Temptation at Vinnies Rosebud

sailing endpapers

Some real endpapers that I resisted at Rosebud Vinnies on Saturday. (How did I do that? The cover wasn’t great.)

Dr Doolittles Circus endpapers

And some endpapers that I just couldn’t resist. From Doctor Dolittle’s Circus. A copy without its dust jacket but rather delightful, and paired with a copy of Dr Dolittle and the Secret Lake. I bought both, along with a 1956 copy of Latta and Macbeath’s ‘The Elements of Logic‘ for Scotty to satisfy both his love of logic and his illogical weakness for a nice old book with a special feature. In this case, a custom ‘postage stamp’ on the inside of the front cover advertising the bookstore where it came from. Grahame Book Company.

book shop stamp

Going back to Dr Dolittle for a moment, is it just me, or does this internal illustration from the book depict The Mymble’s long lost sister? (feistiness of this kind runs in the Mymble family, remember.)

Dr Doolittle meets Mymble

Here’s the mysterious Dolittle lady apparently bumping people from a high place ‘by accident’…

Mymble and daughters

And here is the Mymble with sundry feisty daughters. She is introduced to moomin fans in The Exploits of Moominpappa by Tove Jansson (one of my all time fave books).

Main Street Café, Mordialloc

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What are the essential skills of a good waiter? Friendly helpfulness and not spilling your dinner down your neck? Well, yes. But they are bonuses. What you really want is children’s book recommendations and a chat about literature. 

ImageSo here are Gabe’s two most influential reads from the age of around 11. 

1. Ender’s Game by Orson Scott Card – a cult classic soon to be a film. Gabe says ignore the blurb that emphasises a sci-fi theme. It’s really about people.

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2. Blueback by Tim Winton – a great book. I’ve read this one. 

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By the way, Gabe was our bonus waiter. Our real waiter was fantastic and friendly too, but we didn’t get his name. (Only the names of his kids – Arte and Will.) So thanks to the staff at Main Street for my fabulous birthday dinner out. Whenever we have been to this café we have been blown away by the loveliness of the staff. 

 

The Book of Dragons - current copy

Curses!!

This is the copy of E Nesbit’s The Book of Dragons that I have just bought.

NOW I find, (from my latest ABE books newsletter) that for a mere A$ 813.48 I could have bought this!

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The World Book Day Experts Answer Your Questions

The World Book Day Experts Answer Your Questions | World Book Day.

World Book Day experts

World Book Day Showcase – promote children’s reading

This is a great thing. All you crazy book nuts, get on here and write down your thoughts on kids and reading. You already have the book bug. How do you infect the kids as well? My two are already down with a raging book bug infection likely to last them for life. But some kids have an inborn immunity. How can we help them to find the joy and infinite advantages of a reading habit?

Share your ideas on the World Book Day Showcase!

Showcase | World Book Day.

 

books illustrated blog: Drop by for a chat at Bologna Children’s Book Fair 2013

books illustrated blog: Drop by for a chat at Bologna Children’s Book Fair 2013

For anyone lucky enough to be in the vicinity of Bologna, check out the Children’s Book Fair! One day I’ll get there!

Cover_Hello from Australia 2013

A handful of books from my shelves

Here are three with lovely covers that I’ve picked up in op shops.

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The lettering is poor on this one, but otherwise it is so sweet. I love the simple charcoal with colour overlay.

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This is my copy of The Arabian Nights illustrated by Pauline Baynes of Narnia fame (along with much other beautiful work)

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And this rather sumptuous 1965 copy of Ernest Hemingway’s The Old Man and the Sea.

Where have my links gone? Woe…

I am so new to this. I had to change my blog ‘theme’ to something plainer and whiter without little black borders around all the images. Now all my links to favourite blogs have disappeared from the side. Sigh. I guess I’ll work it out, or perhaps someone can help me…

Have a great weekend!

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Keys to successful picture book covers?

I’d better tell you right now that I don’t have all the answers to this. But I have some ideas that grow (and will no doubt change) as I go along.

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This cover is from the wonderful Will Schofield’s blog 50 Watts.

Two days ago I was working on Thunderstorm Dancing at the library. I decided to concentrate on the cover. The recurring challenge for the day was to find a clean simple arrangement of four main elements: title (longish), two creator names, two leading characters in upbeat active pose (is that really two elements?), suggestion of approaching storm preferably including a big, dark cloudy area.

