Monday, 12 October 2009
Thursday, 8 October 2009
Panorama-orama
Jez got a lovely Horizon Perfekt camera which we took to try out at the beautiful beach at Alnmouth. Here I am looking windswept in panorama. You can see a couple more of his nice long photos on his flickr. 
Every time I listen to '100 years' by Dr Dog I always think that the line 'I'll marry you out of common sense' is incredibly lovely. This drawing doesn't really do it justice.
Tuesday, 6 October 2009
Saturday, 3 October 2009
A Handful Of Treats
Every now and again I pop by the Lizzie Fortunato site to eye up what I would buy if I had a tonne of money. Ideally I'd buy everything but on this visit I think I'd happily plump for this beautiful statement bib necklace.
Absolutely besotted with this image by Melissa Castrillon based on the story of Sarah Henley who, in 1855, attempted to kill herself by jumping from the Clifton Suspension Bridge in Bristol. As she fell the large skirt of her dress blew up like a parachute and she glided safely the 225ft to land. I have always loved this story and this image is the perfect treatment for it. I love that nude pink too! 
Really impressed with this album cover by Anna Hurley
Thursday, 1 October 2009
Peculiar Julia


Oh and this is the very last page...its my family!
New Stuff!
I've just added two different postcard packs to my etsy shop. The print quality is pretty nice so if you didn't want to send them they could double as mini prints perfect for framing!
Saturday, 26 September 2009
Wednesday, 23 September 2009
Seraphima Astafiena and her cabaret, 1922

Adore this new image by one of my very favourite artists (if not my absolute favourite) Carson Ellis. (via her blog).
Anticipation Stations
I am actively excited for the Anthropologie store that is opening in London next month. I have a long standing anthroplogie crush which is only exacerbated by the fact that I can't buy anything from their site as the customs/tax/whatever is so extortionate. Everything is so pretty and girly and luxurious which is about a thousand miles from my current state sat on the sofa in a hoodie and my boyfriends pyjama bottoms (so much comfier than my own) sporting the ugliest slippers ever (fact. there was a poll and everything). Anyway when it opens I'll be seeking out these things for sure...love love love the colour of that skirt (with mustard tights...yes please!)

p.s I'm doing this for these very fine folk. Photos on Friday when it all starts.
Monday, 21 September 2009
Lovely things!
I really love all of these pieces by Australian Jeweller/Silversmith David Neale. The flower brooch above especially. Those colours make me swoon! And how sweet is that wee stag? Lovely stuff.

Sunday, 20 September 2009
London Calling

Last Wednesday I made a quick trip down to London for the opening of an exhibition put together by the agency who represent me, Eastwing. The show was great and it was nice to meet a few of the other illustrators on Eastwing. I haven't really mentioned the whole agency thing on here yet (its still very early days for me!) but here is my page on their site. There's some new work on there to peruse including this bear who was made into a rather nice giclee print for the show and will soon feature on tshirts by Scotland's own Oddities.
If you're in London go and take a look at the show! Its on till Thursday at the Framers Gallery on Windmill St (round the corner from Goodge St tube station.)
Friday, 18 September 2009
Richard Sanderson

Not content with being a thoroughly nice chap with an eye for a good stationary shop Richard Sanderson is also a top notch illustrator with some mean pencil skills. Check out his website for more awesome work.

Tuesday, 15 September 2009
Student Guide

I did some illustrations for the List's Student Guide 2009 which is now out! If you're not a scottish fresher then you can see them online here. Above is Edinburgh and below is Glasgow.
Wednesday, 9 September 2009

