Cuddlefish Gang News – August 2020!

It seems not a Cuddlefish Gang News update passes that we’re not congratulating Dow Phumiruk for something, and this quarter is no exception!

Congratulations to Titan and the Wild Boars, illustrated by Dow for being nominated for the 2021 Rhode Island Children’s Book Award for kids in grades 3-5.

Artwork by Dow Phumiruk

Dow was also East West Literary’s featured illustrator in May!

But, we’re not done: we are thrilled about the recent announcement that Dow will be illustrating The Story of Tammy Duckworth by Christina Soontornvat for Candlewick!

Our own Lily Williams was on NPR with her Go With The Flow co-author Karen Schneemann about menstruation. https://www.cpr.org/…/go-with-the-flow-is-a-story-of-teens…/

Heather Brockman Lee’s beautiful illustrations were published in a recent issue of Babybug Magazine! Woohoo!

We are excited to introduce our newest member!

Brizida Magro is a Boulder, Colorado-based illustrator and educator. She teaches illustration classes at Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design. Brizida holds a BFA in Illustration from Brigham Young University and an MFA in Graphic Design from Utah State University.
She is passionate about rock climbing, wandering the world and bringing stories to life. She works primarily in digital media, often with an analog touch that incorporates collage, ink, and china marker. She enjoys simplicity, whimsy, wee characters, and collecting vintage papers.


Raised by her grandmother and sister, she spent her childhood in a small Portuguese fishing town. Growing up, they would often make things by hand as a family. While her grandmother gardened and baked delicious cakes, she and her sister would spend time making clothes for their dolls and building twig shelters in the countryside.
Her childhood has greatly influenced her current work, which blends together the innocence of vintage children’s art, the naiveté of folk art, and frolicking adventures through mountains and deserts.


The artist is represented by the fine folks at The Bright Agency https://thebrightagency.com/uk
http://sweetbeyond.com/
Brigida Magro

Brizida is such a rock star that we barely have time to announce that she’s joined us and we are already congratulating her on getting a book deal, illustrating Saturday at the Food Pantry by Dian O’Neill for Albert Whitman!

Using the Liquify Effect with Stan

This is Cuddlefish Gang member, Stan Yan‘s portion of an RMC-SCBWI skillshare virtual illustrators’ connect, where he was showing how he uses the push liquify effect in Procreate to create a rippled water effect in an illustration. He also repeated this in Photoshop and showed some of the other liquify effects that are available.

Stan Yanwww.stanyan.me – @stan_yan

Three Lessons From Rough Concept to Ready-to-Paint Drawing

by David Deen www.daviddeen.com @DavidDeen3

Finished Cover Art

Going from a concept to a final artwork can be a mysterious affair. Because every artist has their own process, I can’t show you “how it’s done,” (no such thing exists). I can, however, show you how I do it. I’ll show you how I get from messy concept sketch to final ready-to-be-painted drawing. It’s sometimes funny, sometimes ugly, but hopefully somewhat informative. 

To the right is a painting I recently finished, and please note that all images can be clicked on to see them larger. But it didn’t start off ready to paint; first I had to come up with a concept and develop it until it’s ready. 

Just below you see the concept sketch, which lets us jump right into…

Lesson 1: Allow yourself to make ugly art.

Concept sketch

You know how people talk about finding the diamond in the rough? This is the rough. The point to a concept sketch is to find an idea, not to create polished artwork. That means that you’re using your artist’s eye to see the potential in the concept sketch. At least for me, good artwork is the end of a long process, and that process begins by allowing myself to make ugly (sometimes horrible) art.

The refinement comes later. For example, the creature reaching out from the right in the concept sketch was rough. What is that thing? A rat? A weasel? Spuds MacKenzie reaching out from the 80’s? NO! It’s a fox! Which you’d know if you could see into my mind’s eye. Which you can’t. It’s not even clear that I can draw what’s in my head. I need to develop these characters more before I know whether my ideas will work.

Above you see sketches for the fox character and the goblins. The fox is in a pretty good place, whereas you never see the final goblins; I’m working them out in my head, with sketches on the paper simply as an aide. The poses can change, but now I have real character with details and a feeling I can grab onto. I used the computer to add the new fox into the scene, below. 

Some things are still in the air: the main character, whatever he’s holding, the design of the creatures chasing the hero, etc. But the parts I needed to figure out in sketch are done. Next comes…

Lesson 2: Photo references.

