Wednesday, 8 May 2013

London Book Fair

I had always planned to take my book to London Book Fair at the end of the project, however the books I had printed cost a bit too much to just give away for free so in the end I took two copies with me: one for the stall, one to take around with me to show with my portfolio.

I also took a selection of business cards, mini cards and postcards to give out to people who were interested in my work. 





I had ended up using some of the pages from my book full sized in my portfolio, and everyone I showed was interested in seeing the whole book afterwards which was a positive sign. I got very positive reactions to my work, particularly my book so I think having it printed in time to take with me was a really good idea.
In hindsight, I do wish I had taken more copies with me. Although I couldn't afford to have them on the stall for people to just take, it would have been nice to have a few extra copies to give to the bigger companies who were interested. Although by the end of Wednesday when I went back to the stall my book had gone, so somebody was obviously interested in my work!



I showed my book to a company called Ginger Books, and within a few days of the fair finishing I got an email asking me to send them a PDF of my portfolio as they are interested in my work, particularly my book. They are still quite a small company, and I am still waiting for any feedback, but it's great to get such a positive response so quickly.

I also managed to get an appointment for the portfolio surgery on the Wednesday afternoon with Strawberrie Donnelly from Little Tiger Press. She liked my book, and gave me some good feedback. She said she really liked the idea for my story, and said that the text was well written and it had potential. Her main piece of advice was that my character looked too old for the audience I am aiming my book at, so I would need to adapt her proportions and facial features to make her look younger. Overall she said she liked my work so once I have worked on the things she had advised and gained more confidence in my work she would like to hear from me again in around six months. 
This was a fantastic opportunity, and gave me some really valuable feedback to work on.

Going to London was a really useful experience. It gave me a much clearer idea of what publishers and companies are looking for in a book, and also gave me a chance to show my work to publishers face to face, an opportunity that I probably wouldn't have gotten if I hadn't gone to the Book Fair.

Printing

Now I have all my pages finished and in order I need to start printing my book.
I made my book into a PDF document using indesign, and then started looking at print companies.

I wanted to take some of my books to London Book Fair to show off my work, so cost was going to be an issue if I was going to give them away to people. I decided to have my books printed A5 - half the size I had originally intended - to save on cost, and make some full sized versions myself.

I had been looking at using Inky Little Fingers, however I found a company called Printed.com that offered faster printing at a lower price so in the end I chose to use them. 
When my books arrived I was really pleased, they were really nice quality and perfect to take to London Book Fair. I did, however, decide to round the corners of the pages using my corner cutter so that they would match my postcards that I was taking. It took a while to cut them, but it did give my books a special touch and matched my other promotional items. 





Final images

These are the final finished images for each page of my book in order:





















Tuesday, 7 May 2013

Cover and End Pages

When designing my page layouts I hadn't decided upon a cover design for my book, as I wanted to make some of the pages first to see how they would look before I committed myself to a cover design. I did, however, know that I wanted one image to wrap around and be the front and back cover, so I decided to use one of the scenes from my book.

Once I had designed the "I want to be a Leaf..." "...So I can drift in the wind" pages I really liked the scenery in the background and the colours of the trees. I decided to use this scene and adapt it for my cover by changing the character's position on the front and moving around the background elements. I used two trees that met in the middle of the page, meaning that the image would flow between the front cover and the back. I decided to name the book "What do you want to be today?" 




For my end pages I had always wanted to use a texture or pattern from the book, and I did try using the pattern from my character's clothes. However I found that this pattern did not really match the paint and collage theme of my book when I tried it. Next I thought about just having the leaves falling like they are in the book, only without any of the other scenery.




I liked this idea, as it was simple yet effective, but I felt that it was a bit too simple to gain a child's interest. Also, I didn't like that it was so similar to my front cover. The falling leaves only take up two pages of the book, so I didn't want both the cover and the end pages to use them as this gives the impression that they play a much bigger role in the book than they actually do, so I decided to think of something else.

I liked the flowers I had used on the "I want to be a Flower..." page, and thought that they hadn't had much focus in the book. I tried repeating a whole page of them, and found that they made a really nice pattern. I decided to use this as my end pages instead. 




Variations of Pages

Once I had finished a few of my pages, I started to question if they were too busy and complicated, so I decided to try and simplify them right down to see how that looked. 

I started with my "I want to be a Leaf..." page, using some of my original experiments as inspiration. 




I liked the simplified version as an image on it's own, but I did question whether it would appeal to children as much as the colourful version I had done originally. I asked some people to help me decide and the majority of people said they liked the simple version, but the colourful version has so much more depth and interest that it would work much better in the book. 
I decided to use the colourful version in the end, however I did make the simple version into some postcards, and it does work well as an image on it's own. 

I tried a similar experiment with the "I want to be a Flower..." page, and got similar feedback. Although the flower page was much simpler to begin with I was more experimenting with a much smaller colour palette to see if this looked better. I decided that the muted colour scheme of the second image wasn't bright or interesting enough to capture a child's interest, so again I decided to use my original image.






Starting my Final images...

By this stage in my project I already have my characters cut out, my font scanned in, washes of paint for my background, and my final text decided upon. All I need to start doing is putting them together.

My pages were all designed to be A3 (an A4 double page spread), so in an A3 photoshop document I started putting my background together Starting with the "floor" and the wall/sky to make a good base to start from.
I then add in my character as she is the main focus of the page.


Next I gradually built up the other main aspects of the image. For this page it is the flowers. The flowers are all in different layers in photoshop so I can arrange and resize them all to adapt the composition of the page.



I then add the text. This takes a while as I have to place each letter individually, but it does make a huge difference to the image. Having each letter cut out does look much more effective than typing it, as the collaged letters complement the rest of the image, and make the page look more unified.



I then added the last few details of the image, in this case the butterfly, and my page is finished. 
My all my images were made in this way, although obviously some took longer than others. For example the page with falling leaves took much longer to put together because I had to add each leaf individually, and gradually build up the tree in the same way I had made piles of leaves on the floor for my collage experiments

Font Experiments

Originally I had assumed the text in my book would be a standard computer font. Although for my page layouts I had simply written the text in, hand lettering has never been something I am good at. I didn't want my text to look amateurish on the page, and so I decided to use a computer font.

I started to experiment with arranging my text on a page, trying to incorporate it within the image. 






I liked the positioning of the text in these images, but the text didn't quite look like it was part of the image. I wanted to keep the text childlike because the story is told from the child's point of view, which is why I didn't keep the size of each letter exactly the same and made it slightly wonky on the page. 

I decided to try cutting out some letters to see if collaging the text would be more effective. To match the colours of my book I decided to use the same paper as another part of the book. I started out using the brown paper I have used for the floor, however this was rather thin and flimsy and it was a struggle to keep the paper from curling up or ripping when I tried to scan it. Instead, I used the grey paper I had been using for my character's shirt and socks. This paper is quite thick, which meant it was a bit more durable than the brown paper I had been using. 



Once I had scanned them I started to place them into the images and used them to replace the computer font. 



 I much prefer the collaged text than the computer font, as I feel that the cut out letters really compliment the image and look like they are meant to be there, whereas the computer letters looked a little out of place.
I will use the collaged font in my final pieces.