The First Day of the Rest of My Illustrator Life and Cursing Photoshop

Today was the first day I’ve spent as a full-time illustrator. When I sat down at my desk this morning, I didn’t log in to my (former) job to check for problems. Instead I started Photoshop to continue the work of rebuilding my cover image. When I loaded the 280MB file and moved the cursor, the pretty OS X beach ball began to spin — and it’s been spinning all day. This no joke. That sucker drained several hours out of my day as I googled every possible combination of search terms to find a solution. Nothing worked.

Tonight I copied the file to a thumb drive and tried to edit the file on my wife’s small iMac which is running CC 2019…and there was no beach ball. It was zippy and painless, with not one beach ball. So, the problem is not with my computer — it’s with Adobe CC 2020. Tomorrow I’m going to revert back to CC 2019 to see if that works for me, too.

Despite the headwind, I’ve made some progress. Here’s what the cover looks like now. I still haven’t decided the font I’ll use for the title or the interior text. Here’s my thinking: When I see a comic book font, I think comic book, not children’s book. Yes, I said seriously. Even though my book is a comic-style children’s picture book, I don’t want to use childish fonts. As a former child who loved to read, I know that it’s important that the text have legible characters, not funny characters. Plain text is for kids. Style and cuteness in text is something adults appreciate, but as a child at heart, I want a readable font that will give all six of the books in this series a look that’s friendly to young readers.

cover-image-flattened_blog.jpg children's book, cover image, Photoshop problems, OS X problems

The Flying Rats Who Wear Argyle Socks

Today I spent another hour deleting the white background that I accidentally merged into the line art layer. Relentlessly erasing around the black line art without removing them is delicate, tedious work. I kept dozing off and finally decided to take a nap.

The image below is a small selection (about 5% of the full-sized image). It’s all I could complete today without going nuts with boredom. The orange background is on the layer below the line art — it will not be included in the completed image.

Refining Another Cover Image: Little Jenny Jay and the Mice in Suits

Jenny Jay doesn’t get a lot of screen time in my children’s picture book, but I’m going to spend some time on her image in the cover page to add a little more personality. I know that she’s a clever girl and deserves her own book, or two. While I’m working on her image, I’m also working on her friends, the two hitchhiking mice. I’m going to give them both argyle socks.

I’ve cut this section I’m working on. I cut it out of the 8000x4000 px master image. I’ll paste it back in when I’m finished with it.

Refining the Cover Image Characters

With a big cover image of 8000x4000 pixels, I enough resolution to add some detail to my otherwise cartoonish characters. I figure that the cover image will be printed at 300 DPI or higher, making even mintue details like eyelashes crisp and visible. I can imagine a reader poring lovingly over the image and noticing Momma Jay’s eyelashes, or noticing that the two brown mice are wearing argyle socks. In the picture below I’ve extracted the Momma Jay charter from the cover picture so that I can work on the image without distractions. The trick will be to maintain her proportions so that she’ll look right when I paste the her back into the main image.