However, once this new assignment (for an article in the literary section containing their summer book picks) was under way, what I was quick to remember was the professional and easy manner in which David operates as an AD. (I had recently sent him some samples of my "new style" illustrations which is what had made him think of me for this particular assignment. He had liked an image of mine depicting a man reading a newspaper, and he especially liked that I had used a monochromatic color scheme...) During our initial phone conversation about this current project, we quickly arrived at what the image in general should be, and he wanted me to create this new illustration also with a monochromatic palette, similar to the sample of mine he'd cited.
As with any daily newspaper assignments, there is little time... I doodled out a preliminary rough sketch depicting various people outside, all reading books, purposely giving it a turn-of-the-last-century feel, mostly due to how I drew the sailboat in the background. This rough sketch was created with pencil and pen.
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Below is the final completed art, created with fountain pen (which has non-permanent ink that I can smear with my finger as I draw the image) on paper. I made all the modifications David had suggested. I also brightened the background buff color a bit, added slight tone to the trees and characters, as well as added limited blue in the lake and white in the clouds and in the character's shirts, too. The idea was, despite the image being busy with so many characters, to keep it feeling as light and airy as possible, which was accomplished by letting the line work alone define all the forms, and keeping the color minimal -rather than fill in all the forms with multiple colors.
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This last view (below) is of an alternate version of the final art that I also supplied to David, which uses a different background color. Instead of the background being a scan of a buff color paper, with this version I used a scan of a deeper toned paper that has actual bits of real leaves embedded right into the paper. I am not sure which of the two "final art" images that was used for their "Summer Reading" article, but I prefer the version with the bits of leaves as part of the background. I think the overall richer tones give the illustration more feeling and visual punch.
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Visit my web site stevensalerno.com to see all my various illustration portfolio samples... and make sure to view my KIDS' BOOKS, FEATURED BOOK, and the NEW STUFF categories!
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