1. That wicked Ojha, look what he's done!
    The background to this image was done in traditional watercolour, with a few digital tweaks to pull it together. The original character sketch was done with a 2B pencil on 'real' archival paper. The final colour was then added to the character using the airbrush tool in Painter 9. The layers were then combined in Photoshop CS2, adding swish lines etc. Good thing too, with all of the editorial changes that are taking place on this assignment.
    You can't beat the digital media for flexibility. In fact I bring the sketches into the background first before the final renderings on the character so that I can see how they flow in the entire piece.
    The background here is the Quitab Minar, an historic site in New Delhi. Interesting that this piece was being painted while bombs were going off in the markets of Delhi...and the editor thought that the character was a bit too Moghul looking.
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  2. I remember the first time I saw Emily Carr's painting of an enormous pine tree in the National Gallery of Canada. I was so inpsired by the movement in that painting, seen from underneath with a few swirling movements of oil on paper that capture the essence of the growth of the tree as if your soul is being swept up through the branches, whirling and twirling to the crown. Ever since I have been fascinated by movement in art from Maurice Duschamps, Nude descending a staircase, in its attempt to capture movement in multiple frames on one canvas to children's book art which requires the capture of movement in images that also tell a story. Above is the horrible Ojha swooping down from the Quitab Minar in New Delhi to capture Pokiri Parrot and whisk him away to lands unseen.
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  3. I think that one's art is a growth inside one. I do not think one can explain growth. It is silent and subtle. One does not keep digging up a plant to see how it grows. (Emily Carr)

    Hanging out with Ojha, I feel like I am getting to know him...in all his evil bird-eating ways. In contrast to that, Rajkumari has become younger, more cherubic and all-round cute.
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  4. Well I have finally started to nail down this character and I'm seeing him in my dreams...the rotten SOB - killing all those birds. Ironic that at the same time I am doing a special issue for Biodiversity Journal on Conservation of the World's Birds.
    So, here is Ojha as he scoops up Pokiri the parrot. There will be several of these scenes. Due to the wonders of digital technology I can plunk him into the background that has already been completed. First I'll print him directly onto watercolour paper, paint him up, rescan the image, tweak him around in Photoshop, add him into the background, some more tweaks and then drop the whole image into InDesign CS2 so I can see how that page works with the rest of the book.
    More on this process later.
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  5. Well finally the sketch of Ojha has been approved....and isn't it interesting how close to home inspiration can be found. I used myself and my talon-like fingers, honed by years of clasping onto my pencil, to model for the bird-thieving Ojha. Click on the images for a closer view.
    A poem, The Bird-man of Rajasthan, also rose out of the ashes!

    BIRD-MAN OF RAJASTHAN

    The Bird-man of Rajasthan,
    A side-bag for his prey,
    Flies on velcro vulture-wings,
    For a thieving get away.

    With hungry sunken cheeks,
    And large gaping jaws,
    Gnarled boney fingers,
    With nails as long as claws.

    Swooping in a lightning flash,
    With a screeching reaching cry,
    He’ll catch you in his clasping claws,
    And squeeze you till you die!

    In flowing robes of stealth,
    A soaring silent sight,
    All gentle winged creatures,
    Scatter out of fright.

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  6. This response to "How bad is bad?" from Anastasia Suen when I posted on my CW-biz list serv:
    "I say, make him mean, so that we can really rejoice when he is
    defeated! [I'm assuming the good guys win in this one!]
    :-) Anastasia "

    Yes, the good girl wins in the end and the evil Ojha is carried away by the eagles...serves him right!

    And another response:
    "I agree with Anastasia. Avoid the mischievous look if possible. Completely
    evil is good. There is a good book out about how children learn good vs
    evil by books - "Dragons on the Landscape" Michael Brown.

    I remember a children's book - Diamond in the Window - Jane Langton - that
    had a very scary page with an evil jack-in-the-box picture. I could not
    turn the page and look at that creature - but I loved the anticipation and I
    would read and re-read the story. I knew it was evil. That made the
    children's victory all the more meaningful in the storyline."
    Thanks Mary! ...and I'm going to check out that book.
    The above images of some of natures's other nasties were done a few years back for an E-book, "The Hobyhas", published by a Swiss publisher.
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  7. OK my editor agreed that my colour illustrations of Ojha looked like a "typical" tantric magician but did not look EVIL enough. The revisions called for larger wings, longer claws, perhaps a bag of dead birds slung from the shoulder that explains how Ojha gets his flying power from winged prey. I have shown my first sketch with editoral notes gleaned from my conversation with the editor. Problem is, Ojha is starting to look more like me all the time...I'm not going to read too much into this and you had better not either.
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  8. So then there were the different views of the same character. Since I work digitally to a great extent, I create my characters separately, usually in watercolour (in this case with some coloured pencil for highlights) and then add the character to the background which may be created in the same medium or not. Here are more images of the same character. I'll show later how these are then placed into the backgrounds which will make up the final page image. The placement of text will be addressed at a later date.
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About Me
About Me
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Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
I am a Canadian author/illustrator of fiction and non-fiction for both trade and educational publishers in Canada, the US, and abroad. I have written 4 trade books for Orca books, illustrated and written over 2 dozen picture books and am coauthor/illustrator of an environmental middle-grade fiction series for Harper Collins Children's Books in India. Email: steve@stephenaitken.com
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PUBLISHED BOOKS
PUBLISHED BOOKS
PUBLISHED BOOKS
Sonu & the Metal Elephant
What a Tree Has Seen
What a Tree Has Seen
What a Tree Has Seen
Santillana USA
The Ice Berries
The Ice Berries
The Ice Berries
Puffin Book of Bedtime Stories
The Mountain that Loved a Bird
The Mountain that Loved a Bird
The Mountain that Loved a Bird
Tulika Books
The Mountain that Loved a Bird (Chinese Edition)
The Mountain that Loved a Bird (Chinese Edition)
The Mountain that Loved a Bird (Chinese Edition)
Hunan Juvenile and Children's Publishers
Rat Race
Rat Race
Rat Race
Zaner Bloser
The Pond
The Pond
The Pond
SRA McGraw Hill
The Everything Tarot Book
The Everything Tarot Book
The Everything Tarot Book
Adam's Media
Norse Wisdom Cards
Norse Wisdom Cards
Let's Learn Hindi
Let's Learn Hindi
Let's Learn Hindi
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