I did a quick drawing today whilst watching a slightly mediocre BBC drama called Land Girls. The show might be a bit dull but the high waisted trousers, pin curls and head scarves are not! Hurrah! If I had a better knowledge of WWII I'd love to write a kid's story about the Land Army Girls. Maybe I should do some researchin'.
Another What I Wore Today drawing. Today I was feeling girly and summery (its september! Edinburgh is a bit slow on the sunshine uptake!).We're off to Salisbury tomorrow in preparation for End of the Road festival this weekend. Very excited (especially as the weather looks like it might hold out and stay warm and sunny) and looking forward to seeing bands like Shearwater, David Thomas Broughton, Alela Diane, Okkervil River, Blitzen Trapper, Neko Case, Magnolia Electric Co., The Dodos and a fair few more. Camping! Trees! The SOUTH! Yeah!
(I might be a little over excited about getting out of Scotland for a bit!)
Monday, 7 September 2009
Lobachevsky

A quick doodle for my friend's band. They only have one song on their myspace but its nice. Give it a go.
His other band are a bit more energetic. They're doing pretty nicely at the moment.
Sunday, 6 September 2009
What I Wore Today

Last week illustration star (and pug authority) Gemma Correll started a flickr group based on the tried and tested Wardrobe Remix idea BUT with one important difference. All submissions MUST be drawings. Needless to say plenty of people have joined eager to share their sartorial choices without the stress of posting photos of themselves (myself included). Here is my drawing for today and here are all my drawings thus far. Check out the group to see all manner of exciting wardrobe doodles and join in! Its good fun and a great way to get a wee bit of drawing done everyday. Perfect.
Boots!

Dear Shuh. I would very much like these boots. Please make them in a UK9 for me. KTHXBYE. X
(will post properly later. apologies for erratic/flakey blogging)
(will post properly later. apologies for erratic/flakey blogging)
Wednesday, 2 September 2009
Monday, 31 August 2009
Tuesday, 25 August 2009
Rope & Waves
Shawn Sheu takes beautiful photos. His portraits are lovely but his landscape work is astounding. To me this looks more like a Turner painting than anything that could exist for real. (via Amy Borrell @ All the Mountains)
Love love love this rope knot bracelet from Tanya Aguiniga
Forgot to mention that there's a wee interview with me on Paper Shelters. If you've ever read an interview that i've given before you'll see that I haven't said anything groundbreaking...i'm not a very exciting interviewee.
Catch Up/Sum Up
Oops. Totally neglected this blog recently. It has literally been the craziest month ever. What with going back and forth to London, moving house, Edinburgh Festival, having friends to stay, impromptu lodgers, my sister visiting and trying to do work I've barely had time to pause for breathe! Hopefully things are finally back to some semblance of normality now and I can get on with things a slightly more leisurely pace!

First up a new (ish) project that I've been working on with my very good friend (and lexicography magician) Jane Solomon. I met Jane when she studied in Edinburgh back when I was a first year (she has no returned to Chicago. Boo) and we've stewed on various projects since then (the ill-fated period drama review blog, kid's books etc) but finally got going on one we both enjoy. Sum-Up Stories is a blog in which Jane writes rather charming flash fiction and I try and come up with an illustration to go with it. We've done a few (and there are some i'm yet to illustrate) so far and you can see them here. The goal is to do things quickly and instinctively and to try not to lose interest! Hooray for that.
Second head over to the awesome FormFiftyFive to see the banner I drew to celebrate their 3000th post (thus the MMM not FFF)
I think thats it for now. See you soon!
Monday, 17 August 2009
Waiting
Saturday, 15 August 2009
New Print!
Monday, 10 August 2009
Hiatus
We moved house this morning. At 8.30am. From a third floor flat to a fourth floor flat. I am shattered. Moving all of our stuff would have been challenge enough but the 19 boxes of Friction books really tipped it over the edge. Anyway just wanted to say that due to to being in a new place in amongst a thousand boxes, it being the Edinburgh Festival and thus everywhere being swamped and hectic AND having no internet connection blogging will be suspended for the next week. After that I'll be back and on top form I hope. Hello to all the people who've started following my blog recently. There are 131 of you know and thats amazing. Slightly bewildering by amazing nonetheless.
Friday, 7 August 2009
Friction Prints

So these are my images for We Are The Friction. If you like they are available to buy as high quality digital prints for £20 (about $33) + P&P. Prints are 14 x 21.5 cm plus border for framing. Contact us at sing@singstatistics.co.uk to order.