Thoughts on book covers

thinking in the library

1. Book covers are a lot like posters. The main thing is simplicity. The brain can’t take in (or rather can’t organise and process into the short term memory) more than a certain number of ‘chunks’ of information at one time. So you have to organise and limit your chunks and try to get your tonal contrast to help you with this.
2. You need a clear hierarchy of information. Don’t let your illustration and your lettering get into a battle over the top billing. This is a common problem, I find, and was my biggest challenge the other day.
3. Title Lettering is important. Hand lettering is nice if you can do it well. Sometimes skilful typography is as good or better.
4. Striking that fine balance of using a formula that works but also avoiding cliché! Tricky
The perfect number of ‘Chunks of information’
George A. Miller has provided two theoretical ideas that are fundamental to the information processing framework and cognitive psychology more generally. The first concept is `chunking’ and the capacity of short term (working) memory. Miller (1956) presented the idea that short-term memory could only hold 5-9 chunks of information (seven plus or minus two) where a chunk is any meaningful unit. A chunk could refer to digits, words, chess positions, or people’s faces. The concept of chunking and the limited capacity of short term memory became a basic element of all subsequent theories of memory.
Hierarchy and clarity of text with illustration.
The Middle Sheep
A good arrangement. I was happy with this. No fighting. (Although inside the book plenty of fighting between characters)
Greatest Sheep in History
This is a favourite book of mine but not my greatest cover design. The lettering is fighting with the balloon and it could end in tears.
Title Lettering
There are some hand lettering examples here and some are pictured further down.
Cliché
Sometimes making certain that something will work well, means taking the safe route. And that’s not really what art is about, and it doesn’t help us to grow in our abilities, nor our courage. So if there’s a new, exciting idea that works, and doesn’t look like something we have all have seen 300 times before, that is probably better. If your deadline is tomorrow and you have a headache, that might be another matter. Go for the cliché but do it well.
Well, how did I go with my work? Most of the chunks on my cover designs were getting in each other’s way. I needed them to work as a team. I needed a coach, with a whip and a carrot and another carrot or maybe some chocolate. I didn’t have a coach, so I did the next best thing. I went and sat in the children’s picture book section (not to suck my thumb) and went through two shelves pulling out any covers that I thought worked.
These are not necessarily the pinnacle of book covers. They just happened to be the ones on the B and D shelves that seemed to work. At a guesstimate, they amounted to about 2% of the books. A lot of the books fell into the trap of the Greatest Sheep in History with text and illustration fighting to the death. Some were just outdated looking but not in a good way. A lot of the successful ones were older classics like Babar and Madeline, and they also provide great examples of the use of hand lettering. I’m not posting any of the not-working ones, because I’m not here to knock anybody else’s stuff, only my own :-) So here are the books from the B and D shelf that worked for me (some better than others).
Madeline and the gypsies

Great contrast and clarity but still has texture and painterliness.

Madeline and the cats of rome

A complicated image, but still clear to take in. Possibly helps that the book is HUGE.

just how long

A contemporary style. I might have skipped the white drop shadow on the title text. I love the texture on the bird and the string and how the string leads us to the title.

Babar at Home

This is a copy of the original, and the hand lettering has been replaced by fake hand lettering. A pity, but it still works!

Babar and Father Christmas

Also a copy, but so completely delicious! look at that colour contrast and all that ‘white’ space!

Herbert the brave sea dog

This might have been helped by a bit of extra contrast somewhere, but they’re going for soft and that’s okay. It’s not ground-breaking, but one of those tried and true working formulae.

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Perfection. Again, a re-hashed concept. See the latest reprints of Goscinny & Sempé’s Nicholas books (Phaidon) for something very similar. But it’s so good, why not? This book, by the way, is a divine thing. It is like a meshing of Sempé and William Steig (Pete’s a Pizza). I’m buying a copy.

So that was my work day at the library. Yesterday I got home from an appointment to find a parcel on my doorstep with a book by Kang Woo Hyon called ‘Point Story’. Reading that clarified my book cover thoughts even further, with regards to simplicity, contrast and the beauty of the painter’s mark. So I am filled with ideas to move forward now!

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From ‘Point Story’ by Kang Woo Hyon from NAMIbooks.

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Also from Point Story. Go here to see more about NAMI books and Nami Island.

Sorry this was so long (and WordPress seems to be cramping all my paragraphs together. That’s not a good look).

Cheers!

Link

Great video line up for World Book Day. Take in some video inspiration from some of the big names.

World Book Day celebrations – big name kids’ authors share via video.

This has got to be good! I haven’t watched any of these videos yet, but how fantastic! Some of my favourite childrens’ authors and illustrators sharing knowledge on a range of topics. Aimed at kids… I think. I’ll watch some tonight. Busy, busy.