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  • The Storybook Jungle

    The Storybook Jungle

    To invading germs, you are a jungle full of hungry tigers. To your gut bacteria, you are a warm orchard of perpetual bounty. To your eyelash mites, you are a walking fortress and a mountaintop pasture. How many generations have you hosted? What do they name the wilderness of you? “Host” by @cryptonature, in his

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    October 1, 2020
  • Anatole by Eve Titus & Paul Galdone (1956)

    Anatole by Eve Titus & Paul Galdone (1956)

    Anatole the mouse starred in a series of children’s stories by Eve Titus, illustrated by Paul Galdone in blue, red and white. The ten books were published 1956-1979. Today I’m taking a look at the picture book that opened the series. Anatole was named a Caldecott honour book.

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    September 30, 2020
  • Words to Describe Landscapes, Landforms, Water and Construction

    Words to Describe Landscapes, Landforms, Water and Construction

    (Includes bodies of water.) You may be after a full glossary of landforms, in which case the Wikipedia article is comprehensive: Full list of landforms at Wikipedia. This post skews literary.

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    September 30, 2020
  • Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat and Byron Barton Analysis

    Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat and Byron Barton Analysis

    Gila Monsters Meet You at the Airport (1980) is an American picture book written by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat and illustrated by Byron Barton.

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    September 29, 2020
  • Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain by Aardema and Vidal Analysis

    Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain by Aardema and Vidal Analysis

    Bringing the Rain to Kapiti Plain (1981) is a cumulative picture book written by Verna Aardema and illustrated by and Beatriz Vidal. The rhyming scheme borrows from the well-known childhood rhyme, “This is the house that Jack built“. Vidal’s illustrations have a folktale vibe about them, partly due to those nice white outlines reminiscent of

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    September 27, 2020
  • Sequential Narrative Art In Picture Books

    Sequential Narrative describes art which tells a story in a series of images making use of frames. Let’s say there are 7 main categories of Narrative art. Narrative art is art which tells a story. Monoscenic — represents a single scene with no repetition of characters and only one action taking place Sequential — very much like a continuous narrative

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    September 26, 2020
  • Tight Times by Shook Hazen and Schart Hyman Analysis

    Tight Times by Shook Hazen and Schart Hyman Analysis

    Tight Times (1979) is an American picture book written by Barbara Shook Hazen and illustrated in graphite pencil by Trina Schart Hyman. Tight Times also happens to be the first ever picture book read by LeVar Burton on America’s Reading Rainbow series back in 1983. I can see why they chose it. This short picture

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    September 25, 2020
  • Sidewalk Flowers by Lawson and Smith

    Sidewalk Flowers by Lawson and Smith

    Sidewalk Flowers is a wordless Canadian picture book by poet JonArno Lawson and illustrated by Sydney Smith.

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    September 24, 2020
  • Ferdinand The Bull Picture Book by Leaf and Lawson Analysis

    Ferdinand The Bull Picture Book by Leaf and Lawson Analysis

    remarkable to a contemporary audience, but this picture book is significant for Lawson’s early use of cinematic perspectives. Picture books were influenced by motion pictures and photography in a wide variety of ways. Ferdinand the Bull is a standout example of a picture book which would have looked quite different had the audiences not been…

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    September 23, 2020
  • Ty’s One-Man Band by Pitts Walter and Tomes Analysis

    Ty’s One-Man Band by Pitts Walter and Tomes Analysis

    Ty’s One-Man Band (1980) is a picture book written by Mildred Pitts Walter and illustrated by Margot Tomes. This is a good mentor text if you’re writing a picture book with plenty of rhythmic onomatopoeia. If reading to modern kids, they might find this slow, quiet picture book a bit more exciting if encouraged to

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    September 21, 2020
  • Realistic Paint Studio Digital Art Software Review

    Digital art software keeps getting better and better, which is no surprise, since computer processing power also keeps getting better and better. Drip engines, paint blending and large canvas sizes simply weren’t possible until the average user upgraded. In the past I have played around with a lesser-known art software called PaintStorm Studio. This morning

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    September 20, 2020
  • Wolf in the Snow by Matthew Cordell Analysis

    Wolf in the Snow by Matthew Cordell Analysis

    Wolf in the Snow (2017) is an almost wordless picture book written and illustrated by Matthew Cordell, with links to the Little Red Riding Hood fairy tale. All picturebooks are puzzles. The details of pictures invite attention to their implications. The unmoving pictures require viewers to solve the puzzle of what actions and motions they

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    September 20, 2020
  • Extra Yarn by Barnett and Klassen Analysis

    Extra Yarn by Barnett and Klassen Analysis

    Extra Yarn (2012) is a picture book written by Mac Barnett and illustrated by Jon Klassen. Although this is a contemporary story, it utilises fairytale tropes, in a mostly fairytale setting.

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    September 18, 2020
  • Flat Black in Picture Books and Art

    Flat Black in Picture Books and Art

    If you’ve ever heard advice to avoid black out of the tube when painting, this article is a good explainer for what that actually means in practice.

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    September 16, 2020
  • Arthur’s Eyes by Marc Brown Analysis

    Arthur’s Eyes by Marc Brown Analysis

    Arthur’s Eyes (1979) by Marc Brown is an early story of the popular Arthur series, about an ambiguously animal creature (only after looking it up do I understand he’s a brown aardvark) who lives with his nuclear family in an American suburb. This is a well-crafted story and really speaks to its young audience. The

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    September 15, 2020
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