When I was starting out many years ago, I thought that the use of photo references was for amateurs and wannabees. Real artists had enough anatomical knowledge and robust imaginations that they could bring forth everything they needed from their minds, fully formed, like Athena bursting from her father’s cranium. 

I thought this because I was young and stupid.

I was wrong, and my art improved many times over after I got past that stumbling block and began to use photo references. Quite simply, there is so much to anatomy, lighting, the draping of fabric, and more that few artists can conjure it all from thin air in a genuine way. For most of us, it won’t have the authenticity of an image based on carefully chosen photo references.

If you’re just starting out and need permission to use photo references and still feel like a real artists, you are now granted that permission. I use photo references, an so do most of the professional artists I know.

Back to this piece. My next step was obvious – go find some goblins to pose for the camera. When I couldn’t manage that, I did the next best thing – I got my children to pose. Seriously, children are fantastic for getting photo references of strange creatures. They love this kind of thing. They get into it with a passion. Look at those pictures of my younger son as the goblins. He jumped into that role and became those goblins. 

My thirteen year old allowed me to take a few pics, too.

Your project may call for you to cajole the help from friends and family, find online images, or even pay a professional model. Whatever your needs, don’t do what I once did and convince yourself that you can do well enough without. Find and use references.

At this point, I have a final concept and I can move on to creating the final underdrawing –i.e. the drawing to be painted over. I’ve worked out that I want the final to be 9½” x 15”. That fits the dimensions of a mass market book cover with bleed added around the edge, scaled up to a size that will let me get some good detail without taking too long to paint. You can see me working that out on the right side of the original concept sketch. Art math!

The problem is that the sketch is only a few inches across. The solution is…

Lesson 3: The Grid.

The grid method of recreating and enlarging has been around for at least several thousand years. The Egyptians used it. Medieval artists used it. And today, most children come across small versions of the grid method in activity books. I remember using it to recreate a Scooby Doo drawing in the parking lot of an Albertson’s when I was young.

If you haven’t used it, or at least not since you were a small child yourself, the concept is simple: you create a grid on the sketch, and a larger version of the same grid on the painting surface. Then you simply redraw what’s in each square.

To make the measuring easy, and because a one-inch-square box seems about right for the amount of detail to transfer at a time, I use a ruler to draw lines one inch apart all the way down and across my drawing. Then I scan the sketch onto the computer, open it in a Photoshop-style program, set the live portion of the sketch to the same dimension as the intended painting, and use the guides and line tools to create the same grid (on a separate layer from the drawing itself). I print this out, then number the lines from top to bottom and left to right on both the printed sketch and the final painting. You could, alternately, number the boxes between the lines; it doesn’t matter, as long as it works for you.

Final inks.

In the image to the left, you can see the gridded sketch, and on the right, the final drawing. The numbers are visible down and across the sides. Each square (for instance, the one starting at 3 across, 5 down) contains the same thing as the sketch, only refined and developed for the final painting. 

There you go. You’re ready to use the grid method as well as a professional artist. Or child. Or Egyptian.

Until next time, go make ugly art. Then make it beautiful.

Celebrating our Cuddlefish Gang News!

May 7, 2020

First, we would like to congratulate Dow Phumiruk on yet one more accolade for illustrating the critically-acclaimed Counting on Katherine, which was recently listed by Essence in an article ”Here Are The 50 Must-Read Black Children’s And Young Adult Books Of The Past 50 Years”, and was selected for the UKLA Teacher’s Book Awards (Information Books 3 -14+).

And, we’re also excited to announce that Dow’s adorable pet monster book, Hugsby became available for pre-order in February

…as well as a book she’s illustrating for Andrea Beaty, called One Girl.

Second, we would like to congratulate Heather Brockman Lee on winning March’s SCBWI DrawThis! contest with this stunning piece of artwork:

Third, we would like to congratulate Kaz Windness on the exciting new of the acquisition of her picture book, Swim, Jim! by Simon and Schuster.

In addition, we are excited to learn that Kaz Windness is also a finalist for the SCBWI Crystal Kite Award for Mother Goth Rhymes!

Finally, Kaz’s Bats art graces the cover of the VISNews magazine she’s interviewed in.

Lily Williams continues to receive accolades for the graphic novel she co-authored and illustrated, Go With The Flow, being mentioned in The Washington Post article, “If your child likes comics, here’s a book list to help navigate the shelves”


…as well as receiving AAAS/Subaru SB&F Prize for Excellence in Science Books for her illustration work on Can You Crack the Code!

