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Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Bored Panda, illustrator, illustration, pen, color pencil, shoes, colour pencil, shoe, boots, ballpoint, ballpoint drawing, AJ, illustrator for hire, andrea joseph, pen drawing, Andrea Joseph drawings, Add a tag
Blog: Art & Drawings by Dain Fagerholm (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: rainbow, creature, 3d, boots, gem, merch, gif, society6, dain fagerholm, dain8), drawing, Add a tag
Blog: Colorfly Studio (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: paper artist, Etsy, print, boots, jennifer dedonato, colorfly studio, Add a tag
Blog: Beautifique (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Illustrations, squirrel, boots, rough sketch, surrender, gloves, Nina Mata, snowrender, textured paper, white flag, illustration friday, snow, Add a tag
Dear Dearest Snow,
———– You win. I snowrender. Now go away.
Love Always (preferably once a year),
Nina Mata
Add a CommentBlog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: ink, drawings, shoes, collection, inventory, boots, Mods, collections, Add a tag
Can't be bothered explaining this one. Just stick your nose in and have a look around. And if you don't know by now, you can do that by clicking on the drawing and then on the green arrows in the bottom right hand corner. Fill your boots.
Blog: Read to Me! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Jean Bethell, reading, cows, toddler, boots, cowboys, horse, Add a tag
My middle brother has always been charmed. He was a natural athlete seemingly at birth, a talented artist barely out of babyhood, and never experienced those unattractively awkward physical stages. My siblings and I look enough alike to tell we came from the same mold, but somehow Todd got it just right from the beginning. He is now a world-traveling, multilingual, published author, but he started out as the little brother who still wasn’t a sister but was pretty darn cute. When he was born, my oldest younger brother and I were at my grandparents’ house in Reseda. My mom wanted all of us to get started on a positive note, so she tucked a present for each of us to open each day she was gone into our suitcase. I don’t recall what any of them were but I do remember thinking that any baby who came bearing gifts couldn’t be all bad. Todd came to a household fixated on the written word, so it’s no surprise he was an early reader, but it is a bit surprising that he chose a story about an underachiever as his first independently read book. In Jean Bethell’s The Clumsy Cowboy, Clyde can’t stay on his horse, walk in cowboy boots, or earn the respect of the townsfolk. Fortunately for the sad little cowpoke, he finds Daisy the cow and they are best friends before you can say “catch the bank robbers.” I think Todd liked seeing how the other half live.
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=the+clumsy+cowboy&x=0&y=0
http://www.jacketflap.com/persondetail.asp?person=71210
Blog: Picture Bookies Showcase (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Illustration, Frog, Digital, Roberta Baird, boots, toad, www.roberta baird.com, muddy, Add a tag
Blog: A Mouse in the House (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: muddy, robertabaird.com, illustration, Illustration Friday, IF, children's illustration, digital art, roberta baird, boots, a mouse in the house, mud, dirt, toad, Add a tag
“Don’t pray for rain if you’re going to complain about the mud!”
Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: illustration, drawing, shoes, inventory, boots, childrens, pixies, Add a tag
I'm happy with this one. I hope you like it, too.
You have to click on this drawing to view it. Stick your beaks right in and have a proper rummage around.
Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: shoes, boots, ballpoint, Add a tag
A few weeks ago I was going through the registration process for yet another online account. I said to my niece "I've got to think of another password, I never ever remember any passwords".
She said "Use bumhole".
Me: "Bumhole?"
Her: "Yeah".
Me: "Bum? Hole?"
Her: "That way, every time you look in the mirror you'll remember it".
Me: "Thanks for that".
Obviously, I used it.
Cut to yesterday, when somebody was helping me out with some technical difficulties I was having with an online project. They said "I'll just need your user name and your password".
Of all the passwords of all the accounts in all of the world.
Needless to say, I won't be using bumhole for any future passwords. But, she was right, I didn't forget it.
These are her feet. The cheeky bumhole.
Blog: Sugar Frosted Goodness (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Girl, ice cream, boots, Add a tag
"mm ice cream~" by theangryhedonist.
lickitlickitlickit XD
Blog: andrea joseph's sketchblog (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: moleskine, ink, shoes, sepia, boots, Add a tag
The major mistake with this drawing is that I drew the boot whilst it was unzipped and unworn. I should have put it on, zipped it up and then drawn it. That, of course, would have shown a more shapely ankle. I mean, ladies, imagine in a gust of wind your bustle rose to reveal an unshapely ankle. Oh, the embarrassment. You'd be mortified, right?
Imagine how this poor lady feels, a shapely ankle is the least of her worries. Click HERE for a glimpse of something a little cheeky.
Blog: So many books, so little time (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: fact checking, Add a tag
When I wrote Circles of Confusion, I did tons of research about Vermeer, the forger Van Meegeren, art stolen during World War II, etc.
I kept a big file of photocopies, thinking someone might challenge me along the way – an editor , copyeditor , or reader - to show that the historical facts I had used were true.
No one ever did.
But now novelists are more often using bibliographies, probably for the same reason I kept my file – to show that they did their research.
In an article in the NY Times published a few months ago, some critics and authors found it off-putting or even vain.
“It’s a trend that is running out of control,” said Sebastian Faulks, the author of “Birdsong” and “Charlotte Gray,” in a telephone interview from London. “Lots of writers use them as a way of showing off, saying, ‘Look how hard I’ve worked, look how clever I am, look at all these books I’ve read.’ It’s a plea to be taken seriously.”
I don’t think it’s a bad idea. Sometimes when I read a novel I want to know more about the facts its purporting to make fiction out of. What do you think?
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Blog: So many books, so little time (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: fact checking, Add a tag
When I wrote Circles of Confusion, I did tons of research about Vermeer, the forger Van Meegeren, art stolen during World War II, etc.
I kept a big file of photocopies, thinking someone might challenge me along the way – an editor , copyeditor , or reader - to show that the historical facts I had used were true.
No one ever did.
But now novelists are more often using bibliographies, probably for the same reason I kept my file – to show that they did their research.
In an article in the NY Times published a few months ago, some critics and authors found it off-putting or even vain.
“It’s a trend that is running out of control,” said Sebastian Faulks, the author of “Birdsong” and “Charlotte Gray,” in a telephone interview from London. “Lots of writers use them as a way of showing off, saying, ‘Look how hard I’ve worked, look how clever I am, look at all these books I’ve read.’ It’s a plea to be taken seriously.”
I don’t think it’s a bad idea. Sometimes when I read a novel I want to know more about the facts its purporting to make fiction out of. What do you think?
Subscribe with
JacketFlap's
Children's
Publishing
Blog Reader
I want all those shoes but the law states that men can only have one pair at a time.
Sometimes I wish I were a man(=
Great picture andrea. Love the shoes. Fun thing to draw
I can't really read the smaller text either, but I really enjoyed looking at it all nonetheless. This is a really fun, rich, interesting drawing.
Lovely, lovely .. I'm sure I want to stick my nose in, though .. LOL
Hope you're well
Hugs
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I still have my Clarks Desert Boots...but yours are cooler!
This is great. Any chance of a poster print of this - to go with the hats one. keep it up Lady.
Great drawing as always....my partner now wants a pair of desert boots, your drawing reminded him of a pair long gone
忙碌的一天終於過了,來看看文章轉換心情,也幫你加個油哦~........................................
Thanks everyone - except you Spam buggers. Still, it makes it look like I've had more comments than I actually have.
Anyway, I really like this drawing. One of my faves in a long time. Glad you liked it too.
Cheers, my dears.
Stephen, it must be AWFUL being a man.