I asked my friend, artist and writer Ian Sands if I could do some black and white pieces based on his story "The Top Ten Essential Items For Surviving Fourth Grade". It went something like this - me - "Ian I'm doing some stuff based on one of your stories." Ian - "Okay".
He is an incredible writer and this story is, well, incredible. I needed this - it's the most fun drawing I've had in a long, long time.
I have been working with the National Fire Protection Association lately. Sparky rocks! Tough yet tender, smart and silly. And they like me pretty well, too. They blogged about me here.
I just completed several long months of heavy deadlines and had some time on my hands to do what I wanted. This isn't always very good for my family since I tend to be pretty determined and focused which means I am essentially gone. But my down-time and the beginning of our new OM season coincided. I have been an Odyssey of the Mind coach for several years and am always so excited to start up with a new team of kids and a new challenge every year (links to previous posts here and here). Part of my job as coach is to get them to work together to build innovative ideas. Being me, I thought some sort of visual presentation would be best. Good gracious I couldn't have just stood up in front of them and told them! I started with the idea that a PowerPoint presentation might be kind of cool. I drew out a few little doodles. Ten hours, three computers and five programs later I had a pretty rockin' little one-minute slide show presentation - with sound, okay. So it was overkill. The kids watched it, liked it, maybe got the message. I had a truly great odyssey of my own learning how to make PowerPoint squeak and laughed myself silly when I got some of the sound in. But, being me, I couldn't leave it at that. I spent another several frustrating/engaging/exciting hours converting it to Windows Movie Maker and then uploading it to YouTube. The animation is really rough, okay. The soundtrack I ended up using is so canned and cliche. If I had planned on making an animated short from the start I wouldn't have ever used PowerPoint in the first place (what a clunky mess that is) but I never planned on making an animation from the start. I was just going to scold some kids to listen to each other - right?