Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Papers at the ends

I am not sure who started the practice of maps on endpapers, although it was very clever and thoughtful of them. Some of the most charming ones I've found are in children's books. Having just looked at the endpapers in Winnie-The-Pooh, I was reminded of a reproduction I drew for a dear friend of mine. The drawing is my hand rendered copy of the endpapers that were found on the original Betsy-Tacy children's book series.

Here is my drawing as I worked on it at my desk. The map was about half done.

This is a scan of the map in it's entirety. It was done on handmade rag paper with my favorite mechanical pencil.

One day when I put out my own books I will be sure to have pretty endpapers with informative maps.

If you are interested in learning more about the Betsy-Tacy book series you can visit the Betsy-Tacy Society at www.betsy-tacysociety.org

You can also visit a previous post of mine to read a brief history of the Betsy-Tacy series and also read about my starting of a poster for the giftshop.   My Betsy-Tacy poster post link.

Finding Winnie

The other day I had the good fortune to find a vintage Winnie The-Pooh book in my library's used section. It is a charming book and this particular copy has some very loved pages that I adore. The binding is loose, the fabric edges are fraying and there are some worn patches of color. It still has it's library card envelope in back and I imagine all the children who read about Pooh's heffalump dreams or sitting with ten pots of honey as it rained and rained. As an adult the stories are as memorable as when I first read them and I see the reason for having favorites and classics.


My copy is a reprint from 1961
A small sketch I made, because Pooh is of course always thinking about honey.
The left side of the endpapers. I love the tradition of maps in endpapers.
The right side. It is so sweet to think that if I were to visit the 100 aker wood I would know exactly where to go. By the way as a "bad" speller, all of these carefully written words on the map seem to be very correct in  my mind.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Fall Crawl 2011 pictures!

I am finally getting to show you pictures of how our place was set up during the Saint Paul Art Crawl. Enjoy!
This is the main hallway sort of area after you have walked past our laundry closet and such. It's our first big wall to put art on.  The small table in the corner has my Ferlin book on it, all ready to be picked up and read. Above it are Joe's comic pages and my fairy inks from the Marscon 2010 promo.
This is showing more of the whole wall. Joe's new painting is featured between to his comic pages and the sculls he designed for a friends tattoo.
This is half of our living space transformed into an art gallery. On the round table we featured our magnet packs as well as drawings and business cards. Paintings, prints and books are displayed on the tables just beyond that. Behind our makeshift wall is our working studio space.
This is the other half of our "main gallery." More paintings, prints, and original work can be found on the tables, grids and walls. 
We were lucky enough to find a great display rack to hold all of our many prints. We sell epson, mat finish and lustre metallic prints of a variety of our work.
This is my favorite little corner where we have a print station set up as well as offering paypal. In the background the wall with lots of different posters and art all over it is our studio. It's a very cosy place to work.
So this is what our apartment looked like. I hope you enjoyed seeing our set up!

If you haven't seen my husbands work before, or even if you have, go visit the artwork of Joe Rheault at www.dirtyinks.com