Thursday, December 20

A Very Portland Christmas

To continue on the Portland theme, here's hipster Santa, bringing PBR to all the underemployed boys and girls living on the east side...




Tuesday, December 18

Portlandia!

I will be leaving Portland for a short span of time to spend the holidays with my family, but I love this quirky little city so this week's posts are Portland-related.

This image is something I made for my friend who has recently left Portland for somewhere in Colorado, so I wanted to send her off with a slice of Portlandia. I tried to think of the most "Portland-y" thing I could think of. According to my brain that was a hipster elk/deer thing riding a bicycle past Powell's Bookstore while drinking a PBR.

This is how it turned out:
If this image captures even a fraction of Portland's oddness, I consider it a success.

Materials used: pens, watercolor, colored pencil

I really hope Megan got this in the mail by now and I didn't totally spoil the surprise by posting on here...

Thursday, November 15

Travel

Last fall I created a series of illustrations so I could throw together a stop-motion-y video for a Southwest Airlines competition to win 30 million rewards points to fly wherever I wanted. I love to travel and thought I threw together a fairly convincing and creative presentation as to why my broke AmeriCorps butt should be able to jet across the country on a whim, but they didn't pick my video. (You can still make things right, Southwest!!!)

I was pretty bummed that I did all that work for nada, but you all can view some of the pieces I created. Maybe I'll try to throw the video up on YouTube or Vimeo or one of those places. I wrote a children's book-esque script to go along with the video and narrated it myself and used iMovie to edit it all together because I have lost whatever Final Cut abilities I gained in college.

I'll shut up and show the pictures.
That's supposed to be me. Broke and living in Portland, Oregon. BUT HAPPY!
Then I discussed driving across the country in my tiny little car to serve in AmeriCorps because I am an amazing, selfless person.
This is a really weird combination of images: Cleveland's Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and a geyser (Old Faithful if you'd like) from Yellowstone, because I saw both of those things on my drive across the country. It's kind of surreal and I really like how it turned out even though it makes no sense without explanation.
Hey, look! I don't have enough money to fly anywhere and go on tropical vacations.
Like 99% of Americans.
I explained the awesome things I would do if I was able to fly all over the country for free.
You may notice that I love alliteration.
 I tried to tug at the heartstrings of the soulless marketing folks who didn't choose my video. I talked about going back to Philadelphia to visit my family because I missed them very much. That's a pretty accurate representation of my Pops.
Then I did a little stop motion bit of the ridiculous amount of flights I would be able to take with all those reward points. I even made the airplane look like a Southwest plane. Because I have a crazy awesome eye for detail!!!
Then I cleverly brought it full circle by using the first image, but I changed the words on the sign! Brain-explosion-inducing, I know.

So those are some pictures. I made them with patterned paper, markers, watercolors, and Mod Podge.

Friday, November 9

Giraffes!

This was a project I completed earlier this year for my dear friend Kayla (who is sort of famous). The girl has got some pipes. But I digress.

Kayla's close friend just had a baby, and Kayla wanted a special card made for the family. Specifically, she wanted a family of giraffes. When I finally got down to drawing it out (I procrastinate heavily without concrete deadlines), it didn't take me very long. I drew out one rough sketch to show Kayla:


The finished art looks pretty similar. I got a little crazy with Momma Giraffe's hair, but it's a good look for her.



And here's what the card looks like:


All I used for this card was some Micron pens I think. Some kind of pens. I don't quite remember.

Wednesday, October 24

Robots

As I mentioned in my last post, I was (sort of) working on a little robot art piece. Since I pulled out all the stops at the last minute and manage to finish the piece, I can triumphantly post about it.

Background:
Robo Taco (a Mexican eatery in SE Portland) put out a call for robot art on Craigslist (a totally reputable site to find art jobs) and I saved the post - thinking that I might get around to creating a piece. Usually, I don't, but this time, dear reader, I did! I made a rough sketch of what I wanted my little robot to look like one evening, and the following evening I drew it out on nice paper, inked it and watercolor-d it, and Mod Podge-d it all together.

So here is the rough sketch:
And here is the finished product:
I put it in a frame I got from Goodwill for $2, and voila! A finished piece. It looks pretty classy in the frame, but I don't have a picture of that yet.

