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Laura Egley Taylor

Then a miracle occurs . . .

Best nativity scene ever!

December 24th, 2011

A drawing my son, Reeve, did in kindergarten.

I love how jubilant Mary is here. Anyone who’s given birth knows that feeling. . . WOOHOO! (And Merry Christmas, y’all!)

 

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gone fishin’

July 29th, 2010

crunch-time-clutter

Not! But in casting about for a metaphor to explain such abject blog neglect on my part, it’s the one that surfaces. We’re in magazine throes* now, hurtling down that final week toward the on-press date. . .

And meanwhile it’s summertime back at the ranch, where, over the last few weeks, my brother came visit (first time in 15 years!), Tim and Reeve and I helped friends move, our 13-year-old cat tried to die (spent several days at the vet but seems to be hanging in there on his own now), Reeve had to find (and did!) a place to live in the fall in Las Cruces, where he’s heading back to school. Lots going on.

So, no fish. Except for the undaunted little guy taped to my monitor.

And apologies for the blog silence.

Photo of my desk, magazine production in process. . .

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behind the scenes at issue #161

July 7th, 2010

How to illustrate a magazine article, in this case: an article titled “Handsome in Pink,” written by a dad, Matthew Rushford, about his little boy’s love of the color pink.

1. Hire Ben Hatke.

Email Ben, whom you know from a previous job he did for Mothering, briefly describing the story, budget, and deadline. Ask whether he’s available. Send the story and an excerpt describing the scene which you think might make a good opener:

I stood with my two-year-old son, gazing at the wall of shoes at Payless Shoes. In our immediate range of vision were easily 300 pairs of shoes, all more or less John’s size, and in every conceivable style. Sneakers, slippers, hiking shoes . . . “Oh! These, Papa!” my son gasped, seeming to be literally pulled toward one particular pair, fourth row from the top, far to one side. I walked over to find him reaching for the first_thumb-w-nomost beautiful pair of white and pink slip-on pumps you could ever see on the feet of a 35- pound toddler. They were just about the pinkest, floweriest, girliest pair of shoes in the store. . .

2. Get an email back from Ben, saying he’s available and interested and attaching a rough sketch (1):

I just sent you a scribbly thumbnail showing my first inclination. Pretty simple and literal . . .

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3. spread-w-noWrite Ben back, saying you

need more room for the text of the story.

And send him a PDF showing the space available across the top half of the opening spread (2). Tell him the illustration is looking good, but:

My initial thought is that the shoes need to be “over the top” in their sparkling pink amazingness.

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second_thumb-w-no4. Get email from Ben with a revised thumbnail (3).

Notice that it is really close to what you want. Except for the shoes. They still don’t feel quite right. Not girlie enough. Or. . . what?

5. Realize that the problem might be that the text says ‘pumps’ but the shoes in the rough sketch look more like booties. Point this out to Ben.

6. Receive email from Ben:

Great.  I’ll get on this then, and I’ll be sure to make the shoes proper pumps. Stay tuned!

pencils-w-no7. Get another email from Ben with pencils (sketch done in pencil, before color is added) (4).

Attached are the pencils for the Handsome in Pink illo. The scan is pretty bad because the pencils are so light, but I thought you’d want to check it for any glaring problems.  Otherwise I’ll start in on inks in the morning.

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8. Look closely at the latest sketch and realize that even though the text says “pumps,” and even though you asked for pumps, toddler girls’ shoes aren’t really pumps.

Here’s where you also think that Ben may not have had occasion to be in the know about Toddler Girl Shoe Fashion. Send him a veritable pink plethora of girlie toddler shoe imagery you find online (5).shoes-w-no

I think I steered you wrong with PUMPS.  I should’ve done this initially, but I just now went looking online at toddler girls’ shoes, and of course there’s no heel. . . . And I know the writer said “slip-ons” but most toddler girls’ shoes have straps (even when they slip on). So here are some images I pulled from a couple of shoe sites, just to sorta give you the range. (I’m including the sandally ones here because of their decorative accents!)

