Student at Plymouth College of Art, Blog for my work and research.

Tuesday, 4 March 2014

Task Two: I wish I'd done that!

Researching work for inspiration for ad33

Rebecca Green - Illustrator
I really like the delicate style of rebecca green's illustration, the soft colours and muted colour pallettes give a vintage feel. Her characters express emotion even though the features on their faces are small and simple. I love how she gives them rosy cheeks and pink noses it adds a hint of childhood playfullness. I like how she sometimes uses handwritten text in her work, which is something i like to do myself, and she sometimes uses a collaged textured background which is something i would like to experiment with in my work to see if i could achieve the same feel. The style and genre of this work is similar to my own interests and i find it very aesthetically pleasing. The themes and concepts of her illustrations inspire me in my own work.

http://myblankpaper.com/blog/

Rebecca Green




Samantha Cotterill - Embroidered illustrated diary

This piece of work is something unusual and very different from my own style and out of my comfort zone in terms of illustrating, but i love the idea and concept of it. Embroidered illustration is something i have always had an interest in as it makes unusual outcomes and gives an edge to otherwise ordinary work, it is something i would like to try out in my own work and see how it mixes with my style.




Katt Frank - Illustrator

The majority of Katt Frank's illustrations are of collections of everyday objects, i really like the theme and concept ideas of her work, her style is something like what i aspire to do and i find her work influential on my own illustrations. I love to use hand written text in my illustration and katt uses it in most of her work which is great to see it so frequently as it makes me feel more comfortable using it in my own work. Her work is always visually pleasing, the composition and placement of images and text in her illustrations works beautifully together. I like how she puts attention in detail even in small places which adds and extra decorative element to her work, i hope to be able to do so in my work and make it more detailed.

http://kattfrank.tumblr.com/
'Each cup of tea represents an imaginary voyage'Some nice looking Jars.'Coffee makes the world go round'An idea for a coffee book cover.



Nuno DaCosta - Fashion Illustrator

Fashion illustration is completely out of my comfort zone and i couldnt even begin to try to draw in this style, but i find the illustrations of nuno dacosta to be beautifully appealing to the eye. Fashion illustration is something i have always loved viewing though it is not a genre i would want to go into myself. The variety of tone of line in this work makes it bold yet gentle at the same time, the looseness of the brush strokes make it seem stylized without being too perfect and i love the expression she gives to her characters in her work, it is feminine yet still strong. The way she works with ink and brushes is inspiring and it is refreshing to explore a different style of illustration.







Laura Hughes - Illustrator

The style of Laura's illustration is really fresh and loose and i love the vibrancy and energy in the sketchy lines of her work. I like her style of drawing and would like to take inspiration from this and loosen up the style of my work and not make it look so clean and perfect every time. She uses alot of animals and nature in her subject matter which is a theme i like to work with myself and does alot of characters for childrens contexts as i also like to do so would like my work to be recieved by a similar audience.








Fifi Lapin - Fashion Illustrator

I love the combination of style and fashion illustration genre with something quite cute and dainty that Fifi acheieves in her work. The character of the rabbit is so simple and versatile that it can be used over and over again without ever become boring or repetitive. I like the style of illustration, the inperfection of the line and colouring adds a quirky edge. Her work is used on many different surfaces from tshirts to mugs badges and phone cases, it is a simple design that suits everything, i think this is am important factor in illustration work as it makes manipulating work to fit products simpler. Though fashion illustration is normally out of my comfort zone i think this type of work and style of drawing is more suited to me and it more similar to my work aesthetically so seeing illustration like this makes me believe i can expand my illustration work to more outlets including fashion and beauty.

