In that time, it went from being a picture book to a board book. Color proofs came in while I was teaching at Hollins last summer.
So, now I'll answer a few of the questions I ask my visiting authors and illustrators...
1) My media was pencil, digital, and watercolor. I drew very small, then scanned my sketches at a very high resolution to create the compositions in Photoshop.Thank you for joining me on this creative journey!I like the chunkiness and texture that happens to a line when it gets blown up - although scanning it at a high resolution is key, because I don't want the line to degrade, just show its texture.
2) My favorite part of being an illustrator is having the chance to stretch myself, experiment, and play with new approaches. Not everything needs to end up as a book.
3) Heart Art to me is any image that makes your breath catch, your heart flutter, your eyes stare in wonder as you try to enter the magic the image creates. If I can't stop looking at it, it's probably heart art to me!
4) These days, I don't advertise myself. Jane keeps me busy! And with my teaching jobs, I have as much as I can handle. So, I'm pretty pleased with my picture book work load right now.
5) The most challenging part of being a creator is keeping up with my (and Jane's) ideas. There's so much work I need to create! I need at least five more lifetimes or clones of myself!
6) I didn't hide any easter eggs in MerBaby, although I do sometimes do that. And I do have extra art for MerBaby that didn't make it into the book. What I like about it, though, is that the baby could be a boy or a girl - it's up to the reader.
7) I'm actually in-between books at the moment. Oh, except for the novel I'm writing for my PhD. But another book with Cornell seems to be looming, and I'm hoping MerBaby will turn into a series, and there's a grant project that, if accepted, could lead to four non-fiction picture books. I also have several works-in-progress and books with my agent. So... yeah.
8) A dream project to me would be any work I create that measures up to the standards of the books that made me want to become a picture book creator in the first place. Although, I'm not sure I will ever have the objectivity to see if I've reached that point!
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