(click the image to see it larger)
I'm really happy with how these little guys turned out. They were super fun to draw, and I loved using my Prismacolors again for a whole, entire illustration. (Thank you Bostitch Super Pro 6 pencil sharpener for making that possible!)
This guy is very proud to be first in line in the procession, and has been practicing his fife music
a lot, making sure he was ready for today.
This guy lost his nice tricorn hat in a horse-and-wagon mishap just before he had to step into line here, but is trying to put on a brave face, and is very proud that he gets to be the one carrying the flag.
And this guy has been driving his family
nuts, practicing the drums, but they all know its worth it when they see him marching and drumming so well with his friends.
I did this whole thing with colored pencils. And I managed to keep it pretty clean. But even so, it needed a little tweak with Photoshop at the end to look even better. So I thought I'd show you a little 'behind the scenes' look at how things magically get cleaned up before going to print.
This is how it looked straight from the scanner. Its a little 'dirty', and the scanner made a dark edge on the left. Its also a little crooked.
Then here it is cleaned up, and straightened out.
Here's a close up showing one little piece, with the background as it was, then cleaned up.
Can you see how grey the background looks on the left, and all the little 'bits of stuff'? That's the paper texture, and little flecks of pencil that, no matter how careful you are, deposit themselves on the paper and refuse to come off. So, with the help of the eraser tool in Photoshop, I painstakingly go around each figure and erase all of that out, leaving a nice clean background.
I also use the clone tool to carefully pick out any little stray flecks of something that may land on the actual image (here, there was a tiny grain of dark color on his nose).
When I'm working on a piece that I know is going to be printed, and make a little goof or stray mark, I find myself going "That's OK, I'll fix it with Photoshop", and keep going. But when you're doing something where the original art is IT, like a commissioned piece, you have to be really really careful, because there is no room for mistakes, and there is no fixing the final art with Photoshop! The piece has to be perfect (no pressure).
Okay, so I don't normally read it. But hey--when you're part of the front-page feature article, you check it out.
Guam Stripes" writer Mary Parker wrote about writers in this part of the world. And of course, since I am "Saipanwriter" she contacted me. I put her in touch with Joe Race and Angie Wheat, too. Time was short, so I missed out on hooking her up with other writers (and there are plenty), but still, it's nice to see she got Saipan into the mix.
I received an e-mail from Mary Parker, who said that she is writing a story for Stars & Stripes on Nanowrimo/Script Frenzy here in the CNMI and in Guam.
If you've participated in Nanowrimo or SF, and want to give your feed back for her story, you can reach her at mary at theparkers dot org.
If you haven't participated, it's never too late. April is
Script Frenzy month. Join now! Write 100 pages of script on your movie or stage play or manga/graphic novel or whatever! It's a blast, a mind-wrenching, soul-bruising, but nevertheless radically fun endeavor.
There are a lot of writers out there. Many of us are little published, but with the internet we get a few stories in ezines here and there.
Some days I wish I were a writer in your part of the world. I enjoyed living in the tropics. But I am one of those who suffer from the old Island Fever. How you can get claustrophobic while living on a large island is beyond me; but there you have it.
Thanks, wyrdd.
It's very exciting here. I could never get rock fever! Although I haven't been posting about the federalization of immigration lately, that is certainly on my mind and almost everyone else's here.
For a small place, we have a lot to think about...