http://fifi-lapin.blogspot.co.uk/







Amyisla Mccombie

This is one of my favourite styles of illustration, the contemporary style of Amyisla's hand drawn illustrations is an inspiration to me as i enjoy using traditional mediums in my own work. I really like how she mixes pencil and watercolours in her work as it adds texture, she also uses alot of pattern elements in her work which is how i would like to move forward with my work. I like how she uses subject matter of ordinary and every day life things and uses imagination to turn them into something unusual and interesting. I find her work really inspiring and it is stylistically consistant in all contexts which is what i aim for.


http://amyisla.tumblr.com/

food illustration, food, food art, editorial illustration, illustration, sheep illustration, amyisla, amyisla mccombie, illustrator,
Artist Amyisla Mccombie  (http://cargocollective.com/amyisla)
Amyisla McCombie #illustration #fashion
AMYISLA
Childrens illustration, childrens illustrator, illustrator, illustration beehives, childrens book, art print,


Oliver Jeffers

Though Oliver Jeffers is mostly known for his work as a children's book illustrator his other illustrations are also as interesting and unique in style. I really love his character design, his characters and expressions are so simple yet they communicate alot through such a small amount of marks, i hope to be able to achieve this in my own characters as i like to draw people very simply myself. The use of hand written text is a part of most of his illustrations and i like to use hand lettering in my own work. His work is always imaginative and creative and he uses visual sources combined in his drawings like penuts and coffee stains, making the most of what is already there and turning it into a piece of art. He also uses alot of clever humour in his work which i find inspires me to think of ideas myself.

























Monday, 27 January 2014

Research - Agents/Publishers

I looked into agencies and publishers that i could possibly send my work to and found out how to contact them and send submissions of my work and what process is required to go through. I mostly looked into children's book publishers and agencies as this is an area i hope to go into when i graduate.

Bright Agency
Bright is an agency for children's book illustrators, they have a really wide variety of styles and illustrators that go across the range from young childrens picture books to educational, typography, black and white and many others.

Taken from Bright's website
"We have always been recognised for our role in developing illustrators and have discovered and launched the careers of some of the best unpublished artists to hit the scene in recent years.

As agents, we see it as our responsibility to give help, encouragement and direction to our artists and the Bright Group exists to do just that. We influence and encourage our artists on the direction of their careers – helping them to tailor their work to the needs of the market, without losing touch with their creative personality.

Above all, we listen to our artists – some desperately want to be trade picture artists, others are financially driven or solely work on decorative/stationary books, whereas some just want to draw dragons! Whatever direction our artists want to take we work tirelessly to help them achieve their aims and find the right work from the right clients. If this means working directly with them to create the perfect portfolio pieces to win a particular commission, then our in-house art director is on hand to help.

The Bright Group is also available to help established artists looking for a change in direction – many artists who have already enjoyed a successful career may look to follow a different creative path and when that happens, we are right behind them. We have resurrected big name artists and re-launched them with new styles and pseudo-names. We have been able to triple the income of established professionals by seizing opportunities that may exist outside that artist’s main creative channel. For example, we have helped a stationery artist move into decorative gift books, and moved a top picture-book artist into children’s packaging and clothing ranges.

Whether you are just starting out, or are at the peak of your career, the Bright Group is here to help and guide you. We work with and for our artists and that’s why we have been able to deliver the most creative results in artist representation that the children’s market has seen in recent years."

There submission process is quite simple and easy all you have to do is send a collection of 10-12 images of your work to be considered for representation.

Artist Submissions

We are a busy agency and therefore receive hundreds of submissions each week. We love receiving artwork and will be happy to look at your samples but it is crucial that you follow our guidelines below.
If you are a talented artist looking for representation please send us 10 – 12 low res jpeg samples attached to submissions@thebrightagency.com We do not accept any other file formats or zipped file attachments. We regret that we cannot look at external websites.
This agency is based in London and submitting my own portfolio is something i will be interested in doing in the future.

Beehive Illustration Agency
Beehive is a uk agency representing children's illustrators. They have a great opportunity for illustration graduates to showcase their work on their website.

I think this is a great way to get your work out there and be seen by potential clients.

