Archive for the ‘design’ Category



Tuesday, June 7th, 2011

Yesterday I showed the process leading up to the cover of Everything Goes: On Land. Without further ado or brouhaha, here's the final cover of the book. Click the image to see it quite a bit larger.

The cover design had to be indicative of the work that's in the book, and I do believe it is. Cars and trucks, bikes and motorcycles, buses, construction vehicles, trains, and whatever else made it in the book and on this cover. Vehicles going this way and that way, all kinds of people riding and driving them, and even a friend's blue and white striped Mini Cooper.

Once the final sketch was approved, I use that as the basis to create the inked drawing. I usually try to create my illustrations to the exact size that they'll be printed. Everything Goes is going to be a big book — twelve inches tall and ten inches wide — so this was no problem. I draw the illustration using a big lightbox on nice Strathmore 500 series bristol with watered-down india ink, and use white gouache to carve out areas and add details.

If you take a look at the close-up image below, the wheels of the train, the white outlines of the train windows, the railroad ties, and the wing of the small black bird are examples of where I paint the negative space, or the white areas. When I inked the drawing, the area under the train was solid black. This part of the process is easily my favorite, as it's a real joy to see these details appear and everything come together.

You may also notice that there is no type on the black-and-white line drawing. This is because when I do work like this I always draw the type and add it digitally.



Once these are all complete, they get scanned into the computer where I use Photoshop to color everything and piece it together. When it's complete, I save it as a TIF file and send it to the designer at the publishing house (Balzer+Bray/HarperCollins in the case of Everything Goes).

Everything Goes: On Land is scheduled to be released on September 13. I'm currently working on book two of the series, which is called "In the Air," and which will be published a year later. Lastly, "On the Sea" will come out in 2013. I don't have the covers sketched for either of these two books yet, but they will be similar in idea and business to "On Land." And of course I'll post here about them when they're ready to make their way into the world. Stay tuned!

Thursday, February 10th, 2011

This is the endpapers pattern for Everything Goes. I'll be wrapping up the title page tomorrow and then it's done. Done done.

endpapers

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

If you've ever looked at anything I've made, you likely noticed that I like to hand-letter things. I used to be a type geek back when I was a graphic designer, but at some point — mainly when I started illustrating — I quit using actual fonts with any regularity and started drawing type on everything. This is sort of within the great plan of life or whatever, as it was a calligraphy kit my mom bought when I was 14 years old that led to my interest in type and design in the first place.
Over the years I've considered many times designing a font. However, it never really made sense, since the type I draw is usually improvised and created for the specific place in which it sits, and I like the look of each letterform being different. That is, if I have two lower-case 'g' next to each other (which happens frequently. Re: "Biggs"), I usually like them to look slightly different from one another. It's part of the illusion I struggle with to keep my work looking as least digital as possible. So I've never really found the right project for which to create a typeface.
However, in setting up the workflow of this huge three-book project I'm writing and illustrating for HarperCollins, I'm realizing that every page is going to have anywhere between ten and a hundred captions and labels. And the prospect of lettering each and every one of these ("convertible," "tow-truck," "taxi," "subway," etc) makes my kind of want to go on an extended vacation. And it makes my hand hurt. So last week I realized that this is it. This is the time to make a font.

After googling a bit looking for an appropriate application, I located one called TypeTool. Back in the day when I was working at Adobe and stuff, everyone used Fontographer to make typefaces, which I thought had died. Apparently, Fontographer has been rejuvenated and is also published by Fontlab, but it's about a million bucks. Since I have no current plans to make other fonts (but never say never, right?), TypeTool will do the trick and it's a lot less expensive.

So… I set about painting/drawing a set of letterforms, which I then scanned at really really high resolution (1200 ppi) and cleaned up in Photoshop. I used Illustrator to trace the letterforms into vector shapes, which I could then copy/paste into TypeTool.

I haven't had time to read the manual for TypeTool yet, but I remember the basic idea from back in the Fontographer days.

Not everything is perfect yet. There are some weird pairs and a lot of the punctuation and quotation marks aren't really perfect yet. Furthermore, I didn't include many of the more esoteric glyphs like the signs for foreign currency and stuff like ∆Ωª. I suppose if Everything Goes is translated into other languages, or if by some weird turn I need the Greek alphabet in my captions and stuff, I'll add them later.

While tedious, this has been really interesting. Notwithstanding what I wrote above about likely not making another font, I could really see me doing this again for other picture books, rather than trying to find typefaces that work well for my illustrations…

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Eric Wight and I are doing a program at the Philadelphia Free LIbrary Festival this weekend and we're printing a poster for the occasion. However, I've not been able to choose a particular color combibation. So with a few days left before I print these, I thought I'd ask some opinions. A caveat is that the nature of screen printing dictates that colors aren't always 100% predictable, and another is that we might end up making more than one version. Just curious what y'all think.

decisions decisions

Monday, May 12th, 2008


This Saturday and Sunday is the Philadelphia Book Festival at the Main Library. I'll apparently be an "event" at the festival itself on Saturday and I hope you can make it over to see whatever it is I'm doing. I'll be on the "Target Children's Stage" at 3:00pm.

Rumor has it that there will be a Q & A session. So come up with the question that you've always wanted to know the answer to. (My favorite color is "rainbow" so don't ask that one.) And then I'll be signing books. They've ordered lots and lots of early copies of the new Roscoe Riley books that will be in stores later this month, as well as all the other stuff.

In addition, sometime on Sunday, not sure when, I'll be signing Shredderman books with Wendelin Van Draanen. This is our very first signing together and I'm pretty excited. We will be at the Children's Book World booth, so check in there and find out what time it's to take place. Then, if you happen to see me, let me know too.

This is all good news, yes. But the other shoe has to drop, right? Well yes indeed. At the same exact moment that I'll be acting all famous and whatever on Saturday, the slightly more talented and much better looking Adam Rex will be doing the same in the Children's Story Hour Room, also at 3pm. So you must decide between us, and we're both taking names…

Here's the link for the festival.
And the link for my little event on Saturday.

We're praying for decent weather, so please come in any case.

Thursday, May 8th, 2008


These three books, written by Katherine Applegate and published by HarperCollins, are coming out on May 27. They are the first three of a series of six and possibly more chapter books, for which I am illustrating the covers and interior illustrations. Roscoe is a nice kid who keeps getting into trouble. The stories are really cute and perfect for kids just learning to read. I spoke to someone at Children's Book World in Haverford yesterday who told me that they expect these to sell like gangbusters.
You don't have to wait for May 27, however. If you come to the Philadelphia Book Festival on Saturday May 17, you can get your copy then. I'll be there signing and talking at 3pm.

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