Finally, we would like to welcome Patricia Clock to the Cuddlefish Gang!  

Patricia Clock is an author/illustrator and graphic designer. She is a native of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, where she grew up surrounded by the ocean, the mountains, and a culture that is full of color. She graduated from Faculdade da Cidade with a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Graphic Design and Acting, she worked in the art department for Sony Music Entertainment Brazil, creating CD covers and marketing materials before moving to the United States in 2005. Denver, Colorado, was her first home far away from home, but after a year, she moved to northern California with her husband, where they had two children.

In 2018, after moving back to Denver, Colorado, she started working at her neighborhood elementary school, Willow Creek, and discovered her passion for children’s literature and decided to focus on Children’s picture book illustrations, and became a member of SCBWI.

She loves her family, to laugh, chocolate, white sand beaches, horses, dancing, and be with friends.

Beginning Your Career as a Comic Book Illustrator– Stan Yan Interview

Cuddlefish member, Kaz Windness has started a series of informational YouTube videos for illustrators. One of her recent interviews was with fellow Cuddlefish member, Stan Yan and fellow RMCAD instructor, so we have had them combine their powers to create this!

Stan Yan reveals tips and tricks for breaking into the comics and graphic novel field. What you need in your portfolio, plus best ways to get seen, get an agent, and find work.

Activism in KidLit: How Not To Dull Down the Information

by Lily Williams

When we get to a certain age, I think most of us forget that when we were kids we totally knew what was going on. Sure, maybe we didn’t really understand that raunchy song that played on the radio… and sure, maybe we didn’t totally get why we cried when mean words were thrown at us. But we felt the joy in the music and we felt the pain in the words. So why is it that so many adults think that kids media needs the information to be dulled down for kids to understand it? Why do adults think kids aren’t paying attention to the world around them?

Dulling (or dumbing) down information is when we take ideas and words and make them simple and easy.

Distilling information is when we take ideas and words and make them more precise and effective.

This is the difference that children’s book authors and illustrators must keep in mind when making books for kids.

I write and illustrate a series of nonfiction picture books called the If Animals Disappeared books. These books take a look at the trophic cascade in various ecosystems and the cause and effects that the elimination of a keystone species can have on our planet. This series takes a lot of research and distilling the information can often leave me with a headache. When writing them, I keep this idea of “dulling versus distilling” ever-present in my mind. If I dull the information, it will make the science less effective and the story has little impact. However, if I distill the information, it will make the point hit home harder and inspire change in the hearts and heads of readers. While both dulling and distilling are forms of shortening complicated information and topics when you distill the information you keep the impact.

Example from If Elephants Disappeared (written and illustrated by Lily Williams, published by Roaring Brook Press September 17th, 2019)

Dulling: “African Elephants are important to their environment in a lot of ways because they are a keystone specifies. Because of this, it is necessary to keep them alive.”

Distilling: “Elephants are a keystone species, which means that their actions — from walking to eating, to pooping to sleeping — shape their environment. Without keystone species, the ecosystems they live in, such as African tropical forests, would change dramatically.”

I have read my books aloud at a lot of bookstores and I have not encountered one single kid to not understand the concept and the impact that we have on our planet, because my words are distilled (not dulled). Once we finish reading my books, most kids want to write to their representatives and help save the animals and their ecosystems. Young readers understand the importance of the animals and the cause and effect eliminating them has on our planet as a whole through carefully distilled word choices and effective illustrations. They understand that these animals are endangered and I am able to help them process what it means to be endangered and how that could eventually affect them at home. Giving kids the information and tools to make positive impacts on our planet, helps empower them as young people.

It is important to know that contrary to the way kids react to my books, many adults find my books to be any variety of “too upsetting” and “too advanced” for children. To them I say, you must not be talking to kids like they are people too. Kids hear the news, listen to their parents, overhear conversations in public, and know that topics like climate change are real (the topic of If Polar Bears Disappeared); however, if we do not give kids the tools to understand the long term impacts of their actions and honor them enough to give them the space to process the information… What are we doing and why are we doing it?

This is why it is important to distill the information rather than dull it down. The kids are listening and reading, they are growing and finding their identities every single day. We owe it to them to empower them with effective information to make better, more educated, choices as they continue to grow up and find their place in this world.

