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Thursday, September 30, 2010

Doing Squat And Getting Paid For It!

Finally,I offer you Squat. The final member of the perpetually active, ethnically diverse "Rhythm Kids" that are at the forefront of grade school kid wrangling. Again, this was a piece done for a grade school music teacher and is used with all the other rhythm kid illustrations, alternately, to teach rhythm and work off the sugar rush from lunch. (see "Stretch" below this one and the original four Rhythm Kids here).


I've posted the work-in-progress below. There's the very rough pencil sketch. Then the inked line art (inked digitally, by the way). And then the flat-color version, the last step before smudging in the highlights and shadows. It's a pretty simple illustration done in under an hour, but I'm told the kids in the classroom are "transfixed" by these things. Go figure. Now if these kids would just hurry up and become art directors at major publishing houses, I'd be in business. -v

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Everybody Stretch!

That's right, stop whatever you're dong, stand up and have a good stretch. Get the blood pumping, get the oxygen flowing to your brain. There. Didn't that feel good? Now you're refreshed and ready to do some productive work instead of falling asleep at your desk and drooling on your keyboard. Now get back to work!


That's the theory behind this illustration -- just the latest in a series -- commissioned by a grade school music teacher who happens to be a friend of mine. Apparently, every once in a while you need to shake those kids up, get them refocused and burn off the desire to fidget. It improves learning, emotional positivity and physical health. So go ahead...stand up and stretch. It's good for you.


The work-in-progress steps include the very rough pencil sketch, the inked line and the flat-color version. -v




Monday, September 20, 2010

Moo.

This was a fun project I completely forgot to post this summer when I did it. It's an ad for a chain of dairy stores in the midwest. The ad was part of their summer give-away. I don't have the finished ad with all the copy (they take care of that at the advertising firm that hired me) but I do have the original illustration free of text. What a lovely day on on the farm: cows picnicking with their active, healthy families, riding bikes, skipping rope, openly drinking each other's milk. Mmmm boy, that's what summer's all about.


Odd inside fact: The cows to the left were approved and then, days later, someone decided they looked too much like pigs. So I made the edits they called for (see the startlingly more cow-like cows below).


Now down here I've posted some work-in-progress steps. You can see the two concepts that were vying for first place. The cow picnic eventually won out over the cows-racing-around-the-local-track concept. I think that was a solid choice.


I also have cow dad and cow son (now with new, approved cow faces) separated from their background. It's standard practice to leave the files in separate layers so the ad agency can reposition the components for different ad setups.


The final work-in-progress image is not, as you might suspect, a hideous eight-legged cow deity wielding his hammer of vengeance. He was part of the online flash game that accompanied this summer giveaway (sorry, the game has been taken down now, so you can't go play it). Other illustrations for the game included a carnival "ring-the-bell" game with movable bell and indicator. The cow has extra parts so the flash animators could create the animation of a cow hitting the ring-the-bell game with a mallet. I'm not sure what the grand prize was, but it had something to do with milk. Though I'm sure many of you would agree that the real prize is learning all these behind-the-scenes secrets of the big-time ad game. Right? Right?? -v


Thursday, September 16, 2010

Vroom Vroom! Rat-a-tat-a-tat!

If there's anything I know less about than guns and cars, you've got me stumped (my old girlfriend may beg to differ). So it's always fun when a client asks me to illustrate both.


Here's another piece I did for Brashear --- this time a promotional piece for a gun mount they manufacture. I always feel a little off-balance going into projects like this. Especially when the end product ends up on t-shirts given to actual soldiers. I figure those guys are pretty good with guns and cars, so they could spot errors like an eagle spotting field mice. But I think I came close enough to make everybody happy (excluding, of course, old girlfriends). -v