• Work
  • Blog
  • School Visits
  • Store
  • About
  • Contact
Menu

Icebird Studio

Marlo Garnsworthy
  • Work
  • Blog
  • School Visits
  • Store
  • About
  • Contact
IMG_3719.jpg

Illustrating a Science Figure: Process

July 1, 2020

I have a (dream) job this week, and that is to make a map/figure of Antarctica for a polar scientist. I’m using Adobe Illustrator (and Photoshop).

Pretty excited about my work today. I get to make a map/figure of Antarctica for a polar scientist. Dream job!

(That’s the amazing and beautiful REMA map I’m using as a template, btw.) pic.twitter.com/GXHLThTDkb

— Marlo Garnsworthy🌊❄️ (@MarloWordyBird) July 1, 2020

Check out the REMA (Reference Elevation Model of Antarctica) map. It’s super cool.

Coming along... pic.twitter.com/TSY5Fg99xn

— Marlo Garnsworthy🌊❄️ (@MarloWordyBird) July 1, 2020

I’ve added some gradation in the land (more to come) and some labels. Still need to add lats/longs.

But that’s as far as I can take you on this process journey, alas! Time to move on to the map’s purpose—the confidential-until-published stuff! pic.twitter.com/rTpjeoO5Yq

— Marlo Garnsworthy🌊❄️ (@MarloWordyBird) July 1, 2020

Doing this work makes me feel happy and fulfilled.

In Illustration, Science Tags Illustration, SciArt, science illustration, science communication, illustrator
Comment

Submission for the Tomie dePaola Award

December 2, 2015

Last night was the deadline for submissions for the 2016 Tomie dePaola Award.

The challenge was to create an 8" X 8" image (with no space for text) based on a prompt from Phillip Pullman's "Little Red Riding Hood" from Fairy Tales from the Brothers Grimm (Viking, 2012). There were three basic scenes to chose from, but I definitely wanted to choose the part with the wolf. 

When Little Red Riding Hood had only been walking a few minutes, a wolf came up to her. She didn’t know what a wicked animal he was, so she wasn’t afraid of him.

Tomie dePaola also stipulated: 

One of the biggest and most important challenges the Children’s Book Illustrator faces, over and over again, is the UNIQUE VISUALIZATION of the MAIN CHARACTER.
So often, I have seen illustrators resort to generic depictions of the star of the story–too “designed,” too ordinary, too much like characters already seen in media, especially on TV and video games.
Your task is to make me “FALL IN LOVE” with your illustration and especially with Red Riding Hood.  I want to “meet her” for the first time.

And for your interest, here is my original drawing before painting.

In Illustration Tags illustration, drawing, kidlitart, kidlit art, illustrator, art, digital art
Comment

Latest Posts

  • Antarctic
  • Antarctica
  • art
  • bad seeds
  • children's books
  • craft
  • drawing
  • grammar
  • iceberg
  • illustration
  • kidlit
  • kidlit art
  • kidlitart
  • permission.
  • perseverance
  • process
  • query letters
  • rejection
  • revision
  • sciart
  • scicomm
  • science
  • science communication
  • science illustration
  • submissions
  • writer's block
  • writer's life
  • writing
  • writing tips
  • writing tools

Powered by Squarespace