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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Olivier Tallec, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 4 of 4
1. Illustrator Interview – Olivier Tallec

Apart from greatly admiring his work, my impulse to interview Olivier was three-fold: firstly, my author -illustrator friend Julie Rowan-Zoch urged me to, secondly Olivier is published in the US by one of my favorite publishers (who are right here … Continue reading

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2. Waterloo & Trafalgar

Tonight was for writing this post and watching some football and thinking about orange and blue. And then this commercial comes on TV. (Well, this one is a few years old. Same flavor, though.)

breakerRemember this. It means something in a bit. I promise I don’t care where you buy your life insurance.breakerWaterloo and Trafalgar

by Olivier Tallec

{published 2012, by Enchanted Lion Books}

Waterloo & Trafalgar is at once spare and very much not. It’s a book about unnecessary fighting and the two stubborn sides who forget why they are even at odds. They are suspicious, bored, but always staid. Until. A snail, a bird, a different perspective. Different looks a little bit the same after all.Waterloo and TrafalgarTallec’s goofy little men end up as a charming shout for peace. They are absurd. They are us.

Waterloo. Blue. Trafalgar. Orange. Opposites. Enemies.Waterloo and TrafalgarcolorwheelThere they are, as far from one another on the color wheel as possible. Direct opposites. Complementary colors.

Orange and blue are a combination of dominance, because each is competing for the attention of your eye. One cool, one warm, constant attention-grabbers. Because of their stark contrast, each truly shouts.Waterloo and TrafalgarThat’s why it’s a duo you see in a lot of advertising for banks, credit cards, and other Important Things. Would that Northwestern Mutual commercial be as strong if it were in a different color palette? Probably not. They want to imply strength, power, and – well, life.

And, ahem. I’m a fan of these two colors. Note my blog header and the rest of this thing’s design. Those design decisions were intentional, and since you are reading this and hanging out here with me, it might just be working.Waterloo and TrafalgarPerfect choices for Waterloo and Trafalgar, right? It wouldn’t make sense for those two ridiculous little men to be represented by closer together hues. Their orange and blues are a tenuous balance.

Besides a color scheme that works, that sings, and that smacks you in the gut, this is just a darn beautiful book. The paper is thick and rich to the touch, and some split pages inside extend the stories and heighten the division at hand.Waterloo and TrafalgarI love the die cuts on the cover – those clever windows reveal these two nuts and their telescopes at the ready. And the endpapers’ narrative is subtle as it holds the story in place. The carved out holes close up by the end, and the stream of blue and orange smash right up against each other.Waterloo and TrafalgarStill different, still far apart on that wheel. Transformed into something lovely together.chMoreToRead

Ok, ok. One more orange and blue moment I love is the opening title sequence to the James Bond flick, Quantum of Solace.

breaker(These titles are created by a studio whose motion design work is just spectacular, MK12. They are the creative minds behind the visuals in Stranger Than Fiction and the gorgeous end titles of The Kite Runner. By the way, notice the colors in the first minute of that one!)

breakerAnd! A whole slew of orange and blue on movie posters. You won’t un-see this color palette once you start noticing it. That’s a promise prefaced with a slight apology! Here’s just one:Hugo_FilmPosters


Tagged: balance, color palette, color theory, complementary colors, movie posters, olivier tallec, orange and blue, trailers, waterloo and trafalgar

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3. 2. Big Wolf & Little Wolf

Written by Nadine Brun-Cosme
Illustrated by Olivier Tallec
$16.95, ages 4-8, 32 pages

When a little blue wolf starts hanging out at Big Wolf's tree, Big Wolf doesn't know what to think.

After all this is Big Wolf's tree. It's always been that way.

What could a quiet little wolf be after? Will he try to show him up?

As one day slips into the next and Little Wolf does nothing to eclipse Big Wolf, Big Wolf gets used to having him around, though he isn't particularly welcoming.

Then one day Little Wolf leaves the tree and Big Wolf's heart glows red through his fir. He realizes just how much Little Wolf has come to mean to him.

In this sweet, gently told story by France's Brun-Cosme and Tallec, two solitary creatures let their guards down and discover the joy of being with someone else.


When Big Wolf first sees Little Wolf walking toward his tree, he's just a dot in the distance, but as Little Wolf comes nearer, Big Wolf fears he'll shadow over him.

Once Big Wolf sees that Little Wolf is just a wisp of a wolf, only half his size, he feel more at ease and lets Little Wolf climb up all the way.

Neither wolf greets the other or looks at the other in a mean or suspicious way, though they watch each other with curiosity.

Still, Big Wolf feels uneasy about what Little Wolf's arrival could mean, even more so when Little Wolf stays the night. How presumptuous, he thinks.

Yet that night Big Wolf begins to soften just a little. When Little Wolf begins to shiver, Big Wolf pushes a tiny corner of his leaf blanket over to him.

In the morning when Big Wolf climbs his tree to do exercises, his first impulse is again to feel guarded. Will Little Wolf climb better than him?

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4. Kids books and bad moods

I’ve been reading some fun kids books recently, and too recent titles, both originally published in French and now being released in English for the first time, struck me with their similar themes on bad moods and friendship, and the joyful looseness of the illustrations therein.

Rita and Whatsit by Jean-Philippe Arrou-Vignod, features some perfectly sparse and sketchy illustrations by Olivier Tallec (previously). Here’s a video preview:

And I am absolutely enamoured with Delphine Durand’s illustrations for Ramona Badescu’s Big Rabbit’s Bad Mood.

Check out Delphine’s blog; it’s loaded with the fun, loose work of someone who clearly loves the act of drawing. Here’s the cover, and a sample page nicked from Delphine’s site:

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I am certain both titles would sit perfectly on a shelf alongside Jeremy Tankard’s Grumpy Bird.

1 Comments on Kids books and bad moods, last added: 3/3/2009
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