It's a lonely life...that of the necromancer, er freelancer

A blog by a designer and illustrator, for designers and illustrators which may contain musings on art, movies and random weirdness.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

ArtSpeak: Restore Materials




































Above are promo materials (poster, flyer and postcard) I designed for  ArtSpeak: Restore, an Artshow and Concert to Fight Human Trafficking being held Friday, March 22 to Sunday, March 24, 2013 at the Old Town Hall, 32 Derby Street, Salem, MA. There will also be an opening silent auction and concert: March 22, 7-9pm
The show is being held to benefit iSanctuary, www.isanctuary.org and is hosted by Highrock North Shore, www.highrocknorthshore.org.
We are surrounded by beauty. That beauty, however, is often neglected and abused, hiding it from our senses, our hearts, and our minds.  Artspeak: Restore is an art show that celebrates the unearthing of forgotten and neglected beauty.  All proceeds from art sold will benefit iSanctuary, a non-profit organization that helps restore the lives of girls and women who have been victimized by human trafficking.

For more information or to get involved, email artspeak@highrocknorthshore.org

Friday, February 8, 2013

Really Great Print Ad

I don't usually post other people's work on my blog, but this print ad was so extraordinary, I felt compelled to. I saw the ad, for Legal Seafoods, in the February Issue of the Improper Bostonian.
It caught my eye immediately. This is one of those rare pieces of work that you look at and say " I wish I had done that", the kind of work I aspire to as a designer. It's not just the brilliant, simple photography and the almost complete lack of copy. It's the fact that the concept and execution of the ad so perfectly convey what Legal Seafoods is all about (fresh seafood) that no copy is even necessary. You know Legal Seafood's tagline is, "If it isn't fresh, it isn't Legal." How much more succinctly and simply could you convey that, than with this ad. And how rarely does something like this happen?
The ad was created by DeVito/Verdi, an award winning, medium-sized, full service advertising agency based in New York founded in 1991 by partners Sal DeVito and Ellis Verdi. Their Agency Philosophy, according to Wikipedia "is based on a view that their job is to capture a truth either about the product or the consumer that will resonate, and hits consumer nerves with image that resonate as valuable, truthful and unforgettable." They have certainly done that with this ad.

Friday, January 25, 2013

Sharp Suits: A Creative Catharsis



It has been a while since I have re-posted anything from another blog, but this was just too good to pass up. A friend of mine posted the link to this site on Facebook. It was addressed to all the designers that he knew, it says:
"Ad creatives, designers, animators, directors, illustrators and more took time out to dress up their favourite worst feedback from clients, transforming quotes that would normally give you a twitch, into a diverse collection of posters."
If you have ever worked with a client you have probably heard at least one or two of these. Enjoy!
The link is HERE: http://sharpsuits.net/Home

Rockport Music Postcards

A series of postcards designed for the Rockport Music Association through the marketing firm New Arts Collaborative. These postcards promote different programs in the upcoming 2013 season, covering Flamenco, Vocal and Classical performances at the Shalin Liu Center in Rockport, MA. The goal was to have each postcard have a distinctive look, while staying within the overall branding. The final postcards were printed at Cricket Press in Manchester, MA.











Friday, January 4, 2013

STC Shining City Poster























The latest poster for the Salem Theatre Company production of Shining City. After the initial version of the poster was produced, there was a last-minute cast change, so I produced a revised version.










Tuesday, December 18, 2012

The Next Big Thing

I was recently invited to
 participate in the Next Big Thing blog series. I was invited by my friend and business partner Rae Francoeur who was in turn invited by June Shaw a blogger on http://murderousmusings.blogspot.com/ . I was asked to answer 

ten interview questions for the Next Big Thing about the book my wife and I are currently working on.



1. What is your working title of your book?

 Pyewackett of Salem.

2. Where did the idea come from for the book?

 The idea came from a visit to the Friendship here in Salem, MA. The friendship is a replica of a 18th-century Indiaman, a cargo ship that traveled to the far east. We were asking about the various imported spices and how they kept ever-present rats from spoiling the cargo. Although the sailors themselves sometimes would hunt rats with clubs to keep them in check, there was also a long tradition of having a ship's cat. These cats lived on board and not helped to preserve the cargo by hunting rats, but their presence also improved the morale of the crew.
British warships had ship's cats until 1977.

3. What genre does your book fall under? Children's Literature.



4. Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition? 
Well the main character is a cat, so I have no idea. For the role of Thomas the cabin boy, probably someone like young British actor Thomas Sangster. It would be nice to have known character actors play the captain and the first officer.



5.What is the one-sentence synopsis of your book?


A ship's cat eye-view of a 19th-century sailing adventure as Pyewacket, a large, intelligent cat, and his new friend, Thomas the cabin-boy take their first sea voyage to Sumatra on the cargo vessel Friendship.

6.Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency?


We are not represented by an agency, and are resistant to taking the self-publishing route. We submitted it to one local publisher who passed on it. It is now at a second publisher and we are waiting to see if they bite.

7. How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript?


Well my wife wrote the initial draft in a couple of days, but we've been revising and refining it for about two years.


8.What other books would you compare this story to within your genre?


Probably Pirate Diary: The Journal of Jake Carpenter by Richard Platt (author) and illustrator Chris Riddell.

9.Who or what inspired you to write this book?


My wife and I own a particularly-large grey cat with a lot of personality, and it was not a great leap to imagine him as a ship's cat.M y wife came up with the idea of Pyewackett's first voyage coinciding with that of a young cabin boy named Thomas on the Friendship's trip to Sumatra in 1802.

10.What else about your book might pique the reader's interest?
The book has a local-history connection. Although the voyages to the far east are well documented, the cat's-eye view of the trip will hopefully as a new angle.





Friday, November 16, 2012

STC RECKLESS POSTER























A poster for the STC production of "Reckless".
The original artwork was lost, so I had to
reconstruct the artwork from 6 different pieces of art.