The Snow Queen

Childrens Illustration, Drawings, General

snow queen

 

I know, I know…But I had to. The Snow Queen has been on my to-draw list for a long time. Ever since Father Christmas stuffed my stocking with a very dark and beautiful jigsaw when I was a tiny little-person, I’ve been fascinated. The whole scene was the most gorgeous thing I’d ever seen – I was completely transfixed and often commandeered my nan’s coffee table for days at a time to put together my amazing, silver-sparkly jigsaw. I’m still enchanted by snow and ice and her so if I was ever going to draw a queen, it just had to be this one.

When the Wind is Howling…

Childrens Illustration, Childrens Writing, General, General

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I Won’t Let You Blow Away – Part 2

Childrens Illustration, Childrens Writing, General, General

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After some nifty agent feedback, I’ve made a few changes. Comparing prints, this version wins. What do you think?

I Won’t Let You Blow Away

Childrens Illustration, Childrens Writing

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I’ve been working on a few new stories lately. For the first time in a LONG time I’m having a break to work on new ideas, freshen up my portfolio and tweak my style. This is a spread from the first dummy. It’s a bit of a change but hopefully in a good way. If I let boredom set in, it shows in my work, so tinkering with style every now and again helps me to keep things interesting and new.

When Good Days Go Bad

Childrens Illustration, Drawings, Editorial Illustration, General

Bad Day

Similarity – What Every Illustrator Should Know

Childrens Illustration, Design, General
I designed some new greetings cards this week. Thinking ‘These are so unique!’, I dutifully sent them off to my agent. Being the impatient soul that I am, I keep checking to see if they’ve been added to their site. Out of the corner of my eye, I spot a dynamic banner at the top of the page. It’s showing someone else’s card designs. The style and subject matter look very similar to mine. I panic. Is this person going to think I copied them? Are mine now completely useless? A feeling of hopelessness replaces the excitement I had at creating something different

This isn’t the first time this has happened.

Granny's House In 2011, I created an ink and watercolour called ‘Granny’s House‘. It’s a limited palette work, using only prussian blue, red and black. It was just so original. I thought. A search on Little Red Riding Hood a few months later threw back lots of the same thing. On one, I even left a comment stating something along the lines of ‘Lovely…I did one like this…Earlier’, just in case the artist in question saw mine and thought I’d ripped him off.

It’s not even the second time this has happened.

pirat Early 2012, before Pi-Rat! was released (but after the final art was submitted),the fantastic Julia Donaldson released The Highway Rat…GAAHH! It looked like I’d jumped on the rat bandwagon. People all over the land would cry ‘Who does she think she is! Fancy trying to out-rat Julia…’ But it was fine. Those nightmares about my publisher calling me to say they’d had a change of heart didn’t come true. And Pi-Rat! has since been short-listed for “Read It Again!” The Cambridgeshire Children’s Picture Book Award 2014. Yay!

If you felt beforehand that the idea you came up with wasn’t as original as you thought, you’d be far less likely to start anything in the first place. You wouldn’t feel the motivation and exhilaration that comes with a new sketch or storyline.  You’d judge your work based on all the minutely similar designs and manuscripts that were already out there and end up throwing yours in the bin or a tantrum…Not helpful to the creative process.

tantrum-sequence800 If I’d seen those card designs on my agents’ site before submitting mine, then I wouldn’t have submitted mine at all. And they aren’t THAT similar. As a matter of fact, if they weren’t my designs, I wouldn’t have been so quick to compare.  But that’s the point. If you look too much, you’ll give yourself a whole host of reasons not to get your work out there. If you do anything other than scratch the surface with your research, you could give yourself a case of paranoiac-creative-block.

Nobody should design  in a vacuum, we all know what that breeds, but once you’re committed to a piece of work, go with it. Even if halfway through that work, a high-profile artist/illustrator/writer/photographer/singer/dancer/poet announces something similar. It doesn’t matter. What matters is that it’s original.

The moral of the story is, this happens quite a bit. So don’t panic. Similar is not the same. Similar is how fashions and trends grow. [Copying shouldn’t be confused with ‘similar’. Artists who copy are not artists, they’re imitators. A completely different breed.] 

How to Draw a Pet Unicorn

Childrens Illustration, Drawings, Goodies, Resources, Tutorials

I know, I know…I’ve neglected my blog. Again. So to make up for it, I made this step-by-step guide to drawing pet unicorns to keep you all amused! I’d love to see what you and your little ones come up with so get drawing and tag me in your creations on Twitter (@maxillustration) or Facebook (Maxine Lee Illustration)!

I have this as a hi-res A4 file, so if you’d like to print, email/message me and I’ll send it over. Enjoy x

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