BUY A BOOK
Thursday, 6 August 2009
My two cents
So I've plenty of time to think on yesterday's revelations now and I guess here's what I want to say. It's a long 'un and sadly image free, normal posting to resume shortly.
When i first opened my emails and read about Samantha Beeston presenting Lauren Nassef's and my own work as her own I felt a bit sick. It was a real sudden punch in the gut and sat in the middle of a starbucks on Marylebone high street it was one i wasn't expecting. One of the things I worry about as an illustrator who has a website, a blog and a flickr is that my work is accessable to anyone and that is both a blessing and a curse. Whilst it allows me, and thousands of other artists, to present work and connect with people all over the world it also throws my work into the public domain where anyone can find it, post it, print it, or copy it. The internet is a largely anonymous place, sites like ffffound although often enjoyable and useful, regurgitate images, often without crediting their creator which renders them orphans to many viewers. They appear totally without origin. As a result it is far too easy for people to take their 'inspiration' that bit too far.
In this case the culprit was clearly aware of who created the images concerned (the handwriting that was lifted from me was posted only on my blog which is a far from anonymous source and the images from Lauren's 'A drawing a day' project are only available on her personal site) which sadly makes it a far less innocent crime. It is one thing to copy someone's work and keep it hidden in a sketchbook, (when I was at school I loved drawing paintings from The Art Book, it seemed like good practice) but it is quite another to present it as your own publically and then to enter it into a competition. Alas short of her tutors and the competition's judges following every illustration website and blog going how on earth were they ever going to know? I guess that is what made this all so easy. I'm sure that there are hundreds of people out there presenting other people's work as their own. In fact I know a fair few people who have fallen victim to it recently. I can consider myself lucky that someone spotted this when it could quite easily have gone unnoticed. In that respect the internet and the community of people who follow illustration blogs like my own are invaluable.
This whole thing has raised many questions (not least over at BBIC) about copyright and ownership. As someone just starting out professionally I am hardly equipped to answer them (but Julia Rothman is!) however it is safe to say that if you are taking heavily from someone else's work then you are likely in breach of copyright. It is never ok to rip off other artists, especially if you intend to make that work public.
My advice, though no one has asked for it and I am not really licensed to give it, would be to look at things other than illustration if you are an illustrator, look at fine art or film or read some good books that way you can feel safe in the knowledge that your inspiration has come from an emotional reaction rather than a desire to ape something you've already seen. Listen to conversations on buses, draw in unlikely places and avoid the internet when trying to start work!
I would also emplore people to put notices on your blogs claiming possession of your work...when posting to flickr make sure it is clear that this is your work and not for other people to copy. It seems anal but it could well help. I know that from now on i'll be making sure I tag everything I ever did as my own!
OK. I'm done. Apologies to those who come to this blog for cheery posts about drawing bears. I assure you this is a one off musing and hopefully we'll have no more of this nonsense! Thanks again to everyone who has contacted me about this and offered kind words of support. Knowing that people are keeping an eye out for each other is the only reason I am happy to keep on posting my work online.
When i first opened my emails and read about Samantha Beeston presenting Lauren Nassef's and my own work as her own I felt a bit sick. It was a real sudden punch in the gut and sat in the middle of a starbucks on Marylebone high street it was one i wasn't expecting. One of the things I worry about as an illustrator who has a website, a blog and a flickr is that my work is accessable to anyone and that is both a blessing and a curse. Whilst it allows me, and thousands of other artists, to present work and connect with people all over the world it also throws my work into the public domain where anyone can find it, post it, print it, or copy it. The internet is a largely anonymous place, sites like ffffound although often enjoyable and useful, regurgitate images, often without crediting their creator which renders them orphans to many viewers. They appear totally without origin. As a result it is far too easy for people to take their 'inspiration' that bit too far.
In this case the culprit was clearly aware of who created the images concerned (the handwriting that was lifted from me was posted only on my blog which is a far from anonymous source and the images from Lauren's 'A drawing a day' project are only available on her personal site) which sadly makes it a far less innocent crime. It is one thing to copy someone's work and keep it hidden in a sketchbook, (when I was at school I loved drawing paintings from The Art Book, it seemed like good practice) but it is quite another to present it as your own publically and then to enter it into a competition. Alas short of her tutors and the competition's judges following every illustration website and blog going how on earth were they ever going to know? I guess that is what made this all so easy. I'm sure that there are hundreds of people out there presenting other people's work as their own. In fact I know a fair few people who have fallen victim to it recently. I can consider myself lucky that someone spotted this when it could quite easily have gone unnoticed. In that respect the internet and the community of people who follow illustration blogs like my own are invaluable.
This whole thing has raised many questions (not least over at BBIC) about copyright and ownership. As someone just starting out professionally I am hardly equipped to answer them (but Julia Rothman is!) however it is safe to say that if you are taking heavily from someone else's work then you are likely in breach of copyright. It is never ok to rip off other artists, especially if you intend to make that work public.
My advice, though no one has asked for it and I am not really licensed to give it, would be to look at things other than illustration if you are an illustrator, look at fine art or film or read some good books that way you can feel safe in the knowledge that your inspiration has come from an emotional reaction rather than a desire to ape something you've already seen. Listen to conversations on buses, draw in unlikely places and avoid the internet when trying to start work!
I would also emplore people to put notices on your blogs claiming possession of your work...when posting to flickr make sure it is clear that this is your work and not for other people to copy. It seems anal but it could well help. I know that from now on i'll be making sure I tag everything I ever did as my own!
OK. I'm done. Apologies to those who come to this blog for cheery posts about drawing bears. I assure you this is a one off musing and hopefully we'll have no more of this nonsense! Thanks again to everyone who has contacted me about this and offered kind words of support. Knowing that people are keeping an eye out for each other is the only reason I am happy to keep on posting my work online.
Wednesday, 5 August 2009
Hurt

