All of these questions, and more, run through our minds when
we are working on a new picture book, but the last two are especially important
early on. Many people might not realize that characters can go through many
phases before they become what ultimately ends up in the book. And that is exactly what happened with one of our new picture books, Monster Needs a
Costume by Paul Czajak, which will be the first in a new series called Monster + Me and is being published this fall by Scarletta Kids. It's an adorable rhyming story about a monster who
keeps changing his mind about what to dress up as for Halloween. Ultimately he learns that a little creativity and boldness makes for the best costume of the night. Obviously, that fun and creativity needed to come across in the illustrations as well, and over the last month, we have been
working with our wonderful illustrator, Wendy Grieb, to come up with the
perfect look for Monster and the little boy who takes care of him.
We can't talk enough about how great of an illustrator Wendy is. Right away she had a
ton of ideas for Monster, and sent us countless sketches. Here are a few of them:
We always knew from the text that Monster is big. He
has an innocence about him, but he's definitely huge and has a significant
presence in the room. So the one highlighted above seemed closest to what we
were after: burly and big, but friendly. Working off of that description, we
got to these (aren't they cute?):
We chose the last one, and played around with the horns and tails a bit before settling on a final look for Monster.
And after that, it was on to the boy.
Wendy gave us a number of options (shown below), all with different features and ages, and
for awhile we didn't know which to pick. After doing a bit of research we
narrowed it down to the two highlighted here:
But neither was quite what we wanted. The shorter boy on the left looked
a little too young for what we wanted, and the other boy wasn't quite right
either and looked a little too old. But combined, they turned out to be just
what we wanted. Take a look:
Now it was on to colors. And if you thought there was a lot to consider before, well, you ain't seen nothin' yet. We started with few different options for the boy:
The khaki pants were great on the middle boy, but the shirt
and hair color were a better option from the first boy. So again, it was time
for a mix-and-match scenario. Just to be sure, we looked at the boy in both
jeans and khakis before making the decision:
Then the Monster was up. Take a look at some of the initial
color ideas:
Purple was too dark, so that was thrown out. But
green and blue needed to go through a couple more rounds of tweaking:
Blue seemed like the better choice, so it was time for more options with different blues:
After looking at this last set, we loved number 3, but perhaps he would look better with the
horn and claw color of number 1. So we took a chance, and voila! We finally had our perfect monster and boy for
the new series. Now on to the actual spreads...
All images here are copyright (c) Wendy Grieb
Thanks for sharing this amazing process. Can't wait to see what I know will be a truly magical picture book!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful!
ReplyDeleteso interesting - and perfect!
ReplyDelete