![]() I like that both creators are entrusted to contribute our artistic speciality – and maybe, just maybe, it might just have that strange alchemy that no one can predict (thank goodness, otherwise we’d all be replaced by robots!) and then the finished book becomes something magical and not some middling design-by-committee production.Ĥ. ![]() But it also requires a lot of trust – that the publisher has chosen the right person to bring this particular text to life. It requires a lot of sensitivity and understanding on part of the illustrator – and it could all go horribly wrong. I like not being influenced by any preconceived ideas that the author (or publisher) might have. Funnily enough, I really love working this way. In all of the picture books I’ve illustrated, I’ve never had much correspondence with the author. How closely were you able to collaborate with the writer? Do you prefer to work this way? I had plenty of moments of self doubt – wondering if the whole thing was just going to be a huge mish-mash of styles and disparate ideas as I tried to visualise this journey from traditional storybook bears to realistic non-fiction bears and everything in-between.ģ. ![]() All that problem solving is the most fun part of my work. For Three Bears, I had a tremendous amount of fun the whole way through the process, because each page was trying to figure out a new style, technique, composition and way of making it fit the text AND make it fit together with the previous pages. Normally I work out a whole book in advance, get those roughs approved, then the final illustrations are just a matter of knuckling down and making it happen – which can be a mainly technical process. The challenge was, interpreting the ever-changing voices in the text – which I envisaged as many different styles of illustration.Īs often happens with good ideas, turning them into reality is often much harder than the vague foggy picture in your head. Instead I did some very vague stick figure drawings and sent Scholastic a long letter about what I was THINKING I might do with this very funny post-modern text. This book was most unusual for me in the fact that I didn’t do any roughs or storyboards. But I could see that it was going to be very difficult to illustrate. When they offered it to me, I fell about laughing and immediately ran inside to read to my family. Scholastic had a very funny manuscript but they didn’t know how on earth it could be illustrated, or who could illustrate it. Three Bears was a particularly interesting project. What was the biggest challenge you faced in illustrating this book? Tell us a bit about the journey from storyboards to published work. This led to a rather different approach than I usually take.Ģ. A very daunting proposition, as usually I have at least a few clear visions in my head and start working out from those. ![]() What was your approach to illustrating this book?Īctually I didn’t know what to make of it at first. Thank you to illustrator Donovan Bixley for his generous responses:ġ. The Three Bears…Sort of, by Yvonne Morrison and illustrated by Donovan Bixley (Scholastic NZ) is a finalist in the Junior Fiction category of the awards. We have asked our fantastic finalists for the New Zealand Post Book Awards for Children and Young Adults all about their work, and they have been very generous in their responses. Atlas’s memoir is an informative read for students, educators, weather forecasters, scientists, and weather enthusiasts alike.If you have ever wondered where authors get their ideas, this is your chance to find out. An engaging account of a distinguished career, Dr. Air Force dealing with aviation, hurricane, and tornado forecasting discusses his pioneering work with satellite-derived ocean surface winds and other areas describes his leadership of scientific organizations within NASA and NOAA as well as his experiences teaching at several universities and shares his post-retirement activities. In this memoir, he talks about his time as an undergraduate and graduate student shares his experiences as an operational forecaster in the U.S. Weather Bureau during a time when satellite meteorology and operational numerical weather prediction were just in their infancy. Atlas’s journey began with his start as an apprentice forecaster for the U.S. This memoir follows his decades-long career and his innovative research, which led to improvements in the understanding and prediction of extreme weather.ĭr. That early interest sparked a career in meteorology that spanned sixty years and took place during a period of rapid development in the field. Atlas would often look up at the sky, observe the clouds, and ask his parents questions about the weather.
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