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Icon №9 ноябрь 2017 онлайн
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ICON 9: A Few Pixels to the Left: An Editorial Perspective - Len Small
Len Small is the Art Director for Nautilus magazine and graphic designer. These are the notes that I took from his workshop.
Part 1: Art Directors Have Problems
How to get work
referrals from peers and ADs that know you and your work
competition annuals
inter-webs
Illustration Age
American Illustration
awards/competitions
(e)mailers
don’t send links to google drives/dropbox
go ahead and attach small images to email
postcards
send emails or mailers every 2-3 months, it keeps you in the mind of ADs and to show your latest work
Part 2
The job
are you available? Be honest if you are to busy don’t take on more then you can chew
does the budget work? Be nice if the budget is not what you are expecting, ask if there is more available but don’t cause a fuss
do you understand the assignment? If not, ask questions, better to understand then to get it wrong
when is it due?
The work
a voice
-speak outside the basics
-draw a relationship to the subject
-draw a parallel story
-don’t draw a desk and computer for business piece
-does the sketch give a clear concept without a statement to explain it?
the AD is part of a team, there are many opinions
deliver the final early, even if it’s a couple of hours early. It will be noted when you deliver early. Delivering at the end of a day makes it difficult for the AD to ask for changes or move it on through the process
keep your emails in a thread, it makes it easier for the AD to follow what has been passed between you
Good director goes bad
stories get pulled, it’s not your fault
but what if it is me?
-ideas may not be working
-suggest a phone call to the AD to discuss the problem
-it’s ok to say “it’s not working”
-believe the AD when they say they will contact you at another time
-don’t stop contacting them
Part 3: The Good Stuff
Promos
postcards that kill
unique mailers
handwritten notes
State of industry
web publications
Nautilus along with other magazines have in-house illustrators
digital knowledge important
motion is getting more prevalent
Dos/Don’ts
don’t assume anything
don’t send work at the end of the day
don’t talk bad about the AD on social media
don’t use type unless you are a pro
don’t mail to a personal address
be courteous and reply back, regardless if you take the job or not
send your W9
Meeting with ADs
personal appointment, more inclined to hire after meeting face to face. Don’t forget to leave behind something
it’s never to early to start promoting yourself
ICON 9: Idea Generation on a Deadline - Anita Kunz
Anita Kunz one of the best illustrators spent some time explaining to us in a workshop how to go about generating ideas. Below are a few things I jotted down from it.
New Yorker magazine work
magazine accepts submitted ideas
-NYC specific ideas
-cultural ideas
-timely events
turn around can be within 24 hours
AD does not work with just local illustrators but internationally as well
use humor to get across difficult subjects
come up with ideas quickly and get them to the magazine, someone else might beat you to it
send your comps, you’ll never know if it’s a hit
sometimes they hold onto the idea and contact you when they want to create it
think more laterally
start with a single noun, then break that down into more nouns and so forth
from that tree choose 2 or three nouns to create an image
ICON 9: 10 Mistakes Illustrators Make - Guiseppe Castellano
Guiseppe has a fantastic blog and he has already addressed this topic, but he brought up a few extras in the workshop that I’ve posted. Doesn’t hurt to review these again, even if you’ve read his blog. One thing he did mention, is how often even the “seasoned” illustrators make these mistakes.
10. Wrong file type is a JPG
Right format and type
layered PSD, TIF, EPS
300-350 DPI (color)
1200 DPI (BW)
9. Wrong color space RGB
Right format is CMYK
8. Thinking inside the crayon box (big pet peeve)
color is a character
trees are not just green, so why use the green crayon
don’t dumb down kids books, kids are smart and deserve a sophisticated color palette, make thoughtful color choices
color is like music, loud & quiet
don’t use the same chroma throughout the piece, vary it
7. POV
make it interesting
6. Cropping
watch where you crop
don’t crop at joints
5. Composition
watch the horizon line, it’s boring on the 1/3
look at Sendak’s Where the Wild Things Are for good use of composition
4. It’s not all about you
projects get cancelled, editors change their minds, don’t take it personally
3. Specs
follow what the AD gives you
ask questions if you don’t understand or need clarification
2. Consistency
style in a series is important
characters need to follow through. If the kid has 3 stripes on his shirt to start with, he’d better have 3 stripes throughout the series
1. Surprises
Don’t renege on a contract 1 week before the project is due. Give as much notice as possible if it looks like the deadline cannot be met
Don’t complain about clients on social media, they read it too
Bonus Mistakes
1. Worrying about “style”
style is your interpretation of the world, not what brush you use or how you style eyes
PS brushes are doing the heavy work, don’t let the brush lead the way
2. Not focusing on what really matters
your art
how well you do that thing you do (using your brain and heart)
Guiseppe also mentioned that your website bios should be really who you are, not a CV. It’s from the bios that ADs get the chance to get to know who you are and if they want to work with you.
ICON 9 - Don Tate “So You Want to be a Children’s Book Illustrator” Workshop Notes
I had the privilege to attend ICON 9 this year in Austin TX. I made some notes from some of the workshops and lectures I attended. Lots of gems to share with you all.
Courtesy of DonTate.com
The first is from Don Tate’s workshop on getting into the children’s book market.
Start with educational publishers
gives you experience in serial character development
is usually work for hire
Don started in Scholastic education imprint and from working with them was able to get a foot in the door with Scholastic publication
Find your niche
Attend conferences where AD’s and editors will be in attendance so that you can have contact with them
Do your research on the different imprints in publishing, find the ones that are of interest to you and fit your work
Don advises finding an agent, they know people in the industry and can help get you started
Agents suggest keeping a few different “styles”, it provides some flexibility in opportunities for work
Join SCBWI
http://www.underdown.org/, and http://cynthialeitichsmith.blogspot.com/ have information that is helpful for starting children’s book illustration
smaller publishers have better marketing budgets and put more effort in promoting books then the larger publishers
Process for illustrating a book
begin with the story, either a manuscript given or written
read the story
sign the contract (5% royalty for illustrator/5% royalty for author)
thumbnails/storyboard
Research!!! Make sure you do it
comps
dummy book
helps you see how page turns look
where the placement of text works best
make sure the composition encourages the reader to turn the page
revisions
creation