Username:

Password:

Fargot Password? / Help

Artistic Process

7

Final Frontispiece (part 1)

I delivered the last original colored image to the Spiderwick series today to the art director. Sure, there are a TON of pen & ink drawings still needed for the interior of the final book, but the colored frontis (done in the style of old fairy tale books) is finished, that means no more new colored Spiderwick art…wow, the end is near.

I am feeling a bit nostalgic as I approach the finish line on my work for Spiderwick. It has been a long and glorious adventure with much more highs than lows. I have a game plan for doing the interior art too: I will intentionally repeat compositions I have done already for the series so that it may act as a bit of a reprise – and I’ll start with the colored frontis.

In truth, the frontispiece has always been very important to me. It is usually conjured early on from Holly’s first draft, and is an image which may be too complicated for the immediacy required of the cover. I believe its function is to entice and intrigue the reader now that they’ve actually picked the book up and are looking inside. But the image has also shown a bit of my personal journey as well. Take, for instance, the frontis to book 1: The Field Guide:

arthurSure, its Jared looking at the portrait of Arthur Spiderwick in his secret study. BUT it is also me, as a young artist, shining a light on my hero Arthur Rackham (whom Spiderwick was modeled after). I remember when I finished this image that I knew Holly and I had created something special in this little faerie world. Here’s the frontis to book 2: The Seeing Stone:

goblinsThat’s Holly and I fighting off the fast-growing excitement (and subsequent pressure) of the success of the books. This was also done very early on in the history of the series, but already there was a lot of buzz at Simon & Schuster for the books – we were certainly on our way.

So for this last frontis, I wanted there to be something special and personal for me, that would bring everything around in a big circle. I returned to one of the first finished pieces I did for (what would become) Arthur Spiderwick’s Field Guide, a “Blue Finned Sea Maid” from around 1994. Incidentally, this was part of the presentation I had created for TSR to see if they would be interested in making the book – as fate would have it, they were not.

mermaid8x10

I’ve done merfolk off-and-on for gaming over the years. Here are a couple that I’ve always liked:

merfolk

“Merfolk of the Pearl Trident”, a Magic: the Gathering card done in 1997. My brother, Adam, posed for this holding a broom. Here’s another, more Rackhamy, image…

dungeon

…done in 1998, probably for Dungeon Adventures magazine. These two fellas are not as cleverly designed as the others, but they are less static and show the movement one would want in an illustration of a mermaid.

With all of that in mind, I did my first sketch of the frontis for The Wyrm King, doodled right on the front of Hol’s manuscript:

thumbnail

Next post, I’ll show how I refined the drawing and began the inking process…

16

Friday Fan Art (I.O.U. #1)

TGIF! What a week in DiTerlizziland! I have been up to my eyeballs in creating the artwork for the Spiderwick finale, The Wyrm King. As I continue my drawing/inking warm-ups for each day’s session, I have been rendering some fun stuff that is looong overdue to some of my friends – including this pen & ink art trade with Dinotopia demigod, James Gurney.

Jim rendered a super-cool piece for the upcoming Spiderwick Chronicles Completely Fantastical Edition – which (as I’ve mentioned before) contains the first five books, lost chapters from Holly, a sketchbook from yours truly, and a SICK art gallery by some of my drawin’ pals. Jim said I could have his submission for a trade, and (of course) I jumped at the opportunity.

dinos

I went back to the original Dinotopia and found a nice vignette of the hero, Will, meeting Bix, the benevolent protoceratops. I wanted to do my take on this scene, mainly because I would LOVE to be in Will’s shoes. (And, also, because the idea of becoming friends with a dinosaur is not too far removed from becoming friends with a creature of the faerie realm).

What got me juiced was re-interpreting the dinosaur and incorporating some of the current theories linking dinos to birds. So that is the place that I went to for my reference. I cracked open Dr. David Norman’s Illustrated Encyclopedia of Dinosaurs, which had reconstructions of the protoceratops, but (more importantly) had a very detailed line-drawing of the skeleton – a structure to build upon.

protoceratops

Immediately, I thought exotic parrots in the rainforest…or even prairie chickens found in the western U.S.. Right away, I knew Bix was going to be feathered.

bixsketch

I sketched Will up on a second sheet of paper and composited the two sketches in Photoshop. This is great for sizing and moving around the figures. I even adjusted the balance of Bix by straightening his left leg to hold his weight.

composite

I transferred the 11×14″ sketch onto Strathmore plate 2-ply bristol using my light table, refined the pencil lines, and inked it up using FW inks and a Hunts 102 nib. I even gave it the trademark Spiderwick dual-border (which I outline with a ruler and pencil, then ink freehand.)

jgfinal

I hope you like it Jim, I’ll have to blop some watercolor on a print out at some point…unless someone out there is really good at digital coloring…

PS – Update! Jim posted his image (of Hogsqueal riding on Bix) on his site. He even included a little video of himself inking the piece…check it out!

