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Laura Egley Taylor

Then a miracle occurs . . .

when production deadline exhaustion meets ADHD Month

September 29th, 2010

adhd

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Mel (a.k.a coworker and fellow production person Melyssa Holik): . . . and then do that with them; so what do you think?

Laura: I’m sorry Mel; I just blitzed out. . . . Could you say that again?

Mel: Oh, that’s OK. — Sorry, let me finish this Pringle. — It is ADHD Month, you know. Ha! I was just thinking how Pringles can look like ducks’ beaks if you try to talk with one hanging out of your mouth. . . .  So what did you need?

Laura: Sorry, let me just finish this email to. . . Um. . . so. . . what?

Mel: What did you need?

Laura: Oh. . .well. I think . . .what?

Mel: You asked me something?

Laura: Oh, yeah. . .I don’t remember. . . .  I think I just wondered what you said?

Mel: Oh, that. . . (laughs) I have NO idea!

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Photo taken with my phone downtown last week is my attempt to illustrate the state of my brain right about now.

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here we go again. . .

September 2nd, 2010

houseIt’s toy time at the Mothering house! Product Review Editor Candace Walsh‘s desk has been a little like the receiving office at the North Pole, snowed under by boxes and boxes of toys, many of which have had to be assembled.

In years past, this task has fallen to Mothering‘s circulation director, John “You Da Man”* McMahon. Since John was out of town last week (traveling with his son Ian, who is starting college at Duke this fall), Bram McMahon has kindly stepped in to help. (Bram is John’s—and Mothering Editor and Publisher Peggy O’Mara‘s—younger son.)

So our staff photographer, Melyssa Holik, is starting to get all a’tingle with anticipation. Despite the fact that she has to shoot what seems like hundreds of toys, I’ve noticed that she seems to enjoy this project. (I’ve also noticed how much “arranging” and “setting up” sure can look like “playing with” . . .)

Regular readers of the magazine will know that all this buzz and hubbub is in preparation for our annual natural toy review (which appears in our November–December issue each year). And it’s a team effort: the UPS guy delivers the toys; Bram assembles them; Candace looks them over, reads up on them, plays with them, and writes about them; then Mel photographs them, gets text from Candace, and lays out the reviews.

It may only just now be September—and still almost 90 degrees out—but it’s beginning to look a bit like . . . well, you know!

*Since he is, actually, da only man in the Mothering offices these days.

UPScandace-and-boxesBramPhotos, from top: 1) my favorite so far of the toys Bram has put together (dolls artfully arranged by Bram); 2) the UPS guy makes a delivery at Candace’s desk; 3) Candace at her desk, last week, surrounded by boxes; 4) Bram, stopping by several afternoons this week to do assembly, thereby proving that he got his dad’s toy-building genes, for sure.

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Raccoon sighting.

August 6th, 2010

raccoonIn our kitchen.

Yes, it’s been a very odd week.*

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*But, meanwhile, we got the September-October issue to bed, and peace has returned to the Production Department valley.

Photo of our wee-hour visitor was shot with my iPhone, handily at hand since it sleeps next to me (Reeve works until after midnight many nights, so I always have the phone within reach)

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nocturnal visitor

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homemade soda, anyone?

July 18th, 2010

opening-spreadTo shoot our July-August Peggy’s Kitchen section, an article by Cynthia Lair on do-it-yourself soda, Staff Photographer Melyssa Holik and I spent the day at the El Rey Inn, a favorite “staycation” getaway spot of mine and Tim’s, right here in Santa Fe.

The El Rey is pretty special: a Route 66-era inn tucked away just off the main drag behind white adobe walls and surprisingly lush—for the desert, I mean—gardens. Mothering Editor and Publisher Peggy O’Mara and I thought it would provide a casually elegant, summery background for the soda shoot. And it was really lovely. . .

Here are a few behind-the-scene shots from the day.

Above: The opening spread of the article, a lineup of syrups and fruit teas, mixed by Mel in preparation for the shoot.

Below: 1) Mel lines the bottles up along a wall conveniently situated beneath a skylight and above a stairway; 2) You can see that the rooms were being cleaned while we were there—oh, the glamour of the photo shoot . . .  3) We had to have a poolside photo in an article about summer drinks! 4) Mel sets up the last shot before the wind blew the placemat (and the drink) off the table; 5) I liked how cool and inviting this photo was, and wanted to show at least a hint of the Spanish-style architecture of the El Rey; and 6) Mel sets up that shot.

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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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it’s here!

July 2nd, 2010

CV1-161The July–August issue. On newsstands—and listening devices*—now.

Photographer Laura Siebert shot the cover (her third for us in as many issues) in the mountains outside Colorado Springs, Colorado.

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*Our new audio edition! Check it out here.

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a new look for the magazine

June 16th, 2010

audioHere’s a sneak peek at what’s going on with our next issue. We’re working right now on an audio version of the magazine which will launch with our July-August edition!

You’ll be able to download all the articles from the magazine to your favorite listening device,* so you can listen whenever and wherever you want: on the run, in the car, stretching, knitting, cooking, doing magazine layout . . .

Stay tuned! (Downloads will be available in July at the Mothering shop.)

*I use this iPod shuffle (and old-school headphones—earbuds don’t work for me).

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huh?

June 4th, 2010

turtle

Easy-to-follow toner-replacement instructions from the Xerox printer people. . . providing some much needed levity during production craziness. . .

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When Mel rides her bike in to work . . .

May 25th, 2010

mel-bike

she rides her bike IN to work.knitting-basket

How many people do you know who bike
around with their knitting? Excellent stress-reducer during these hazy, crazy days of magazine production.

Oh, and also in the basket? Her towel . . . (Happy Towel Day!)

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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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