Archive for March, 2012

Illustrate 2012: March

Illustrate 2012: March

I’ve been doing a whole lot of illustration this month, as I’ve been working on wedding invitations for some friends of mine.  They’re all done, but so as not to steal their thunder, you’ll have to wait to see that illustration until after the invitations have been sent to the guests, and I post the finished product in the portfolio section of this site.  So while I was feeling a bit like that illustration should count for March, it’s probably good for me that I was forced to create something new for this project.

Spring has sprung a little earlier than usual here in Philadelphia, and as a result, I currently have the most painfully beautiful daffodils growing in my backyard.  The kind I have are not the sturdy trumpet daffodils you often see in public landscaping.  The ones in my backyard are dainty and delicate, and the corona is a bright orange, while the petals are a perky yellow color.  I’ve always loved daffodils because they’re one of the first signals that Mother Nature is awakening from her wintry slumber and bringing new life.

I’ve also been increasingly inspired by traditional botanical illustration because of its intricacy.  Some of the illustrations just blow my mind in terms of detail.

So it only seemed fitting that this month’s illustration subject should be the daffodils in my backyard.  Coincidentally, I also happened to relocate my fine-tipped pen nib, so I was able to reflect their delicacy in my line.  It all worked out quite nicely, as you can see below.

Illustrate 2012: March

If I Had to Go Back to High School…

I did not like high school.  If you had asked me at the time, I probably would’ve said it was okay, but in looking back on it, it really wasn’t.  I didn’t like it.  I was bored, and my boredom was compounded by the fact that I felt like the vast majority of stuff I was learning had no relevance to my life.  Oh sure, there were a few notable exceptions, like music theory and math,–I always liked math–but by the time I graduated, I was so ready to move onto learning something that I was actually passionate and excited about.  For a couple of years, that was music.  And then it was engineering for three more.  And I’m still amazed that I even managed to find the field of engineering after the battery of lousy science teachers I had in high school completely turned me off to science.

So when I walked into The Sustainability Workshop last week to hang out for the morning, it was like walking into a whole new educational world.  Nothing could have been more different from the high school experience I had.  High school seniors were working in light-filled rooms on projects they were genuinely excited about.  There was meaningful discourse and witty banter going on between teachers and students.  And the building itself…well, let’s just say it’s about the furthest away you can get from the drab gray environment I spent four years of my life in.  It was exhilarating to say the least.

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Down the Rabbit Hole: Trusting the Creative Process

About a week and a half ago, I started work on a new design project.  It’s a great project for an organization in the education sector, and I’m excited about it.  Yet when I started it, I headed in the same direction I seem to head at the beginning of every new project–that is, down the rabbit hole of self-doubt.  About three hours into the whole creative process, I had convinced myself that all my ideas were crap, and I was going to have nothing to show the client in two days when the preliminary design was due.

Of course, this turned out to be utter garbage, and after giving my brain some space by driving several hours, playing in the pit orchestra for a show, and sleeping on it, I realized that in fact, what I had come up with was pretty great.  The good thing is that I know my brain likes to play this game with me.  In fact, it does it almost every time I try to create something.  And I know that if I just give it time, that part of my brain that tells me whatever I do isn’t good enough will finally turn off and let me get some real work done.  But at hour three, it’s pretty frustrating.

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