8

Back in the Saddle Again (Again)

This week I did, in fact, sketch a whole lot more. However, I found myself working on characters and scenes from my new novel…and I am not quite ready to unveil that world just yet…so you’ll have to wait a bit before I share those sketches.

But I broke out the pen and inks (and even a little watercolor) to get my brain back into the realm of Spiderwick. Below are some gestural sketches of fantastic characters from the new series, Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles.

giant11

Okay, the first thing worth mentioning here is that none of these are referenced. I know what I said back in the previous posts, but for me, these are less about visual accuracy and more about getting loose (and reacquainted) with the tools. So I took this giant doodle and brought him up to a finish pencil drawing.

giant21

giant3

Then, I put a little ink wash on him and even inked in some of the darker spots. I have found that inking an image after gives a very different effect than when inking prior. I tend to be much more conservative on where these rich blacks go, so as not to overwhelm the pencil marks and pools of ink wash.  Peter DeSeve is a contemporary illustrator who excels at this approach.

But usually, I ink first – in the tradition of most Golden-Age illustrators (Arthur Rackham, A.B. Frost, Edmund Dulac, etc). I keep the sketch very loose, like this doodle of Sandspur.

sandzy1

…and force myself to do some serious drawing with the ink. This prevents that frozen, lifeless look which happens when all of the lines are simply traced over with the ink. Both approaches have their merits, but for loosening up, I prefer this.

sandzy

Here I take this simple sketch of Taloa the nixie…

taloa1taloa2

…and add a little watercolor wash to the linework. To me, this excercise is more like tinting a doodle. It is a vignette, a study.

Normally, these little warm-ups find their way into the flat file, or are given to friends. These three, however, will be given away as prizes from Simon & Schuster at various conventions this year (including San Diego Comic Con and BookExpo America). Stop by their booth if you are planning on attending, perhaps you may even score one…

14

Back in the Saddle

I realize I’ve been doing a lot of writing, designing, plotting, and even a little art-directing lately. But the one thing I haven’t done a lot of is some serious drawing. As I warm up to begin the interior art for the last Spiderwick book, The Wyrm King, I blow the dust off of some old sketches in an attempt to track what I’ve learned in the last decade.

This is nothing new. French artist Claire Wendling did it masterfully in a fascinating revisit to one of her earlier published sketchbooks, Iguana Bay. In the same spirit I took my first self-published sketchbook, aptly titled DiTerlizzi Sketchbook (it was limited to 100 copies and sold at the 1994 GenCon game fair), and looked at it with older, possibly more astute, eyes.

sketchbook1

I started with the goblin on the cover. Certainly he was a classic Dungeons & Dragons Monster Manual-inspired character. Though there is some fun gesture with the penwork (especially in the hand), I really had no control over the ink. I was trying to learn how to put it down on paper without making too much of a mess. The overall gesture doesn’t say much about his character either – he is simply a grotesque head popped on a scribbled torso.

The first thing I did, before I sketched anything, was take a quick snapshot of me acting as this goblin. I figured he was a grumpy sort of character (perhaps due to dental problems). So, with my computer, I struck a pose:

photo-1

Young artists out there: this took less than 90 seconds to pose and print. One and a half minutes. If I had Ang take the shot with our digital camera, then perhaps 5 whopping minutes to shot, download, and print. There is no excuse why you cannot have reference to help make your imagery more convincing. You are never too old, or experienced, to do this. Okay, rant over, blog resuming…

goblin

Great, so the grumpy goblin pose helped. I was able to sketch the pull from his crossed arms on his tattered shirt convincingly, and play with some nice facial lighting. In fact, I twisted and pushed his facial features to give him a battered appearance. (Personally, I think most D&D characters would be a little worse for the wear from all of the adventuring anyhow).

lizardman1

Next, I found a fairly decent ink doodle of a chameleon lizard man shaman. Surprisingly, my linework here was pretty solid, if a bit overworked. The aspect I did not capitalize on, though, was the awesome anatomy of the lizard itself – he has humanish arms and legs plopped on his reptilian form.