I'm away in London and on a bit of a timed internet connection BUT i had to post about this.
GO HERE
and then HERE before you read the rest of my post.
I'm feeling pretty hurt by this. The fact that someone believed they could trace my work is pretty awful but that she then went on to enter it into a competition which she won is devastating. As most of you know I graduated at the start of the month. I am likely the same age as Samantha Beeson and with a similar amount of professional experience, to start my career with this is pretty disheartening. My heart goes out to Lauren Nassef who is an incredibly talented illustrator and absolutely doesn't deserve to have to had this happen (who does i guess?)
I will post on this properly when I get back. Copyright is a difficult issue and I need to have time to process all of this and then try and sort something out.
Thanks to everyone who has contacted me about this. It is good to know that there are so many people looking out for each other on this here internet.

On a lesser note she also stole my handwriting. Who doesn't have even enough creativity to write the word 'hello'? Urgh.
Sunday, 2 August 2009
Festival Build Up
(jez enjoys our new rooftop view)
Evenin' all. Its very nearly festival time here in Edinburgh. The tourists are flooding in and the streets are filling up. It takes progressively longer to get from one end of the high st to another and its only going to get busier! argh! Saying that the festival is always an exciting time up here and we've got tickets to a few exciting shows. Are any of you heading to the fringe this year?
Anyway here's some nice stuff.....
Animation 1 from jaakko ghostbuster on Vimeo.
Jaako Pallasvuo does amazing work. I love his recent animation experiments. (via AAA)
I would really like this supercool bathplug please (though it is perhaps a little pricey. for a plug). From Panik.

King of all he surveys Stuart Kolakovic has just done this AMAZING book cover for 'Along the Enchanted Way' by William Blacker. If you don't check Stu's blog go and have a look at all the awesome work he's being doing lately.
Illustrative Young Illustrators Award 2009
Have you bought a copy of 'We are the Friction'? No? You should. Its well good.
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