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John Manders Illustration
Illustrator and Author
Caricatures- Weddings / Proms
Comic Strips
Author of Children's Books - for sale
School Assembly Visits
Drawing Demonstrations
412-400-8231
Caricatures- Weddings / Proms
Comic Strips
Author of Children's Books - for sale
School Assembly Visits
Drawing Demonstrations
412-400-8231

Where’s My Mummy? jacket sketches
book promotion, illustration process.
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Only 2 weeks til Hallowe’en! How about we take a look at the thumbnail and tight sketches for the Where’s My Mummy? jacket art?
The first five are thumbnail—very rough and small—sketches. The last 2 are refined—what I call tight sketches. Caroline Lawrence, the art director, liked the version with Baby Mummy standing.
Two animators I know
illustration careerBack in the days when I was a graphic design instructor at Pittsburgh Technical Institute, I had a student who was dying to be a Disney animator—Pete Mekis. Pete lived and breathed Walt Disney. PTI was designed to turn out graduates ready for entry positions in graphic design, not necessarily for animation careers. Pete was dead-set on animation, though, so I told him he’d need 2 portfolios when he graduated: one for graphic design and one for animation.
One way I was able to help Pete was through a lucky circumstance. I had a friend from art school days, Will Finn. Will and I had attended Art Institute of Pittsburgh ‘way back when and like Pete, Will was into animation. After graduation Will headed out west where the animation studios are. Will always was a fantastic drawer and he got a job with Disney. If you saw Aladdin, you’ve seen Will’s work on the parrot Iago.
Anyway, after I got in touch with Will, he generously took Pete under his wing, doling out plenty of constructive criticism and advice. Will gave Pete a tour of Disney Studios when he flew out there. The crit & advice were given through typewritten letters. Each one contained enough material for a drawing teacher to work up several lesson plans (which you can bet I did!). Here’s a sample:
And Pete wound up animating Dora the Explorer, among other projects. Life doesn’t always go exactly as planned, but if we’re lucky we find ourselves doing what we love.
So I’m at this restaurant…
illustration career…and the guy sitting the next table over finishes his dinner. When the waiter brings him a check, the guy says “I’m afraid I won’t be able to pay for this until you give me the recipe for everything I ate.”
The waiter says, “I’m sorry, sir, but we can’t give out recipes. A recipe belongs to the chef. If I gave you the recipe, you could start your own restaurant and I’d be out of a job.”
And the guy replies, “Well, I won’t pay you for this dinner then.”
Yes, okay, this story didn’t really happen—at least not in a restaurant. The true story: an illustrator buddy of mine finished up a project recently, submitted his bill, and the client told him they require that he sign a release form (giving them sole usage and exclusive rights, etc.)…before he can get paid!
According to copyright law, you own all rights to your images until they’re transferred to another party. In my opinion it’s unethical for a business to hold your payment hostage until you surrender sole ownership of your images after the job’s finished. Usage should be agreed upon before the job starts.
Here’s the good news: a brand-spankin’ new edition of the Graphic Artists’ Guild‘s Handbook of Pricing & Ethical Guidelines (PEGs, as we professional artist-types call it) just hit the newsstands! It is chock-full of information about how to negotiate usage of your art, what other artists are charging—it even has legal forms in the back, like sample contracts. You get all this for the footling price of $40.00. It’s money you’ll wish you’d spent years ago.