Paperish Mess

I’m excited to share that I’ll be selling prints in a great new shop/gallery here in Chicago called Paperish Mess! The shop opens this weekend, and there’s even a fun opening party this Saturday, November 10th from 7-10pm. I’ll be going and I can’t wait to see all of the awesome local hand-made goods that owners Lisa Muscato and Sean Murty have gathered for the store. Stop on by if you’re in town!
Paperish Mess is at 1955 W. Chicago Ave in Chicago, Illinois

New Print — Foxxxxxy

I’ve had a hankering to draw a fun fox lately, and thinking about foxes makes me think about one of my favorite 80’s epithets — Foxy. Why don’t we call people foxy anymore? I think we should all start using this adorable, woodland-scented compliment whenever we want to tell someone they’re attractive. In honor of that idea, I drew this fox, with the words “You’re so Foxy,” and I’ve just made this available as a print in my Etsy shop. Buy it for someone you love (or just someone you think is foxy)!

Honeycrisp

 

Here’s a personal piece I finished recently as a way to experiment a little with technique. I sometimes wish I could dye my hair my favorite shade of turquoise, but I’m a little too chicken. The great thing about drawing pictures is you can sort of live vicariously through them, so the next best thing to actually dyeing my hair is drawing a fab chick with turquoise hair! To give her a bit of purpose, she’s holding this apple — maybe it’s an ode to autumn? Maybe she’s a funky sci fi/medieval Eve? However she’s interpreted, I had fun drawing her long blue hair and secretly wishing I could pull that off.

Funny Animals

I’ve been having fun experimenting with some funny animal drawings using lots of pattern and lines. This first drawing was what I sent my dad for a father’s day card back in June, and the second one is just a summery drawing of a lion and an antelope on a bike ride through the country. (Those animals might be foes in real life, but in MY world they’re best friends!)

 

Happy Mother’s Day!

Here’s a flower I drew for this year’s Mother’s Day card. And my mom just got hers in the mail, so it’s safe to post! ;o) I’m incredibly fortunate to have not only a mom but also a mother-in-law who are super supportive and hang my pictures on their walls. It is such a wonderful thing to have parents who believe in you and make you feel special!

Technique-wise, this was a fun experiment working digitally — I sketched this flower quite a while ago, but gave it a new twist by turning the lines to color and completing the rest of the color work in Photoshop. I will be trying more experiments like this soon!

Little Shop of Homicide

This is another book cover that I illustrated recently for the excellent people at Penguin books. The book is called Little Shop of Homicide, and is the first in the new Devereaux’s Dime Store Mystery series by Denise Swanson. Ms. Swanson is the New York Times best-selling author of the very successful Scumble River mystery series, so it was extra exciting to be a part of the Devereaux debut! Here’s the premise of the book (from Denise Swanson’s website):

“Devereaux Sinclair is the happy new owner of the adorable old-fashioned shop in her small Missouri town. But when a revenge-crazed cop accuses Dev of murdering her ex’s fiancée — and the murder weapon is found with her fingerprints all over it — Dev’s store, and her life, quickly turn from charmed to troubled. If she doesn’t find the real killer soon, this five-and-dime owner will be serving twenty-five to life…”

It was fun to develop the look of Devereaux and capture the small-town feel of her dime store in the illustration. The book just came out this month, and if you’re a mystery fan like me, you should give it a read! (You can order it on Amazon, here.) Thanks to Elizabeth Phillips for the great art direction!

The Juno Charm

The Juno Charm

The Juno Charm is a lovely new book of poetry written by Irish poet Nuala Ni Chonchuir and published by Salmon Poetry, and it was relseased just last month. My “Midnight Peacock” illustration was chosen for the cover art because, as Nuala put it, the peacock is the symbolic animal of Juno, and the book includes several references to the moon. Nuala and the people at Salmon were delightful to work with, and I was quite excited to receive my copy of the book a little bit ago. If you’re a fan of poetry (or peacocks!) you should definitely check it out!

Visit the Salmon poetry page about the book here, and if you’re in the States and would  like to order the book, you can get it from Amazon, here. And, if you’d like to order a copy of the “Midnight Peacock” print for yourself, you can do so here.

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