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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Little Vampire, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 3 of 3
1. Vectorizing Treenie

Treenie the toothless vampire


This little vamp was actually inspired by a dearĀ  friend who’d been requesting this little girl for quite a while now. And what an appropriate time to finish it with Halloween right around the corner! Hope she enjoys it as much as I enjoyed making it.


Check out the new video on how I vectorized our little friend! Every chance I get to work with vectors I try to make a point to remember (but I usually forget) to document the process since its always so much fun to watch it all come together…kinda sucks that you tube automatically disables my audio though…seriously annoying. I had to upload this things twice to get some type of audio in there.

Anyway, enjoy the weekend yall!!

HAPPY FRIDAY

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2. Grapic Novel review: Little Vampire


First Second is issuing three of Joann Sfar's Little Vampire tales in one beautifully produced volume out May 12. Little Vampire includes "Little Vampire Goes to School," "Little Vampire Does Kung Fu!," and "Little Vampire and the Canine Defenders Club."

Sfar's Little Vampire tales feature two heroes, one important sidekick (a flying red dog ghost named Phantomato), and a multitude of creepy-funny secondary characters. The two heroes--Little Vampire and a boy named Michael--meet in the first tale when Little Vampire decides to go to school. Because he can only attend school at night, he amuses himself by doing Michael's homework. When Little Vampire's collection of ghostly guardians discover what he's up to, school is over for Little Vampire and he is sent to convince Michael to never tell about the Vampire and his world.

Michael, however, is a lonely little boy who lives with his grandparents and is bullied at school. As soon as he arrives to Little Vampire's crazy house with ghosts and ghouls of every shape, size, and color, he never wants to forget Little Vampire and his world.

The Little Vampire stories combine the wacky with the sweet, traditional folkloric tropes with more modern jokes, serious thoughtful passages with pure frivolity. Take a look at this exchange between the Captain of the Dead and Michael when he first arrives to Little Vampire's house:

Michael: I swear to devote my life to protecting the dead and keeping their memory. And if I break my word, may a thousand curses befall me.

Captain of the Dead: Now do the sign of the cross.

Michael: No. I can't do that.

Captain: It would give more strength to your oath.

Michael: But I'm Jewish, Captain. The cross doesn't mean much to me.

Captain: Do the sign of the star, in that case.

Michael: We don't do that either. And I don't believe much in God. 'Cause my parents are dead.

Captain: You're a bit young to believe in nothing.

Michael: Well, maybe he exists, Captain, but after what he did to me, I don't feel like I owe him anything.

Captain: You should think about all that some more. Sad times often open miraculous doorways.

Next up? Taking a bath--or not--jokes.

Sfar fills each page with colorful, compelling hand-drawn boxes. He'll also interrupt from time to time with "important information"--names of ghost monsters, for example. Each page and every panel gives the child reader something to think about, something to laugh at, an adventure to follow.

Little Vampire is highly recommended for readers ages 8 to 14.
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This review is part of First Second's Vampire Month. Check out First Second's blog for more!

3 Comments on Grapic Novel review: Little Vampire, last added: 5/11/2008
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3. Poetry Friday Review: Shape Me A Rhyme


Poetry and Nature go together like espresso and biscotti, like John and Paul, like tomatoes and garlic. Jane Yolen and Jason Stemple explore the symmetry of nature and verse in their lovely new picture book Shape Me A Rhyme: Natures Form in Poetry.

Shape Me A Rhyme
works on two levels. Yolen's straightforward, beautiful verse and Stemple's bold, bright photography make Shape Me A Rhyme perfect for reading aloud to a very young child. Its creative approach to shapes and poetry means this book would work equally well as part of a grade school unit on shapes, nature, or poetry.

Each two-page spread in Shape Me A Rhyme is devoted to one shape. Yolen and Stemple cover the circle, triangle, coil, star, square, heart, arch, wave, oval, fan, rectangle, and crescent in their exploration of shapes in nature. Yolen's subtle humor is present throughout, as in this poem devoted to the square:

A shadow square
Upon a frond
Resides beside
A quiet pond.

Since nature rarely
Seeds a square,
We must make do
With what is there.

How cleanly these lines read, comprising in their sound and meaning the stoic square.

Accompanying Stemple's dynamic photos and Yolen's verse are related words in different fonts scattered about the page. The square, for example, is accented with "block," "tetragon," "quadrate," and "quadrangle."

Read Shape Me A Rhyme to a child today. There's much to discuss--from poetry to natural forms--in its pages.
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Other blog reviews:

5 Minutes for Mom
KidsLit
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Cloudscome is hosting at A Wrung Sponge today. Check out her Found Poetry experiment. I'm going to try this at the rink tomorrow and I'll report back over the weekend.

7 Comments on Poetry Friday Review: Shape Me A Rhyme, last added: 11/12/2007
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