, he may spark something in you too.

By Oliver Gettell May 7, 2013, 2:20 p.m.

Over the course of his imaginative and painstaking career, the stop-motion animation wizard Ray Harryhausen created some of the most dazzling effects to grace the silver screen, and all without the benefit of computer-generated imagery.

Following are but a few of Harryhausen’s memorable creations.

“Mighty Joe Young” (1949)

As a teenage boy, Harryhausen had been awestruck by the original “King Kong,” which was released in 1933, so the opportunity to work alongside that film’s animation guru, Willis O’Brien, on another giant-ape movie was something of a dream come true.

“Jason and the Argonauts” (1963)

Many of Harryhausen’s adventures were set in the ancient world, including 1958’s “The 7th Voyage of Sinbad” and the groundbreaking “Jason and the Argonauts.” As trumpeted in the trailer below, “Jason” features such spectacles as “the towering bronze giant Thalos,” “vulturous harpies,” “the dreaded seven-headed hydra” and a “merciless army of skeletons.”

That last effect took four months to create for less than five minutes of screen time, Harryhausen told The Times in 2010.

The Barefoot Buccaneer Makes Its Debut

14 Monday Jan 2013

Posted by Illustrators Journal in CHILDREN'S BOOK

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Tags

artist as brand, barefoot, buccaneers, childrens book, digital media, digital painting, illustration, illustrator, illustrators journal, innovation, levinland, pirates


BAREFOOT_CVR.SOLO

I am so excited that my newest children’s ebook is finally finished and published. The illustrations were done by B.H. Nara. I am now looking for a publisher who will be interested in publishing it. Here’s the one-liner.

Banished from the table for her poor manners, Stella stomps up to her room, only to find herself the captain of an extremely unruly crew! After her adventure on the high-seas, Stella realizes that misbehaving children are no fun, and makes it back just in time for dinner.

http://www.flyingbooks.me/books/show/326

If you want to buy the download it’s very inexpensive and well worth the read.

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Editor’s Note

Visit www.levinlandstudio.com and see the portfolio of the editor Lon Levin

The Spring Issue '17 of the Illustrators Journal will be out in April with all new interviews with cartoonist Mark Stamaty, Fantasy artist and Society of Illustrator's Hall of Fame artists Kinuko Y Craft and some artwork from Millenial sensation MollyCrabtree.

The issue will focus on protest and the arts from Daumier to Ingram Pinn.

Levinland Studio

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