Showing posts with label pelican publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pelican publishing. Show all posts
Thursday, May 24, 2012
"Why the Possum has a Large Grin" Book Trailer at Last!!
I am so delighted to finally work with an author/musician. It made the trailer so fun! Yes, it is clear I watched way to many Warner Brothers cartoons as a kid...
I love this book; I hope people who read it enjoy it as much as I enjoyed illustrating it! (Out in Fall, 2012)
Monday, April 23, 2012
Why the Possum has a Large Grin
Here is a sneak peek of the book I illustrated and written by Johnette Downing. It is about a naive deer and not so nice possum and hilarity ensues.
Out in the fall!
Here is an interior sketch peek:
Out in the fall!
Here is an interior sketch peek:
Thursday, December 1, 2011
Review: Annie Jump Cannon in the School Library Journal
The review for Annie Jump Cannon Astronomer just came out from School Library Journal!
From the review:"This inspiring picture-book biography of a trailblazer in the field presents insight into the challenges of women interested in science during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. ... The realistic illustrations capture the time period and complement the text. They’re scientifically accurate, including a physics equation on the professor’s chalkboard. Some of the pictures have helpful labels to inform readers that the building is Harvard Observatory, the man is Edward Pickering, or to make a scientific explanation understandable."
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/slj/printissue/currentissue/892676-427/preschool_to_grade_4.html.csp#nonfiction
The reviewer even noticed the equation on the blackboard! It was by a famous French female mathematician.
Here is more about the art in a previous blog post http://christinawald.blogspot.com/2011/10/book-trailer-annie-jump-cannon.html
Also, cool news: Carole heard from some relatives of Annie's who enjoyed our book!
From the review:"This inspiring picture-book biography of a trailblazer in the field presents insight into the challenges of women interested in science during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. ... The realistic illustrations capture the time period and complement the text. They’re scientifically accurate, including a physics equation on the professor’s chalkboard. Some of the pictures have helpful labels to inform readers that the building is Harvard Observatory, the man is Edward Pickering, or to make a scientific explanation understandable."
http://www.schoollibraryjournal.com/slj/printissue/currentissue/892676-427/preschool_to_grade_4.html.csp#nonfiction
The reviewer even noticed the equation on the blackboard! It was by a famous French female mathematician.
Here is more about the art in a previous blog post http://christinawald.blogspot.com/2011/10/book-trailer-annie-jump-cannon.html
Also, cool news: Carole heard from some relatives of Annie's who enjoyed our book!
Thursday, October 6, 2011
Book Trailer: Annie Jump Cannon, Astronomer
The book trailer is now up on You Tube!
I am very excited about this book. Both the author Carole Gerber and I did a lot of research.
When I was first contacted by the publisher about the book, I was embarrassed that I had never heard of Annie Jump Cannon. As a kid, my favorite show was Cosmos and I wanted to be an astronomer when I grew up. I not only read a lot of Carl Sagan, but was a huge fane of science fiction as well. How had I never heard of her?
Somehow I ended up in illustration and industrial design, but maybe if I had known about her, I would have still pursued a career in science.
The era of science that she contributed to was an amazing time and it seems like she is lost in the shuffle of more popular scientists like Lowell, Hubble, Einstein, Tesla etc.
When you look at her accomplishments, it is amazing to think that women did not even have the right to vote for most of her life.
Illustrating the book was a challenge since varied pictures are not often paired with her information. It was like a scavenger hunt; figuring out what lab equipment to illustrate and how the classrooms would look or what they would wear, what her childhood house looked like... In addition, I did not want to simply replicate the few images of her that are available. I wanted to make them new and my own take of the scenes.
For Example, there is a famous scene showing Annie and her class with a bunch a lab equipment (http://www.wellesley.edu/Astronomy/Annie/Images/lab.gif) I had a really hard time figuring out what they were doing in the picture to make a dramatic scene from it. I asked several people who had actually taken (and taught) college physics to pinpoint what it was a picture of.
Finally, my cousin's husband who teaches engineering at Cooper Union in NYC put me in touch with a professor who said that his assessment was that they were not performing any experiment, it was a posed picture where the photographer just piled a bunch of equipment around them. So, we decided to go with the picture above where she is doing a spectroscope experiment.
The building at Wellesley was particularly hard to find since it burned down many years ago.

Fortunately, I got in contact with a person at Harvard who had made a documentary about Annie. He was able to give me a lot of information-including her eye and hair color. This may seem odd, but the only color images of her were when she was elderly and grey.
Anyway, the book is now out, and I hope people like the effort we put into it. It was a joy painting the life of Annie Jump Cannon!
By the way, a note on the trailer: Several sources said that Annie loved to play the piano. It seemed like Bach would be a perfect fit for a scientist. When I was young, I tried to learn this two part invention #13 myself, to varying degrees of success, mostly unsuccessfully.
![]() |
Back Cover |
![]() |
Sketch from the layout... |
Wednesday, April 13, 2011
Annie Jump Cannon Cover
Today is 70th Anniversary of Annie Jump Cannon's death on April 13th, 1941... Here is the cover of the book Carole and I did coming out in fall!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)