Mouseboat

 
 

It’s release day for Mouseboat!

 
 

Here’s some more bits and pieces of the book making process: thumbnails, sketches, reference images and very early character ideas.

As an illustrator, I think there’s a danger in getting too close to a story: a certain amount of objectivity always helps, in my experience. But sometimes that line blurred for me while working on Mouseboat. Over the course of the book, I lost my grandmother, my uncle and attended funerals for other friends and family. While I couldn’t relate to Faye’s untimely loss of her mother, I could relate to the wave of emotions that grief hits you with: anger, guilt and sorrow, crashing over your head.

This past fall, I heard the Polish expression that in a shipwreck, all you need is a plank. Not two. Not three. A plank is all you need to keep afloat and survive. Looking at the illustrations for Mouseboat, I hope that sentiment comes through. It’s impossible to sweep away all the turmoil that grief brings and it can often feel like a storm from which there’s no possibility of relief. But sometimes it just takes one small thing to hold onto, as you stick your head above the waves. One plank.

And if there’s anything that comes through in the art for Mouseboat, I hope it’s that small bit of hope.

Not Yet

 
 

I started spring cleaning earlier this month. Then I started moving furniture. After single-handedly moving a couch, a coffee table, one chair and a houseplant that weighs more than me, things are looking up. There is far less dust and much less inertia. In the process, I unearthed a few sketches and assorted book ideas. I loosely based the sketches above on an autumnal road trip my grandparents took us on, as teenagers. The highlight of the trip was definitely eating fried chicken and brownies outside the legendary Willey House on a glorious October day.

Other things:

The Piratess

 
 

Imaginary labels for imaginary libations. Although on second thought, pirates seem more like rum aficionados than G&T fans.

 
 

Testing, Testing

 
 
 
 

It’s exactly a month until the release of Mouseboat, written by Larissa Theule. It feel like final artwork was just turned in for this yesterday, but the calendar reminds me that was close to a year (!) ago.

I’ve begun sifting through early sketches and art tests, ahead of the book’s release. It’s always fascinating what remains and what is done away with during this stage. Here’s a few early pieces of art from the book.

And I’m over the moon that Mouseboat has a starred review from both Booklist and The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books.

 
 

A mossy pattern and a fairy maid. The above-average-temperatures have me prematurely thinking spring. And while that’s a ways off yet, the longer days and the brighter mornings are very much welcome.

Assorted Things:

  • I just finished watching the first season of Astrid et Raphaëlle and it’s absolutely charming (streaming stateside on Amazon and airing on PBS affiliates).

  • If you’re local to seacoast New Hampshire, Two Bees Café is splendid. I popped in for a carrot cake and a coffee this week. Days later, I’m still obsessing over the wallpaper.

  • Wildcat, a new Flannery O’Connor biopic is in the works.

  • This London-loving sweater pattern went straight into my Ravelry queue.

Hourly Comic Day

 
 

Because I needed a creative kick in the pants, I decided to give Hourly Comic Day a whirl. I had a free day Wednesday and thought it would be a good challenge to work in a format I don’t typically use. All in all, it’s pretty mundane, but Miley Cyrus and homemade turkey soup do make an appearance (just not together), so there’s that.

:: Read here / Click Thumbnails to Advance ::