lizardman2

My quick redo retains his lizardy features with a couple of hints at intelligence: jewelery, belts and pouches, and a staff.  By the way, I used the same book I used as reference for this original drawing: Chameleons, by James Martin.

chameleons

…more tomorrow…

5

Repackaging Spiderwick (part 3)

This week I enter the home stretch on my journey of searching for the strongest jacket image to represent the new package design for the first-ever collection of The Spiderwick Chronicles books.

tdcomp7

After viewing John Lind’s design for the Spiderwick exhibit program from last year, I began exploring a simple illustration from the book that could be used in a more graphic style which would echo some of the inspirations I was looking at from the start.

tdcomp8

I was really attached to the idea of this belly-band crossing over a darkened image, especially if the band was laminated and embossed to rise up from the background. This shot of the gates was interesting, in that I liked the idea of a very limited palette, but the word “Spiderwick” being used twice was sort of odd.

tdcomp10

Next, I played around with this image, one of my favs from book 3, with Simon and Mallory leaving the elves’ enchanted grove. I had colored this illustration for one of the calendars, so there was some nice background textures to manipulate in order to create mood – more so than if this was simply just a pen & ink drawing.

I tried including more intrigue by knocking the logo out in a cavern (ala the dwarven mines in book 4), but I felt that the two parts were not connecting cohesively.

tdcomp11

For some reason, the simplicity and color palette reminded me of Francis Cugat’s original cover to The Great Gatsby, (especially when you compare the word “The”), so I toyed around with a simple typesetting versus the busy Spiderwick logo. Since there was all that black negative space in the bottom half of the image now, I added very subtle shadows of hidden goblins tracking the heroes. I felt like I was now truly onto something.

wraparound3

Showing it to the team at S&S, John Lind, Ang and Holly, we all agreed that this was the right image for the cover tonally. It took place outside in enchanting woods, and yet there was a very real threat looming about in the gloom. To further this idea, we decided to make the goblins simple line art and use the glossy laminate to make them pop against the matte image. The effect works: you don’t see the goblins right away – just like the kids in the story. Above, is the final art (with Jared added).

final

…and here is the jacket at last. The type is all set in gold foil (just like the Pullman book) to pop off the dark, mysterious cover.

The Spiderwick books always bring new challenges to me – whether its the collaborative storytelling process with Holly, the varied art styles required for the various titles, or just simply creating a new and enticing image just like this collected version. Always, I am thankful to have these challenges on such a fantastical project.

By the by, this week I finished up the layouts on the 30+ page sketchbook that will also be included in this tome…more on that later.

14

Repackaging Spiderwick (part 2)

tdcomp2

My quest for a successful cover to the upcoming Spiderwick collection continues with a brief exploration into Art Nouveau.

tdcomp3

The Spiderwick art is actually influenced by this artistic movement, especially the notion of nature’s spirit (the fey-folk) twisting its writhing tendrils around mankind. These two explorations were my attempt at making Spiderwick feel more classic (like The Jungle Books), but we (the art director, editor, and Ang) agreed both were not quite right tonally with this new version, so I left the Art Nouveau behind and continued searching.

redjericho

I had been reading Joshua Mowll’s Operation Red Jericho (which is a cool book with even cooler packaging) and tried a cover inspired by its simple layout.

tdcomp5

The problem we’ve encountered with the “Vitruvian Faery”, the Spiderwick International Sprite League logo (and an obvious nod to da Vinci’s “Vitruvian Man“), is that it sometimes can feel a little pagan/witchcraft-ish at first glance, hence us never using it as a cover image. Though it was actually what I originally envisioned on the cover to Arthur Spiderwick’s Field Guide (ASFG) as I feel it conjures up the bond between science and art…but I digress.

I returned to the actual art I did create for ASFG, and tried a couple of cover ideas using the art in a more graphic way.

tdcomp4

This first comp is meant to sit side-by-side with ASFG stylistically. Again, there is a faery and a goblin which I hoped would appeal to all sorts of readers. But the ugly toadish goblin, with his fashionable scarf, wasn’t working…

tdcomp6

So I attempted an “adult fiction” version using Thimbletack as both brownie and as a boggart. Though busy for a cover, I really liked how this illustrated the lightness and darkness of the story. Furthermore, I thought it alluded to the theme of Jared dealing with his anger, and what that uncontrollable anger can do to a person. But alas, I was on my own here – no one on the team really liked this take.