Materials used: Watercolor paper, Micron pens, watercolors, colored pencils, and patterned scrapbook paper (the background)

Friday, September 21

A Lady & Her Pup

Here's a quick post before I kick off my weekend:

We had a gift exchange in the AmeriCorps program I was in last year (we were a pretty tight-knit bunch) and I think there was a max of $5 you could spend since we were all broke and that sort of restriction leads to thoughtful, handmade gifts. (Which it totally did).

I had some small frames from IKEA that I wasn't using for anything, so I spray painted them black and made some pen drawings to go inside of them. I figured most people would dig pictures of themselves (I adore a portrait of myself that was done in Paris - even more so because I've had to draw myself a countless number of times for self-portrait projects) and pictures of their pets. This particular lady was the first AmeriCorps member I met in Oregon because she let me and my boyfriend crash at her place for a few days before I moved into my house. She has a super cute dog named Pablo, and my then-boyfriend bonded with Pablo because he loves all dogs. I realize I'm getting off track now, so here are the pictures:
I apologize to Megan for this portrait - it does look like her but I did not crop this image well. It makes her look much less cute than she is in real life because of the way I cut her chin out of the picture. I did a much better job with Pablo:
Such a cute puppy!

I think these were drawn with Micron pens, but I can't quite remember. Woo!

Friday, September 14

Scribbly Doodles

My life has been a smidgen crazy recently. I'm at the beginning of a lot of great things, and I haven't had much time to draw as a result (I will be fixing that soon!). I found these creature doodles in a notepad and felt they warranted a post. I drew them last year during the before-school reading program I ran at an elementary school. We had a volunteer reader come in on Wednesday mornings, which gave me a bit of time to draw. Of course, the kids always wanted to see what I drew at the end of the session. Sometimes they tried to draw the same thing. It was pretty cute.

I have more of those early morning doodles stashed away, so I'll scan them in at some point.
I love the crazy-eyed vulture-looking guy at the bottom of the page.
This doodle makes me very happy. It is the most Quentin Blake-ish thing I've ever drawn. (Quentin Blake did the interior illustrations for the majority of Roald Dahl's books, for those of you who don't have an expansive knowledge of children's book illustrators).

These were drawn with some felt-tip pen I acquired at school. I think I pilfered a few of them from the supply cabinet because I really liked making lists and drawing with them.

Thursday, September 6

Blue Moon

I just realized this post could have been very timely had I posted it the night of the blue moon. However I wasn't thinking about that, so you'll get this post now.

I had the pleasure of designing a t-shirt for my high school marching band this year (I also did it last year - I'll have to find those images for another entry). The theme for their show is "Shadows" and it features "A Night on Bald Mountain". I watched the Fantasia animated clip for that tune and had a pretty complicated idea in mind involving demons and witches and skeletons. Since I'm a lazy bum I didn't do much to flesh out the idea, which worked out to my favor, because the band director wanted something involving the moon. They have a backdrop for the field of a giant moon and clouds, so he wanted that idea to translate to the t-shirt.

I figured the idea would be super easy, and I'd whip something out in no time. Not the case my friends. I struggled for a bit before landing on a concept.

First I tried using a photograph of the moon and clouds, and I tooled around with it in Photoshop, but my digital skills are limited and I was frustrated with the results:
Mind you, this is the inverted image because it would be white ink printed on a black t-shirt. I spent way too much time trying to make it work, it was so uninspired. I was also concerned about how well the image would print on a t-shirt, because there are a lot of gray tones in that image that might not come through in a one color print (I took a screenprinting class in college so I have a little bit of experience with setting up silkscreens).

I was also unhappy that I used a photograph. It felt like cheating. I am an illustrator, so anything I do that isn't drawn out doesn't feel authentic to me. Cue design disaster number two:
Granted, this isn't terrible, but I knew the image wasn't going to translate too well to the screenprinting process. Plus there was no narrative - just a moon and some clouds. I didn't like this either, but at least I got some practice with Photoshop brushes.

Finally inspiration struck! I was looking at pictures of full moons and I really liked the effect of shadows of objects in front of the moon. It was a really nice framing device. Once I came up with that concept, the rough sketch came out easy peasy.
Visual inspiration.
This is the final result for the front of the t-shirt. I was very happy I was able to add a slightly creepy narrative to the illustration and figure out a way to "ground" the moon.

