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Showing posts with label illustration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illustration. Show all posts

Illustration|Marguerite Sauvage



According to me, illustration is one of the most elegant, refined and interesting arts, above all when it regards fashion.
One of my recent discoveries is a french illustrator wich works with prestigious magazines as Elle and beyond fashion, she has customers like Apple, Marshall Fields, Motorola, Orange and PlayStation.
Her line is delicate, soft and whirling, her subjects are sophisticated and refined.
She is Marguerite Sauvage, paris based illustrator since 2001, an artist with an extremely feminine, contemporary and dreamy touch.
I found a beautiful creation from Marguerite Sauvage on the web and I decided to sent her an e-mail. 
She has been so kind to give me the authorization to use her images to share on the blog, so, here they are.
Here some Marguerite’s works, if you want to see others, 
this is the website 
//
A parer mio, l’illustrazione è una delle arti più eleganti, raffinate ed interessanti e quando incontra la moda, lo diventa ancora di più.
Tra le mie recenti scoperte nel settore, un’illustratrice francese che lavora con magazine prestigiosi come Elle e oltre alla moda, annovera tra i suoi clienti Apple, Marshall Fields, Motorola, Orange e PlayStation.
Il suo tratto è delicato, leggero e vorticoso, i suoi soggetti sofisticati e raffinati.
Lei è Marguerite Sauvage, parigina, illustratrice dal 2001, un’artista caratterizzata da un’estetica estremamente femminile, contemporanea, tinta da tocchi onirici.
L’ho contattata dopo aver trovato una sua immagine sul web e lei è stata così cortese da concedermi di usare le sue immagini per condividerle con voi sul mio blog.
Eccone alcune, se volete vedere altri suoi lavori il sito è http://www.margueritesauvage.com













Sweet Summer Reads!

The Flower Power girls are now in paperback, with sparkly redesigned covers! Drawing inspiration from  Christine Norrie's adorable original illustrations, I was able to channel my inner illustrator and create a new look for these middle grade tween novels. Lauren Myracle is at her best here, with four flower friends and tons of chat room fun. Get 'em while they're hot!



Under the Cover: Gay America


To mark the passage of same-sex marriage in New York, here's a look at the making of a book that honors the LGBT struggle for equality.

Book Summary 

Milestones of gay and lesbian life in the United States are brought together in the first-ever nonfiction book published specifically for teens.

Profusely illustrated with archival images, the groundbreaking Gay America reveals how gay men and women have lived, worked, and loved for the past 125 years. Gays and lesbians play a very prominent role in American life today, whether grabbing headlines over political gains, starring in and being the subject of movies and television shows, or filling the streets of nearly every major city each year to celebrate Gay Pride. However, this was not always the case, and this book charts their journey along with the history of the country. Providing a sense of hope mixed with pride, author Linas Alsenas demonstrates how, within one century, gay women and men have gone from being socially invisible to becoming a political force to be reckoned with and proud members of the American public living openly and honestly.

Cover Creation

I worked a little backwards in the Gay America design process, creating the title lock-up before I solidified the design. But in this case, the typography actually inspired the overall look.

For this book, I really wanted the typography to speak to the subject. I felt it was important for "GAY" to be prominent, looking embattled but strong, while "America" was smaller and more idyllic. But most importantly, I wanted the two words to be physically entwined, to suggest that these two worlds are intrinsically united.

"GAY" is set in Eroxion Roman and "America" is set in Bickham Script.


In these initial sketches, I played with the combination of both American and Gay Rights symbols: stars and stripes of all colors. 




Finally I found the best marriage of symbols: Stars on a field of rainbow stripes.


The missing element was photographic. We felt it was important to depict the many faces of Gay America in united celebration. After much deliberation, we decided on this image from Getty.com:


And the final cover and full jacket:


Reviews

From Booklist: 
*Starred Review* "Alsenas’ landmark history of American gay life focuses largely on public attitudes toward homosexuality and the seemingly endless struggle for gay rights. After a brief survey covering pre–twentieth-century America, Alsenas narrows his focus to offer a closer examination of more recent events. Thus, Chapter Two deals with the period 1910–39; Chapter Three, with 1940–59; and so on until the final chapter brings the reader to the present—and beyond. In an effort to humanize his material, the author begins each chapter with an individual story told from a personalized (i.e., lightly fictionalized) point of view. While this succeeds in dramatizing factual material, the effort may be unnecessary, since the epic story the author tells of the gradual emergence of gays and lesbians from the shadows is itself a compellingly human drama. Alsenas’ often sprightly, always engaging style makes his history even more reader-friendly, as do the many archival photographs that enliven each page. This first-ever book to cover this material for young adults is essential reading for all young people—gay, lesbian, and straight. Grades 7–12." —Michael Cart

"Gay America is an amazing book: entertaining, informative, and endlessly fascinating. Thoroughly researched, beautifully written, and gloriously illustrated, the book puts the LGBT movement into its proper historical context and features many luminaries of our community. Whatever your sexuality, Gay America is YOUR America. This important and groundbreaking book should be required reading in every high school in the USA.” —Lesléa Newman, author of Heather Has Two Mommies

So, what exactly does a book designer do?

I get this question a lot. Most people think that designing a book means illustrating or even writing it. I don't write the text, but I do decide how the words look on the page. I don't illustrate in the traditional sense (see: Chris Van Allsburg, Eric Carle, Sophie Blackall, Brett Helquist, &c.), but I do create visual illustrations by drawing or compositing digital images together. I also enlist the expertise of extremely talented illustrators and photographers to help create cover and interior artwork. Design encompasses all of these aspects. It's the glue that aesthetically holds a book together. From the jacket art and paper stock, to the text size and font choice, designing a book is artfully styling its elements so that the theme of the book carries from cover to cover.

 

How it works 

Here's the final cover and full jacket for How I, Nicky Flynn, Finally Get a Life (and a Dog), by Art Corriveau. The book is about the physical and emotional journey of a boy and his newly adopted seeing-eye dog. It's told in a spunky, light-hearted way, so I thought it was important to convey that in the design. 

 

The jacket includes photography, illustrated graphics, and typography that (thankfully!) work together in a playful way. I chose the primary color palette because it makes the story feel vibrant and light. The dog is a stock photograph from Getty Images and I drew the other graphic elements (arrows, sunburst, &c.) in Adobe Illustrator. The title type is PraterBlock One, but it's slightly redrawn to integrate better with the design. All of these elements I carried throughout the interior of the book: 

 

Title page:  



Section header:



Page 1:



Interior spread:


Author's note: 

 

The dog is just so dang cute, he bears repeating! And the placement of the arrows on the page makes it feel like you're moving through the book. Not that a page-turner needs any help, but just these little design notes make the page-turning experience more interactive and fun.