Be the change,

Lily Williams

Character Expressiveness Tic-Tac-Toe

If you want to learn how to draw more expressive characters, you’ve come to the right place! This month’s Cuddlefish blog comes to you from Stan Yan.

Try the exercises you find in this video and share what you learned. And be sure to tag us on your favorite social media outlet using @cuddlefishgang:

Facebook: @cuddlefishgang

Instagram: @cuddlefishgang

Twitter: @cuddlefishgang

And tune in on the 15th of each month for more great ideas and information.


Visit Stan at:

Web: http://stanyan.me/
Facebook: squidworkscomics
Instagram: zombicatures
Twitter: @stan_yan

Stan Yan at San Diego Comic-Con!

Stan Yan couldn’t believe this was the 50th San Diego Comic-Con, and his EIGHTEENTH year of exhibiting! And, while he didn’t exceed his record sales from last year, there were a lot of things that made this particular year particularly special.


Firstly, his good friend and fellow Cuddlefish, Kaz Windness, who was debuting her convention exclusive edition of Mother Goth Rhymes, invited him to participate in a panel about horror in comics, which Stan said was great fun, and featured comics legend, Trina Robbins! 

Secondly, there were fun meals with friends almost every night, including some with Kaz, her agent Timothy Travaglini, kidlit superstar, Salina Yoon and her phenomenal artist husband, Christopher Polentz!


Thirdly, although revenues weren’t up, he was extremely happy to say that he sold 37 copies of There’s a Zombie in the Basement this year (not to mention almost 200 buttons and stickers)! GO STAN!!!

Of course, he doesn’t want to understate how many great caricature customers there were! He received 40 zombie, pony, and other character commissions (62 subjects), finishing 31 (50 subjects), and will attempt to finish and ship the remaining drawings to folks over the next two weeks. Sounds like Stan is going to be a busy guy!


You can view his complete gallery of drawings from Comic-Con at http://stanyan.me/2019-san-diego-comic-con-report/, which will be updated as his illustrations are completed! Brilliant work as always Stan!

San Diego Comic-Con Success and Happy Book Birthday to Kaz Windness’ Mother Goth Rhymes

Cuddlefish member, Kaz Windness just got back from San Diego Comic-Con and has earned the affectionate nickname of “sell-out.” Why?

Here she is at the Hermes Press booth, seeing her book for the very first time. Hermes Press decked their display with a 10-foot banner featuring Stabby the Unicorn and ran a special comic-con exclusive limited edition version of Mother Goth Rhymes with a teal cover and full-color signed and numbered tip-in sheet. Mother Goth Rhymes received extra-special treatment.

This is the SDCC limited edition teal cover with signed, full-color tip-in sheet.

Hermes Press brought just over 210 copies at the conference with a special cover price of $49.99, and here Kaz is on Saturday afternoon selling the last copy! “Hermes told me this never happens,” quipped Windness. “Only Jim Davis [Garfield creator] sold every last copy. But by Saturday afternoon, we were taking orders for the special edition copies left back at the office, with free shipping, of course. Considering how many nightmares I had that I wouldn’t sell a single book, this came as a surprise and total thrill.”

On Friday afternoon, Kaz shared the panel stage with fellow Cuddlefish member, Stan Yan, and comics legend Trina Robbins for a discussion about women in horror and finding humor in the macabre, facilitated by Hermes Press founder and president, Dan Herman.

And perhaps the best thing is that Kaz’s book is officially out and pre-orders will be mailed on August 13th. You can get your copy HERE for only $24.99.

We asked Windness for any final words of advice for showing at Comic-Con.

“Bring business cards and some freebie handouts like button pins or vinyl stickers to go with a bigger ticket for-sale item. And NEVER trust natural deodorant to do the trick. It is no match for the power of Comic-Con.”

Congratulations to our sell-out, Kaz Windness, and here’s to the creepy world of Mother Goth!

Visit Kaz Windness here:
www.MotherGothRhymes.com
www.WindnessBooks.com

Best Portfolio Websites for Illustrators

As The Cuddlefish Gang is busy creating our new website (www.CuddlefishGang.com), I thought I’d take a moment to share some tips and tricks on portfolio websites, sure to hook those big fish clients.

