I'm stuck
-
I really love your art ,I agree it is hard to know what is modern,especially what modern children will like, but really it is the parents who pay the books for the children so do you need to appeal to the parent too. Maybe SVS could do a video on current trends in childrens books. That piece with the buffalos and witch is amazing.
-
But whats wrong with looking old style? I love it! Its like making pics with traditional camera. Those pics dont dont have all the effects but many people prefer it, as they are more natural. Its about fashion and fashion often goes back to the past. I think the most important is, if you like it or not? If you do, then dont change:)
-
I like "old looking" drawings. In my opinion, your style is amazing.
-
Your style appeals to me, I guess I'm old fashioned.
-
@TessW Wow!!! Thank you TONS for taking the time to go over these. I can see what you mean now! I do have a hard time controlling my values, for sure. I work mainly with watercolor and I am guilty of making everything too light all the time. I did take those classes, I think I need to review the lessons though.
YOU ROCK. Thanks!
-
@ajiabram Thank you! I really love your work. Your pen and ink stuff is very striking. I keep hearing that "tastes come around" but I don't want to be waiting for forever to get out there. Good luck on your stories, too!
-
@Marsha-Kay-Ottum-Owen I always get compliments from grannies, too! Maybe grannies know where it's at, right?
-
@DOTTYP I would LOVE for a video on trends in children's books. Because everything is so varied and mixed together and because publishers are buying books 2 years in advance, it is such a murky area. My true goal is to find a look and a voice that pleases me to my bones, and I can feel it starting, but I feel like I need a push. Like when I go to draw something, I can feel something happening, but somehow, in the final piece the magic that I felt in the drawing dies and it looks old to me. Maybe my problem is in the rendering...
Anyhow, thank you tons for the feedback!
-
@aska I do love older illustrations, but I don't think that it is something that will bring the paychecks in at the moment. Some of the older illustrations I didn't start appreciating until I spent some time really studying them. Do kids and parents these days want to devote the time to acquire a taste for this sort of work? It also does come down to fun for me. I have a lot of fun at the drawing stage, but in the painting stage, something becomes tedious for me so maybe that is a signal I should change something. I just wish I knew what!
-
@alfredbaudisch Thank you!
-
@Christine-Garner Thank you!
-
@JeaneBean i understand you need to earn money. However i also believe that its better to find your niche that follow some fashion. Good luck with adjusting your style, so you are happy with it, but dont adjust it in a way that is easy to sell. Maybe its an idealistic view, but at least you will enjoy your work;) iam not a proffesionalist, just a hobbyst, so sorry if its a pack of BS
-
@JeaneBean No problem. I actually think you could keep things on the light side, as I've seen that aesthetic before and it works. You have a lot working for you- you just need to figure out how to control your focal point a bit better.
For example, this illustration by Beatrix Potter is pretty light to mid tone, but she pops the foreground figures out by a little more contrast in her line work and accents of color.
Or this one by Maurice Sendak. Notice how busy his background is? But the boy pops out by how light he is and how little texture he has over his whole body.
Anyway, like I said, I really like your style! I would just make more of it and watch how you order it. Maybe do more with kids in it and make a few more black and white images if you also want to tap into middle grade books?
-
Your work is really nice but I noticed that your characters seem more whimsical than your back grounds which feel more realistic(the third image is a good example) as well possibly some of your color choices could be brighter the image with the buttery flies is an example. Hope my ideas help you
-
@JeaneBean I guess they know what they like
-
As previously mentioned and demonstrated I think there are a few things that you could do (maybe even in Photoshop to your existing images) to help improve the dimension in them. I don't think you have an old style by any means - especially when it comes the figures and compositions. If you are looking for a challenge to help shake things I would try a color palette challenge. Find a color scheme with no more than 5 colors, and try and create an illustration based on that. A "trendy" color scheme might help you bring your prior knowledge into a fresh light.
As a side note, I really like the second image. I wouldn't necessarily say you need to focus on "darker" imagery, but the composition, form, and color choices in that piece are really nice.
-
@aska I totally agree with you. It is such a fine line to navigate!
-
@TessW Great examples! Thank you! I really like how Beatrix Potter did hers with the lines of different weights. Perhaps I will try that in the future.
-
@Tyler-Hallstrom I think you are spot on on the color. I didn't notice it until I had uploaded everything to my website but I have a tendency to use the same three colors over and over again. It seems that everything I make is red, green and yellow. I also noticed that I unconsciously decorate my house in these colors, too. I think I will pick some different color palettes and see what happens. Thanks for the great tips!
-
@JeaneBean No problem! Personally, I love using https://coolors.co/ to help generate ideas. Sometimes it can be fun just to start with a color scheme and let that help lead you to the story and your image.