Walker Books
Walker is a publisher of children's book that range from young children's picture books to teenage fiction, they represent both authors and illustrators. Walker accept submissions of illustrated picture book to be considered for publication, the submission process is on their website.
How do I submit a manuscript/illustrate books for you?
While we do not accept fiction manuscript submissions, we are happy to accept illustrated picture-book stories and/or artwork samples via post or email.
POSTED SUBMISSIONS
ILLUSTRATED PICTURE-BOOK STORIES: Please send an illustrated dummy and/or a typed manuscript. 
ILLUSTRATION SAMPLES: Please send eight to ten colour samples or a CD showing your work.
These should be accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope for us to return your material to you if we decide not to pursue it.  Material received without the appropriate SAE will be recycled.  Please note, we can no longer return any material sent from outside the UK, even with international response postage coupons.
Please do not send original artwork or dummies, only copies, as Walker Books cannot accept liability for loss of or damage to material submitted. 
We regret that we are unable to enter into any correspondence about submissions or discuss them on the telephone.  As we receive a large number of submissions in the post each week, please allow up to three months for us to respond.  We appreciate your understanding in this matter.
Please send your dummy/samples to:
Illustrator Submissions
The Art Department
Walker Books Ltd
87 Vauxhall Walk
London
SE11 5HJ
EMAIL SUBMISSIONS
Illustrated picture-book stories or illustration samples should be sent as a jpeg or PDF for images (5 MB size limit) and as a Word document for text.  Unfortunately we are unable to reply to email submissions unless we are interested in your work.
Please send email submissions to: illustratorsubmissions@walker.co.uk
For further information and advice, we suggest you check the following websites: http://www.writersadvice.co.uk;http://www.writersandartists.co.uk/

Walker also offer work expierience placements in their company, which i think is a great opportunity to see how a big publishing company works, available placements are advertised on the website and you apply by email to be considered.

Research - 3 Artists

I have looked into 3 different artists/illustrators that i aspire to and work in similar ways to me. I looked into their work and things they have published aswell as reading interviews and information about how they work and how they got to the point in their career they are at today.

Oliver Jeffers
He is one of my favourite illustrators in terms of style and character design. He writes his own stories that he illustrates himself which is something i would like to do in the future. He uses a mixture of media from watercolour and acrylics to collage. He has a comtemporary style and uses compostition and space to create his visually appealing illustrations. He also uses handwritten text in his work which is something i enjoy using in my own work.


The Great Paper Caper


Stuck


The Incredible Book Eating Boy

 http://www.todaysparent.com/family/activities/interview-with-author-oliver-jeffers/

I found this interview with Oliver Jeffers where he explains how his writing and illustrating process work  "They both happen at the same time. I kind of develop them simultaneously because they have to support each other."  Its really useful to see how illustrators work out and plan their projects, in the interview Oliver explains how he plans his pictuure books "I do a lot of storyboards, which can be the trickiest part sometimes — trying to get everything to fit into the 32 pages of the picture book and having the story flow over that space. That’s where a lot of the creativity comes into."


Amyisla McCombie
I love the style of Amyisla's illustrations, they are soft and delicate with the pencil drawings and pastel colours. I like how she uses pattern in some of her illustrations which i also like to use in my own work. I really like her character design and the faces of the people. She uses alot of white space in her work, leaving the focus on the character or object of the illustration, this is similar to how i like to make my illustrations, with little background.







I found an interview with Amyisla on Questioning Creatives http://www.questioningcreatives.com/amyisla-mccombie/
In the interview she says how important having constant visual inspiration is "You can never have too much inspiration! I collect lots of things, have lots of books and constantly go to museums and galleries. It rare that an idea appears from nothing". I think this is good advice to keep creative and keep ideas flowing.


