Images 2009


My acrylic and mixed-media on canvas painting, “The Song Came and Went,” was juried into the Images 2009 Central Pennsylvania Festival of the Arts show at State College.

This would be it.

Changing to all Rotty

After some soul-searching and cutting of losses, I’ve decided to ditch the marketing of my traditional illustration style in favor of 100% of my twisted illustration style. I still have the traditional portfolio up on my site in case there are any leftovers from past marketing campaigns who still want that style. But for the most part, I haven’t had many takers, and the twisted style seems to have gotten legs.

This is the kind of stuff I want to do most. I know I’ve now eliminated myself from a lot/many/most markets that want more traditional material, but if I’m to stand out of the crowd at all, I have to be true to myself.

This is me.

Hello world.

Possible gorget


So last year about this time, we took a trip to Bar Harbor, Maine, to celebrate our fifth wedding anniversary (we were married there at the top of Cadillac Mountain at sunrise). The first time we were there, I had found a piece of slate that I thought was interesting near the beach, and I brought it home with me.

Last year while we were there, we took another trip to the Abbe Museum, and it was there I saw a piece that looked very familiar to the piece I had brought home five years earlier. It was a Native American gorget.

I’ve already contacted the folks at the Abbe Museum to hear their thoughts. I’ve also uploaded a few photos I took of the piece I found, and I’m interested in hearing what other people may think of its origins.

Dead Line

Here’s one of the latest things I’ve been working on. It’s a five-page graphic novel that follows a stumped graphic novelist as he is faced with a deadline “in five pages.” I used graphite (powdered and in pencil form) and Photoshop to get the effects I was looking for. The image posted here is page one.

For those interested in how I’m working it, I had separate postcards made of each page and I’m sending them out to art buyers once a month (for the next five months) with a super-secret invitation-only Web page address on the back of each one. On the site they can download the graphic novel page as a printable pdf.

Fontstruct

So I taught Typography last fall, and for a semester-long project, I had the four-credit students work out a font on the FontShop site, www.fontstruct.com. (If you haven’t made it over there yet, it’s a great site where you can create your own working typefaces.) One of the student’s typefaces was even chosen as a “Featured Download.”

Here are links to a few of the final products. I’m very proud…

Kimothy by Kim Franczak
Bloc by Lara Heinz
Hot Mess by Jon Stefaniak
Brickyard by Corey Perkins

Leave them a comment, and let them know what you think!

Em dashes and hyphens and editors—Oh my!

(Sorry in advance if I can’t get the punctuation working properly on this blog!)

See, the thing I’m liking about editors—and this is coming from a Typography/Graphic Design instructor—is how they keep using em dashes properly.
I’ve received two emails from editors over the past two days, and both included the correct use of em dashes. The one I got today used two em-dashes and a hyphen properly in the same sentence! And on top of that, both editors used only one space after every period.
Oh, yeah. They get it.
Call me anal, but I’m thinking those are the people I want working on my books.

March 2008


Doodle-a-day…not so much.

Here’s March:

Giraffe polo


Here’s the latest.

Just finished the polo illustration getting ready for the conference next month. I’m hoping to get at least one more finished by then. It kind of looks like I’m obsessed with giraffes right now.

Not sure and too busy to weigh the consequences.

February 2008


My “Doodle a Day” pocket calendar has slowed a bit. I’ll catch up eventually. Here’s February:

Shop around


Well, I finally got a CafePress storefront put together with lots of stuff to show off all these kid’s illos. Here it is:

www.cafepress.com/nora_thompson

Lots of clothes, of course, for big and traditionally-sized kids, a tote bag, teddy bear, pet accessories, journal, mouse pad, mugs, cards, stickers, magnets–whew! I culled the images from both my traditional and twisted styles, and tried especially hard to match up the images with the product I placed them on. Not an easy task!

My favorite? Hmmm. That would probably have to be the Jeeraffe journal (pictured above). I think he fits perfectly in the space.

Take a peek or a long look around, and don’t forget, holidays are just around the corner…

Wall Arch

I was pretty startled to hear the news about the falling of Wall Arch at Arches National Park in Utah. Here’s the National Park Service article. We made a trip out there two years ago, and that particular arch was one I remember well because of its proximity to the hiking trail. A stone wall blocked one side and the Wall Arch spanned along the opposite wall with the trail sandwiched between. The structure seemed very delicate at the time, but I got that same impression with most of the arches we saw there. It was a humbling feeling knowing those stones could topple on our heads at any moment.

I’m glad we took so many pictures.
(Arches National Park: Wall Arch 14 June 2006)