The Grandeur of the Forest Floor: Making a tree stump

     Early in the design process for "Search For The Sugar Puff Hollow" I came across an inspiring image from an old set of science booklets.  The picture (below) was so dreamy and mysterious I wanted to capture elements of it for my book.  It portrayed a grandeur of the forest floor that I hadn't seen before.

I went about figuring out how to make an almost life-sized tree stump.  I didn't want it to be heavy so I needed a structure that was extremely light weight.  This was before I had a soda stream and I was going through a lot of Perrier bottles (and feeling guilty about it).  I love finding ways to recycle plastic bottles and I had begun to save the bottles just in case I could use them for the book.  SO I hot-glued all my perrier bottles together and and made them into the tree stump structure.



After that I covered it with tinfoil and papier mache to create the exposed roots and the top of the stump.  But what to cover it with?
     I had been using yarn to cover some of my trees and really wanted a special yarn to cover the stump since it was a close-up of a tree.  I had found a few sources on Etsy.com for coiled yarn.  My favorite was a shop called faroeviking in Ottawa.  I contacted Heidi who spun and died all of her yarns and she made me 2 skeins of custom dyed and coiled yarn.  You can read more about Heidi here.  It really turned out beautifully.






Illustrator Favorites: Fritz Eichenberg

A couple of years after I first moved to Nashville, I attended an exhibit entitled,"Witness To Our Century: An Artistic Biography of Fritz Eichenberg", put together by Vanderbilt University. Seeing this exhibit was one of those moments in my life that has given me the desire to work hard at making excellent art and always seeking to allow my work to express the complexity of emotions and meanings I feel are present in my work.  I still feel I struggle with getting that full expression communicated.  Much of my work is very light-hearted but in my head there is so much more drama and depth.  Alas, for me, my work will never be perfect, but every artist finds room for improvement for themselves.  Here are some illustrations by Fritz Eichenberg from books I have collected in the years since that exhibit.
Wuthering Heights

Tales of Edgar Allen Poe

Heroes of the Kalevela

Heroes of the Kalevela

Reynard the Fox

Gulliver's Travels

Crime and Punishment

Illustrator Favorites: Gordon Laite

One of my favorite children's book illustrators from my childhood is Gordon Laite.  When I was a kid I loved looking at the illustrations he did for The Golden book, "Five Fairy Tales".  My favorite is Beauty and the Beast.  There is an elegant, dramatic and sweeping beauty to the spreads in his books.  Now that I'm older I've sought out more books he's illustrated.  I've included them below.  Enjoy.

Five Fairy Tales
A Big Golden Book
Golden Press 1962




Joseph  The Dreamer
by Clyde Robert Bulla
Illustrated by Gordon Laite
Copyright Clyde Robert Bulla 1971
Illustrations copyright 1971 by Gordon Laite





Now That Days Are Colder
by Aileen Fisher
Designed and Illustrated by Gordon Laite
Lettering by Paula Taylor
Text copyright 1973 Aileen Fisher
Illustrations copyright 1973 BOWMAR