Teagan White
I love the style of Teagan's work and she is one of my favourite illustrators. She works with the themes of nature and wildlife which is what i like to do in my own illustrations. I love how she personifies her animal characters and has them doing human things. Her use of colour lends itself to the theme, i prefer her watercolour work to her more recent digital colouring as i think it creates a better tone. 






Last year i emailed Teagan some questions and got a brilliant reply full of useful information and advice on illustration and the industry, here is a copy of the questions and answers.

How would you advise an illustration graduate to promote themselves and get known as a professional illustrator?
-       I think that simply marketing yourself online using social media goes an incredibly long way. Personally I don’t solicit work because I think that the process of putting yourself out there and getting rejected can take a toll on creative energy and be very discouraging; social media is great in that you can focus on making good work, put it online, and people will either respond positively or not at all (plus bloggers and other people in general do most of the work of spreading your stuff around). My basic belief is that if you’re not taking advantage of every major network available to you (Behance, Facebook, Twitter, Tumblr, Instagram) you’re crazy, because it’s a free way to get your work seen by as many people as possible. I also think that it’s important to post everything to all of these because different people will use different sites to follow you, and you can’t just post to one and expect someone to sign up for the site to keep up with you. Do your best to just be everywhere online, and make it really easy for people to be constantly reminded about your work. Beyond social media, it’s also great to enter shows (locally & nationally) & submit to periodicals (Society of Illustrators, 3x3, Creative Quarterly, CMYK, etc etc) which can get you seen by people who didn’t happen to come across your work online.
 What technical skills do you believe illustration graduates should have?
-       This depends mainly on what work you want to do; someone who wants to work in product illustration needs a lot more developed digital skills than someone who wants to do editorial illustration, for example. But at bare minimum I think that illustrators need to have enough of a handle on Photoshop to make quick and seamless revisions to their work (so the basic ability to change the colors in a piece even if it was done traditionally, and to stitch together pieces of an image if you have to redraw part of it). Otherwise you’re going to run into problems, because it’s unrealistic to expect that no one is going to request revisions to your final artwork, and typically you wouldn’t have time to redraw/repaint an entire final piece. You also need to have a basic understanding of print methods, appropriate web & print resolution, file formats, etc.
You could probably get by with just the above, but in my opinion, you should have a full working knowledge of most of Photoshop’s features, basic design & typographic skills, understanding of how to set up artwork on templates for print, and familiarity with Illustrator, vector vs raster, & Pantones. I’ve found that most clients expect you to have a handle on most of this – it wouldn’t necessarily mean that they wouldn’t work with you if you didn’t know this, but the easier you’re able to make things for them, the more likely they are to hire you again and the less problems will come up when you’re delivering final files and such.
 What personal qualities do you believe support a career as an illustrator?
-       I think that pretty much every successful freelance illustrator I know is a workaholic (ugh I hate that term). Basically, they tend to be extremely dedicated to their craft, up for working very long hours, and their world pretty much revolves around their career. Also common, but not universal, is for them to be very friendly, engaged, and open in their online presence & professional interactions, even if they are introverted or quiet in person. Other valuable skills are organization, very good written communication skills, ability to accept & interpret feedback without getting offended or discouraged, ability to juggle many projects – and good time management is extremely important.
 How do you find clients and get jobs?
First of all, if you haven’t already, I think that it’s really important before you start any intense self-promotion to have a fairly clear idea of what type of work you want to be doing, and where your work best fits in in the industry. My best general advice to people is to make sure that your portfolio reflects the type of work that you would like to be doing, and to look at your work with a critical eye and judge whether it would be easy for an art director, editor, or potential client to see specific practical applications for your work in their industry, and whether it’s unique enough for them to come to you over other illustrators, as it is a competitive field. Sometimes this means adding a few new projects to your website that are really tailored to the industry you’d like to work in, to really make it easy for people to see how they could use your work. This is