None of these are exactly right, since none of them are over the top enough. . . But I would aim for a lower heel and a more open front with a strap. And then whatever flowers, gemstones, bows, butterflies, shiny things you want to decorate with

9. Receive confirmation from Ben that he gets what you’re talking about—and understands why you sent him all those shoes.

Thanks.  I’m glad I sent you the pencils! . . . I’m going to use that first pink pair of shoes, the large image, as a model but they’ll hopefully be more over the top

10. Receive final illustration from Ben, drop it into the InDesign layout and . . . voilà!

final

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And with that, I have to say I love getting to work with patient, creative, talented people like Ben.

(In addition to the whimsical illustration, it’s a fun story. Be sure to check it out.)

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P.S. You can see more of Ben’s work at his very engaging blog, here.




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how to make a magazine

May 24th, 2010

front-porch fun with chalkWell, sort of. Mel and Lally and I got a little sidetracked when we discovered this deliciously colorful chalk still hidden deep in the recesses of the trophy (on display in the community kitchen area) awarded in Friday’s scavenger hunt.

So the three of us grabbed the chalk and went to town, as they say, on the front steps of our office, everyone else having already left the office for the day. Squatting over our artwork like little kids, scribbling and scrawling in the almost-summer evening air. . .

Sometimes the path to creating a magazine is a winding one.

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kazimir and me

February 3rd, 2010

It’s just that there was so much snow today! And that envelope was just lying there. . .

On the left, Kazimir Malevich‘s “Suprematist Composition: White on White”  (1918).

On the right, my “Priority Envelope in More Snow than We Expected Today, When Everyone Else Got to Go Home But I’m Still Here Because I Can’t Seem to Get Anything Done” (2010)

OK. So much for today’s Fun with Art History. Time to put the camera away and get this magazine out the door. . .

white-on-white-redux

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rabbit!

February 1st, 2010

calendar

So there’s this thing we say at our house first thing on the first day of a new month.”Rabbit!”

Not sure why, but it has to do with good luck. Also not sure where I heard this, or even when I started doing it. Hadn’t really wondered where it came from til today, so I looked it up. Good old Wikipedia.

Apparently, we’re not the only ones with this tradition.

Nick, my nephew who is in the Peace Corps in Mali, is particularly good at remembering to Rabbit. It’s been a little surreal to get Rabbit emails from him on those occasions when he’s been able to get to an internet cafe on some dirt road in some sleepy village in west Africa. These emails don’t necessarily arrive on the first of the month, but we’ll not get picky, considering the circumstances.

OK. Must get back to the March-April issue. Almost done.

So, rabbit, everybody! And happy February . . .

Photo is of our kitchen calendar, featuring art by Rodney White, an illustrator whose positive outlook and dry sense of humor (in addition to the style of his work—love those textures!) I particularly enjoy. His tongue-in-cheek sayings, painted into each work, often cause me to do a double-take. This one: “I’d rather be. . .”

There’s some gorgeous stuff on his site. Check it out.

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finspiration

January 24th, 2010

So many possible blog entries, so very little time this week . . . so, instead, I’m uploading an inspirational image I keep taped to my computer monitor, a postcard I received a couple of years ago from illustrator Tim Foley.

A belated thanks for the lift, Mr. Foley . . .
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lovely distraction

January 16th, 2010

Yes, I’m here to work. On our March-April issue. Yes. BUT. I just came across an old postcard, mailed a couple of years ago, from illustrator Gwenda Kaczor, which led me to her website, which just provided some lovely, refreshing distraction from the tasks at hand.

Here’s a bit of a peek at her yummy portfolio.gwendakaczor

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a three sitting in a chair

January 13th, 2010

Another in the then-four-year-old (now 20!) Reeve’s Number Series: “A 3 sitting in a chair waiting for its friend Alex (It went to get some water from the stream. . .)”a-three-sitting-in-a-chair

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old momma five

January 7th, 2010

I recently came across this scan of a drawing Reeve did when he was four. . .  a reminder of how delightfully fresh a child’s view of the world can be: “Old Momma 5 with the sun shining over her back. And a mushroom in a mushroom field.”

old-momma-five

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Tip: Next time your child draws something, be sure to ask him or her to describe what’s happening in the drawing, and write it down somewhere on the page (or on the back). Include the date the drawing was made.

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