OK, I guess I have been a little “hidden” lately, but now I have been found!
In keeping with that theme, here’s my art from the November 2010 issue of Highlights High Five… a Hidden Pictures page for the younger set. Kitties and baked goods? Oh yeah, those are some of my favorite subjects!
Tag: highlights
New Press This Month
Some interesting stuff has shown up recently…international-type stuff!
Here’s my Half Pint item written up in a Korean Magazine called DesignNet:
Aaaaand here’s Pizza Boss 3000 written up in a French Magazine called FHM:
Back here in the ol’ US of A, Salt and Playtime is in May’s issue of Everyday with Rachael Ray:
And here is this month’s Highlights High Five recipe illustrated by me…Pink Lemonade!
Magazine Mayhem!
Here are a few new items currently on the shelves:
April’s Highlights High Five has Deviled Eggs!
And after you’ve made yourself some nice deviled eggs, sit back with April’s Rachael Ray magazine and check out this:
There’s “Calf and Half” again!
I have to hand it to Rach and her “people”…they do find fun stuff for the magazine. Look at the knitted fruit! And the adorable Mary Jane wellies! On the same page is a product by my friend Christy, too…”Pound,” a set of nails for driving into your finger food (not your fingers). How constructive!
I have a bunch of fun new items starting to pop up here and there-
I’ll show you some of them soon.
I’ve had A LOT of work lately, so sometimes the blog gets the cold shoulder!
And by the way, Happy St. Pat’s Day!
Tell Some Stories
Here’s a new feature illustrated by me in the March ’09 issue of
Highlights High Five Magazine:
It’s on your newsstands now!
Are there even any newsstands left??
New Stuff in Highlights High Five
Here’s a new spread illustrated by me that appears in the November 2008 issue of High Five:
Don’t you want to go make some soup now? Tis the season!
I am definitely trying this one out!
Here’s a new feature just out in the December issue:
It’s my first Hidden Pictures feature!
I remember looking for Hidden Pictures when I was a kid… so it makes me happy to have done one of my own.
The 2008 Highlights Highlights
Finally, a chance to revisit my neglected blog!
I recently got to go to the 2008 Highlights Illustrator’s Party in Pennsylvania. Highlights (the makers of the well-read magazines, and also owners of Boyd’s Mills Press) is a very unusual company that actually puts aside time each year to party with it’s illustrators. Yeeha!
We got lucky with 3 days of great weather:
The stretch of NY/Pennsylvania that we traveled through is beautiful. Unlike last year, there were no 4-hour traffic jams to bog down the trip, and we arrived without incident.
The Highlights folks have the party-throwing thing down to a science, so when we arrived, there was the first of many lovely buffets. We were able to stay in a cottage near everthing, and the next morning began with (yes!) more great food!
The illustrators spent the first half of the day doing illustrator stuff. We got to hear Leonard Marcus speak- he’s a children’s book historian, and author of a fabulous book I have (maybe you do, too) called “Golden Legacy”, all about the cultural and artistic impact of Golden Books. I’m anxious to find some of his other books now.
Then we got to check out each other’s portfolios.
I though the folks coming to this event would have all been east coasters, but I was wrong. Illustrators came from all over the country. Getting to connect the art with the names and faces was a real bonus. Luckily, this was made easier by our big, clear nametags!
While we were doing this, our families were off having a blast at a farm. Check out this beautiful place! Eric and the kids had a great time. The kids were glad to meet other kids who like art (I guess this doesn’t really happen as much as they’d like here at home).
They got to paint and decorate pumpkins:
Beat each other with noodles:
Listen to fiddlin’ kids:
And roast marshmallows:
Later that afternoon, the big event…we all met at the main Highlights building in Honesdale for a costume party! This year’s theme was “The Enchanted Forest”. Needless to say, illustrators are pretty good at coming up with costumes…and so are the Highlights staff.
The entire building is decorated, inside and out. It must take weeks of planning to do this; it’s refreshing to think that it is allowed and encouraged within the company.
I love these mossy tree people.
Inside, the kids got to go on a Timbertoes scavenger hunt with stickers hidden all around the building.
More food…awesomely themed.
Leprechauns! Cloaked Art Directors! Fungi! Dragonlike Photographers!
Fairies! Keebler Elves! Unicorns!
Unbearably Cute Ewoks! Teeny Tinys!
The one and only Joan of Art, hailing from the Columbus, OH office.
Look- it’s a portrait of pure evil!
Wait a minute… it’s Judy Moffatt (who’s not evil at all, really).
Eric and I were apple trees…I guess you can say we didn’t think too hard about this, since we pretty much live in an apple orchard. It was a logical choice.
What’s that? It’s the BloomMobile! This is the Highlights company car (I presume) decorated in the manner of Suzanne Bloom’s adorable Splendid Friend books.
Good times. It’s very fun to see such universal participation in something like this.
Later that day it was time for a lamb roast, (with intro by Christine Clark…)
Can you see the ultra cool, gigantic mural behind her, too? Awesome.
Here’s a closer view:
Then, of course, there was a post-dinner hoedown!
Silly me, I thought the hoedown was part of last year’s “ranch” theme.
It’s not, it’s just hoedowning for hoedowning’s sake!
The next morning was another farewell buffet.
We met so many great people over the weekend…here are two of them:
It’s Phyllis and Brad Harris, all the way from Missouri!
There were cheesy potatoes available this morning in the buffet that were TO DIE FOR.
I need this recipe (let’s put it in High Five- ha!)
Then after a swing:
and a horse-drawn hay ride:
We headed back home.
It was another great driving day.
This road cracked us up…it follows (EXACTLY) the contour of the ledge butting up against the Delaware river. It was like a rollercoaster. Best not to take your eyes off the road here!
Along the river we saw these:
We refer to them as “those things in the water.”
Does anyone know what these things are??
Thanks to everyone at Highlights for such a fun weekend. It’s a real treat to hang out with people who love children’s illustration and writing. Hello to all the new and old friends we met there- and for those of you who couldn’t get there this year, hope to see you next fall!
Just Peachy
Here’s a peachy feature illustrated by me in this month’s issue of Highlights High Five magazine:
New Stuff
My poor, ignored blog.
Been busy lately with a million things, and there’s a million more coming!
In the meantime, some of my art has been popping up here and there:
Here’s April 2008’s issue of Highlights High Five, with my Creepy Crawly Dominoes feature (oooh, it’s a fold-out!).
Here’s a little piece in May 2008’s Highlights magazine (the one for bigger kids). It’s a feature they run every month called My Best Self. Hey, look- Roz is on the same page!
The Read, Rhyme and Clap DVD is available from the Children’s Book-of-the-Month Club’s Spring 2008 issue. I did the Muffin Man sequence on it.
Here’s the new, improved children’s menu for the Newport Creamery chain of restaurants. I got to do the whole thing (fun!!) and will continue every so often as they need ’em. I applaud the company for pursuing a more individual approach with these- instead of using the menu equivalent of “clip art” (which they could have easily done), they commissioned me to make something with local appeal and original characters. Yay!
And hey, what’s THIS?
You’re right, I did NOT do this. Eric did!
His design is featured in June 2008’s MacLife Magazine, where his iPOD watch idea came in as a runner-up in their Design-the-Next-Big-Apple-Thing competition.
They had some very nice things to say about it- check it out!
That’s it for now! Back to work!
Go Ahead…Make My Hat!
I did the art for the “make a hat” feature in January 2008’s issue of Highlights High Five:
I had to make a LOT of paper hats just to figure out the exact motions needed to get the point across- it gave me serious flashbacks to first grade!