Archive for the ‘Children’s Books’ Category

New Year, New Stuff

Monday, January 3rd, 2005

Well, goodbye 2004, and hello 2005. I have to say I will probably remember 2004 for a long time as the year I started making art again. And as my new splash screen hints, in this new year I am planning to try to focus that trend towards books again. The next questions are the whats and whens, but I am happy to let those questions percolate for a while.

Dancing Robot

In the meantime, I continue to experiment. I am loving this new brush pen my little brother got me for Christmas, and I used it on six drawings yesterday. I am a little scared to use it up, because the packaging is all in Chinese or Japanese, and I can’t read one character on there. I don’t have any idea how I’d replace it (unless Teddy gives me some clues, or perhaps birthday presents *hint-hint*).

Dancing Robot

Over the weekend I tried to spend some time thinking about the past year, and some of the trajectories I have launched. By extension, of course, that means I was thinking about the coming year, and what goals I might set for myself. I have learned that, in general, saying things out loud makes them more likely to happen; but by way of caveat: saying things “out loud” on this weblog does not always have the same effect. Be that as it may, here is my biggest goal for the year:

I plan to have a book submitted to a publisher before the end of 2005.

Those who have known me long enough know that I made children’s picture books when I was an undergraduate at Carleton. Two of those were of publishable length, but looking back at that work, there is a significant amount of polish missing from both of those projects. The writing especially needs work. At this point, with the progress I’ve made with my drawings in the last year, I am not as worried about improving the art as much as I once was. The biggest challenge I face with the art is deciding on a style and medium, but my theory is that the tone of the story I write will influence the art, and vice-versa. I figure I can relax and let the two evolve together.

RAR!!

And finally, the monkey-wrench in the mix: I really like drawing comics. I don’t know if I am any good at it yet, but I am really enjoying experimenting. I am so used to drawing with pencils that it feels like a palatable baby-step to use ink instead of graphite for a while. Using ink has made me much more confident about my lines, and the richness of the black ink is really exciting, especially compared to the gray of the pencil marks. Perhaps the book I make this year (if it is only one) will be a comic book. Who knows?

Welcome, 2005!

Gallivespians

Monday, June 28th, 2004

His Dark Materials Trilogy: The Golden Compass / The Subtle Knife / The Amber Spyglass

I love Philip Pullman’s His Dark Materials trilogy, and
I’m not afraid to say it! I’ve heard rumors of a movie version, which I would watch in a heartbeat, also without shame.

Oh, and I’ve never played D&D either.

One-Month Digest

Sunday, April 11th, 2004

Geez, this has been a busy month! Since my last post when we got Kitty (as the hedgehog is now called), we: went to Kansas to visit my grandma and saw the Konza Prairie restoration; I went back to Chicago to talk to Eric Rohmann; we saw 8 films at the Wisconsin Film Festival; spring league Ultimate Frisbee started; and we had a good visit with my almost-step-brother.

Oh, and I put up a new poem on Cereal & Milk.

I’m not sure how much I want to say about each of those things, but I figure I should record something about each event, so here it goes: I will put up one post for each of these events with approximate dates, and this one will be my table of contents.

Over the river and through the woods…
Eric Rohmann
Wisconsin Film Festival
Spring League
A brief visit
The Ickaby Eight

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