Then I glanced down at the cover to the program catalog I had worked on with designer-pal John Lind for the exhibit we did last year at the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art. There was something so fresh, yet aged and classy, to John’s simple and successful design.

carle_catalog

2

Repackaging Spiderwick (part 1)

I thought it would be fun to share a little bit of process that I usually don’t discuss much, which is the design work that goes into a book’s jacket.

covercomp1

As an illustrator, my focus is often set on creating a quintessential image to capture the story within. Oftentimes, good design and typography can do just as good, if not a better, job. Also, I feel that these elements need to feel organic and cohesive to whatever image is presented as the representation of the book.

This fall, Simon & Schuster will be releasing a bind-up of the first five Spiderwick Chronicles books. Many have thought that the books should have been presented this way to begin with, but Hol and I really wanted these stories to be enjoyed by the younger readers we intended them for – hence the small page length and numerous illustrations.

(The image above, btw, is my first thought which I rendered after the initial discussion with my editor. I like to capture a first impression before I move into the “inspiration gathering” phase.)

With the film’s release last year, we found that Spiderwick was now exposed to a whole new set of readers and fans. Instead of releasing a bind-up in the insane mix of movie tie-ins last year, we waited so that we could craft a thoughtful, more exciting, version of the story. In many ways, this is a repackaging of the original books, very similar to what is done when a novel goes into paperback. But this version is intended for new fans of the Spiderwick world, and yet it offers extras and goodies that will (hopefully) satisfy our fans that have been with us since the beginning.

When we took all of Holly’s text from the first five books and put them together, we came up with a 500+ page novel, albeit one with a small trim size. That said, one of our first decisions was to design this book to appeal towards an older reader…say, 12 and up.

So I started looking at examples of books that (I felt) met with the same challenges I now faced and solved them in a new, refreshing way. Here is what I looked at:

abarat1

Clive Barker’s paperback cover to Abarat. I love iconic covers. Their clean imagery gives you an immediate sense of what the book is. I feel the strength of this cover isn’t just in the somewhat macabre illustration (done by Clive, no less), but the prominence of his name (hence it being typeset larger than the title). He has that name recognition that I wasn’t sure Hol and I had. Also, we have trouble representing Spiderwick with just one character: Use a faerie and it can appear too girly, use a goblin, and it looks like we are aiming towards boys. So I kept looking…

compass

Philip Pullman’s first title in the His Dark Materials trilogy. I was blown away when I first saw these covers, to me they are like a fine piece of art by Gustav Klimt (as evidenced by my first layout, which mimics the composition). Here, Phil’s name takes a backseat to the titling – which I prefer. The use of the celestial clipart is genius, as is the heavy emboss and the gold foil. We’ve used foil on the Spiderwick books before, so I made a note that we should consider it for our bind-up. (By the way, the original American cover for this featured art by Caldecott medalist, Eric Rohmann…pretty cool)

coraline

Neil Gaiman’s Coraline. This type-only cover is a very different treatment when compared to the original release…

coraline2

…and it is a fine example of what great type and design can achieve. This feels very classic to me, and tonally correct with its palette of black and silver. I also carries a sophistication not seen in the original (though I like McKean’s mixed-media mastery)…a sophistication I wanted to imbue into our cover.

rackham1

Lastly, I looked at some of Arthur Rackham’s lettering and design used for the title pages in The Ingoldsby Legends.

rackham2

Obviously, I am inspired by his fabulous illustration work; however, he also had a knack for fantastic titling. This nod to Art Nouveau design I respond to, and it was the direction I would initially set off in…but I would soon learn my limits…

11

Wyrm King Cover

I am excited to unveil the cover to the third, and final, Beyond the Spiderwick Chronicles book. This is also the grand finale to my favorite faerie series.

wyrmcover

This arrangement, of a character facing off with another, is a composition I’ve used throughout all of the Spiderwick books starting with book 1. I thought it would be fitting to use it here as our hero, Nick, faces the “big bad” of the trilogy – a creature not described in Arthur’s Field Guide…

cover-sketch

The preliminary sketch was done in pencils, and a tonal study followed which was rendered digitally. Once the sketch was approved, it was enlarged and transferred to bristol board where the final painting was rendered in Holbien acryla guoache.

covertonal

The art director and I thought the scene would read more dramatic if Nick was reduced in size, giving the creature a more ominous presence. This change was done in Photoshop, and you’ll be able to see the slight difference once the book comes out this September. Below is a quick draft with the scale change:

2p_cvr_wyrm-king

Pages:12345