something that everyone needs to do once in a while – for example, I’d like to be doing more work in stationery, greeting cards, and textiles, but I rarely get those opportunities because I don’t have much in that style on my website. Keep in mind that sometimes it doesn’t matter how amazing of an illustrator someone is, if there aren’t obvious uses for their work in the industry – I know some illustrators who do incredible work, but don’t get much or any freelance work because their work doesn’t quite fit in anywhere. In my own portfolio, the pieces that most people really like and that sell well as prints are not the same pieces I get calls on – most of my bigger projects are typography or black & white detailed drawings, because those are more often needed in the industry and there are not many people out there who have a good handle on both typography and drawing. As much as we all like to think of ourselves primarily as artists, it’s also a business that you have to sell.
But you may already have all of the above stuff worked out, and if you do, I’ll say again that I believe social media to be the best way to get your work seen by the largest amount of people – and if you’re seen enough, you’re GOING to get work. However, some people prefer to take more direct routes which are totally legit too, like sending out mailers to art directors, or signing up for services for illustrators to get work such as the Directory of Illustration or the i-Spot. Agents are another option, but in most cases it’s harder to get an agent than clients, and their job is as much about helping you manage your projects as it is about promoting you; you should be able to have projects coming in on your own without their help too in order for the relationship to be sustainable. In summary, there are actually a lot of resources available to you – my experience has been that the free online ones (that is, Behance & social networks) are the most effective, but if that doesn’t seem to work out for you engage in some of the other methods too!
What inspires and motivates you to be an illustrator? 
-       Well to be honest I don’t think I ever decided to be one exactly; I more just fell into it. I’ve been drawing & posting art online for a very long time, and once my work started to improve people started to contact me for small jobs – logos, album artwork, things like that. It was a long time before I really thought of myself as an illustrator, or realized that I was making a living off of it. However at this point it’s central to my own self-identity; it’s most of what I do and think about, and I wouldn’t know what I was doing with my life without it. I think the motivation comes from a couple different angles – one is financial, obviously I have to make a living, but since I’d be drawing anyway it always kind of feels like this cool game to get paid for it too. Another motivator is the abstract idea of being “successful” – an interesting job comes in, and I get really excited about it because there’s the general feeling that you’re progressing or getting somewhere (even if it’s kind of an illusion sometimes). But more than the career-type-stuff, my love for art in general is what really makes me passionate about what I do; the rest is all a bonus. Partly I’m inspired by other art that I see and by what other illustrators are doing, and I just get so excited about aesthetics and about making things that it would be painful to NOT make things. And partly, I think that so many things out in the world are so beautiful that I feel compelled to do something with it, to make work about it because what else can you do with overwhelming feelings of appreciation for the world you live in? Yeah, so I guess it’s a combination of all of those different things.

Thursday, 23 January 2014

Pattern Designs - finished outcomes and evaluations


For the Cath Kidston pattern designs i made a set of 4 pattern prints with the theme of wildlife and nature. I have 2 samples of each pattern, the original pattern image and one digitally duplicated and put together to make a bigger pattern than can fit to any size. I painted the original illustrations with watercolours, scanned in and cleaned up on photoshop where i multiplied it into a bigger pattern. Here are the finished designs.



Badgers and Strawberries




Hedgehogs and Leaves




Squirrels and Acorns




Foxes and Mushrooms


Evaluation
I really loved working on this project as it was a theme i enjoy working with and i like to create characters, i have not had much experience making patterns before but discovered it is something i would be interested in doing. In terms of fitting the brief i think stylistically my designs may not be in tune with the normal cath kidston style as my designs are a bit more fun and cutesy than what the brand normally work with, but i thought it was important to use my own style rather then copy what has been seen before. i think by using the theme of wildlife and nature it ties in with there thematic style anyway. 
I would like to expand this project by using my pattern design on things such as fabrics, homeware, accessories and other surfaces. It would be great to see my work in context but at this point i have not had the money to experiment with doing this but it is something i really want to do in the future.