Entries in book (15)

Sunday
Feb192012

Printing the Cover: In the Sounds and Seas Vol 2

One step closer to a finished Volume 2: a generous edition of 200 covers are printed! I had hoped to fit both pattern blocks onto the press bed for the work and turn, but the fit was too tight to print well. So much for saving time! The dark patterns on the inside and outside of the cover are printed in a mix of black & metalic silver ink, and the title is metalic silver. Next step: taking the cover paper and the digital files for the book to the offset studio for printing and finishing. Color me one happy but exhausted print maker.

Tuesday
Feb142012

Volume 2: So close!

Printing the cover of Volume 2 this weekend and sending the files to press next week. Not ready for a victory lap yet, but it is exciting to see the finish line!

Sunday
Jan222012

Rough Scans: Two Spreads of Volume 2

 

Tuesday
Dec202011

Illustration Process: Composition Troubles

The illustration work towards In the Sounds and Seas: Volume 2 has gone remarkably smoothly--so smoothly, in fact, I've hardly given myself the time to write about it here. While each page of V1 felt labored in some way, burdened with making decisions of style and format that would affect the content of the rest of the project, I was able to jump into production of V2 with delightfully little friction. No composition struggles, no clogged pens, and no worries over how to draw hundreds of tiny bunnies. Wonderful!

That was the story, at least, until last week. The action so far in V2 revolves around the character who was revealed at the end of V1, walking through the coastal village, through the woods and to her home/workshop. The rest of the chapter takes place in the workshop and hints at the plans she is making that will carry her through the rest of the story, all of which revolves around the boat she is building.

In the chaos that had grown in my studio prepping and shipping etsy holiday orders, I had lost track of the composition mock-up I built to guide me through this book. Given my good fortune thus far I confidently started illustrating anyway:

And I abandoned it here. The action of walking toward the door of the workshop is not very important and doesn't need to take up more than half the page. The function of this spread is the reveal of the boat: the boat is central to the action of the remaining 5 chapters, and if I'd kept this composition the boat would have been a footnote on the bottom third of the page. No good! So I started over:

With this do-over, I minimized the action of entering the house, and intended to reveal the layout of the house and dramatically introduce the boat in construction in the bottom panel. As I inked the page, I grew less and less satisfied with the composition. Each spread that I have completed so far feels exciting and well made, and this one falls flat. The action of entering the house is still primary, the angle in the bottom panel reads a little forced, and as soon as I started filling in the long panel of water in the middle I realized it was lazy filler. Further, the boat is still not emphasized as the important information on the page: in many ways the boat is the primary character of the series, and this composition doesn't convey that at all.  I abandoned this page as well.

Frustrated at having spent so many hours drawing and inking pages that will not make it into the book, I spent a full day drawing spread composition after composition in miniature to try to work out the best way to tell the story these pages needed to tell. In doing that exercise, I realized that I was trying to accomplish too much, too literally, and in too little space. The whole workshop doesn't have to be laid out dollhouse-style; the important reveal is the boat. So I started again:

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Success! I still want to do some more work on the light/dark balance on the recto page, but what a relief to be able to move on. After two weeks of sketching and penciling and inking and failing, I am very happy with this spread. Keep your fingers crossed that I get back to my old rhythm, and move forward quickly and well. Time's ticking toward my mid-March completion deadline!

Thursday
Oct202011

Embodied Research

With the first pacing mock-up of Chapter 2 of In the Sounds and Seas almost completed and a long quiet fall and winter ahead of me to draw, I thought now might be a good time to write about process and progress.

I faced a different set of challenges in composing the pages for Chapter 2 than I did in Chapter 1. For starters, I had already illustrated some of the more challenging sequences in Ch1 in previous projects, so the visual language was familiar and many of the "how the hell do I draw this?" problems had already been worked through. Ch2 is brand new in that regard. I benefit from knowing how I best work on these drawing projects (in quiet, with hours set aside and a cup of tea), and from knowing the overall aesthetic of the book, but the rest is just new.

Not only that, but the action in the book is foreign to me. The primary event in Ch2-3 is the building of a large sail boat, and the bulk of the rest of the story after that occurs on the ship. I knew that fudging the details in this chapter would be a huge disaster if I realized down the line that, say, a ship of X model couldn't hold the 3 crew I need it to house. Even worse was the realization that if I illustrated the construction of a boat incorrectly, anyone who had actually built (or, for that matter, sailed) a boat would laugh at the sequence with disdain. The story would hold up, but distractingly incorrect details could ruin the experience for some readers.

The first thing I did was read...a LOT. I've spent the summer reading sailing narratives in historical nonfiction and online, pouring over "How to Sail" guides at breakfast, practicing knots, and delighting in Sailing Alone Around the World, Joshua Slocum's autobiography.

Late summer I took a sailing lesson and learned a lot, having only before ever been on large tour-boat cruises on Lake Michigan. I learned how hard it was to pull up the main sail; I learned how severely a boat can (and should) keel; I learned that I get really, really sea sick.

Taking the lesson that doing something once is just as if not more helpful to me than reading how-to guides, I kept my eyes open and searched actively for any news about folks building or restoring sail boats or ships in the Chicago area, that I might be able to help out and learn some tricks. No such luck. Instead, I'm building a model ship!

This will be a model of Mr Slocum's gaff-rigged sloop, The Spray. I couldn't be more excited about it! In the end, I will have hands-on experience with at least some of the problems one would face when building a ship (and I will have my other resources to fill in the gaps), and I'll have a pretty great model from which to draw.

For now, back to steaming the wood and planking the ship!