Domain Names
Personalize it! While it’s tempting to use a free domain option (http://YourName.wixsite.com/mysite), that a sure sign of an amateur. Free web addresses are bulky, hard to remember, and look terrible on print marketing.
Choose an easy-to-remember domain name. Your name is your brand, so use it! YourName.com or YourNameArt.com is going to be a lot easier to remember than something obscure, no matter how cute it is.
Buy and forward your other names. If you’re like me, you go by both a nickname (Kaz) and your given name (Karen). I own all my names and I forward them to my website: WindnessBooks.com. Why WindnessBooks.com you ask? I lost KarenWindness.com for a couple years because I forgot to renew the domain and the domain thief wanted $400 for it! Don’t be like me. Set up an auto-renew!

Name Logo
On the subject of names, many illustrators use a hand-drawn version of their name for branding. This is great for personalizing websites and social media, too!

Hosting with the Mosting
I posted a survey to The Cuddlefish Gang, and here are our favorite portfolio website providers: Squarespace, WordPress, Wix, or build-it-yourself.

Lily K. Williams says: I use WordPress because it has video hosting, and that is basically it. However, in the last two years, they have really made it easier to use. I pay a lot for the business package though, so maybe that’s the only reason I think it’s worthwhile. If you don’t need video hosting (and can just upload a link from Youtube) and are more comfortable with a different hosting site, then go for it! I will say I do like the fact that I can have a blog, portfolio website, and store all in one place. But I think you can do that with most of them now. So chose what’s easiest and what you don’t have to learn!

David Deen‘s approach: I use a WYSIWYG program called Magix and then manually upload the files to my web host (Lunarpages). I used to write the HTML code in a text editor, and then later used a hand-written Perl script to make changes to all the pages at once, but as the web got more complicated, that became less and less feasible. So now I use the WYSIWYG editor. What can I say? I’m old school! (And I’m cheap, too!)

Dustin Resch adds: I recommend people use a builder these days (10 or 15 years ago I’d have punched myself in the mouth for saying that, those things are trying to put me out of a job) – I find Squarespace and others to be really easy to use. I’ll always do some extra template customization, part because I’m extra picky about websites, part just because I can, for me it’s like a cook reading a recipe and ad-libbing ingredients based on experience.

Templates
Chose a template with a clean portfolio-forward display option. Wix has a design option specifically for illustrators. Squarespace’s  Wexley, Avenue, Wells, or Flatiron templates are all good choices. The main thing is to show potential clients (HELLO PUBLISHERS!) your art right away. No landing pages, no cropped click-through images, no messy backgrounds, just bold, fabulous in-your-face art! White backgrounds with clean and simple navigation for the win.

What should be on your website?
ART: But only your best work and only work that pertains to your targeted market. Quality over quantity. And if you enjoy painting simple baby board book stuff and highly rendered realistic chapter book illustrations, too, separate that work in different categories. We know you can do many things well, but if you mix it all together, it gives the impression that you are scattered and it’s hard for the client to zone in on exactly what they want to hire you for.

Unlike printed portfolios, your website can feature a lot of artwork. Just be sure you’re proud of everything in your portfolio and updating with new work regularly. And if you hate drawing something, don’t show samples of it! Murphy’s Law guarantees that your one tortured bicycle piece will land you a gig drawing lots and lots of bikes.

CONTACT INFO: Include a contact page that features your social media handles (live links are best) and at least one easy way to find you. I use my email address and I’ve spelled it out (karenwindness (AT) gmail.com) to avoid any potential bot fishing. I check this email account every day so I won’t miss an interested client. Also, I hate talking on the phone, so I don’t include my number on my web or other marketing materials. I wouldn’t answer if you called, so why would I advertise that number?

ABOUT YOU: Publishers are hiring a person and a personality just as much as they are hiring you for your talents. They want to work with illustrators they connect with. Include a photo of yourself and a short bio. Talk about your niche/focus and include some personal interesting tidbits, too.

Optional but good to have pages are: links to your blog, merchandise (print-on-demand store), published books for purchase, book projects, and events.

In conclusion, I hope you find these web tips helpful! If you’d like to add tips of your own or think I’ve forgotten something, please chime in and leave your comments below.

And be sure to follow The Cuddlefish Gang everywhere on the interwebs!

www.CuddlefishGang.com

Facebook: @cuddlefishgang

Instagram: @cuddlefishgang

Twitter: @cuddlefishgang


Post by Kaz Windness, founding member of The Cuddlefish Gang, RMCAD Illustration Instructor, and Illustrator Coordinator for the RMC-SCBWI.