Here's the back:
Whew. That was a wordy post. Next time I'll just post doodles of kittens or something.

Oh yes, one more tidbit of information: all of the images for this shirt were drawn with my Wacom tablet. I almost always scan in a sketch and work on top of it, but this time I drew on blank layers in Photoshop while looking at my sketch. I saved a lot of time by cutting out that middle step. Perhaps I will start doodling on my tablet more often.

Wednesday, August 22

Food for Thought

I've been craving fast food all week (I know, bad Erika!) and I might cave in and buy some tomorrow for lunch because I'll be walking all over campus to test out a scavenger hunt I'll working on (my job is pretty fantastic). So in honor of my cravings, here are some drawings I did of food. It was an assignment for Illustration I or II, I can't remember. But they were fun.

Tomorrow I will probably eat something chicken-related, but burgers are good too.

 I will definitely get fries with that chicken thing I plan on eating.

This taco looks tastier than the ones I had the other night. Hard shell tacos have more aesthetic appeal than soft tacos.

 CAKE!!! This will not be part of my lunch tomorrow.

And for you lovers of veggies, here's some cauliflower. I don't eat it because it sort of looks like brains. And because I am a picky eater.


So there are some pictures of food. Next time I'll post some sketches of a current project. Except I haven't started that yet. I'll work on it.

Materials used: Micron pens (I REALLY liked those pens in college)


Friday, August 17

MAPS Logo Design

At the beginning of August I began my new AmeriCorps position at Portland State University. My official title is Retention Project Program Assistant (fancy, I know) and it comes with perks. Like my own office. There's also this amazing copier that can scan in documents and send them as e-mail attachments, which blew my mind. It's also how I got all of the images for this post onto my computer.

Anyway, the program I'm working with was initiated  last year and is in a bit of a transition period this year. Someone made a logo for the program last year, which looked like this:

I didn't hate it, but I thought it looked a bit amateur, especially for a university program that does important, good work. I kept the basic idea of the compass and found some reference material:


I drew one thumbnail and went with it. I know that's frowned upon with logo design, but since I was tweaking a design and not inventing it, I thought that was enough brainstorming. So here's how it turned out:


I like how it turned out. Plus now I feel like I've done something productive (I've done a lot of reading at work but not much else). It's always fun when I can use my art skills for good.

Quick note: there is a rose in the center of the compass because one of Portland's nicknames is "Rose City". Knowledge is power!

Materials used: Micron pens, Photoshop/Illustrator

Friday, July 27

Wonder Wolf!

I can only tenuously connect this post to the Olympics, but I've been thinking about the Olympics, so deal with it.
This little guy is the Wonder Wolf. As you may (or may not) know, I worked in an elementary school in Beaverton, OR for the past school year (near Nike headquarters - Olympics connection) and the school mascot was the Wonder Wolf. I actually dressed up in that costume a handful of times, unfortunately there is no photographic evidence of this...

Anyway, I made thank you cards for student volunteers and teachers at the end of the year, so I drew a cartoony little wolf. He's got an apple to signify education, and a little cape to do awesome deeds in.

I let some of the kids color in the cards before I handed them out - I'll have to see if I can find one to scan in and put up here.

There was no real connection to the Olympics here, although I think the Wonder Wolf would make a pretty great Olympic mascot. Better than that weird blue thing for the Atlanta Olympics in the 90s. What was that thing?

Friday, July 20

More Monkey Business...

To continue on the theme of my initial post, here is another card that also involves a monkey. Specifically, party monkey.



This was for my brother's 18th birthday. You can never be too old for monkey cards.

I think I used the same photo reference for this card and the party monkey on the last card. Months and months apart. Weird.

Materials used: Watercolor (very muted), some kind of pen, Artists' ink & little brushes

Thursday, July 19

Firsties.

So after having this blog set up for ages, I'm finally going to start posting on here regularly. Probably.

To kick things off, here are some drawings of monkeys. They were for a high school graduation card for my brother. I should have gotten a picture of what the card looks like, but I'm a terrible archivist of my own work, so you'll have to wait on that.


 The enthusiastic fellow above is on the front of the card...


 ...and party monkey is on the inside of the card. You don't mess around with party monkey. He parties hard.

Materials used: colored pencils, Micron brush pen (love that pen!!)

Whew. That wasn't too terrible. More will come soon, I promise (pinky swear).