Since shifting my blog platform to the in-built system on my Wix-run site, I've left this Blogger blog largely untouched, however I notice the imported images from here lost some quality in the transfer, and all the image captions were lost, so I'd like to keep this old ship afloat!

Here's some nautical themed images from the archive!

From A Canoe in the Mist (written by Elsie Locke, Jonathan Cape, 1987)

 

From The Mystery in the Bottle picture book (written by Val Willis, Scholastic UK/Farrar, Straus & Giroux 1991)

From Peer Gynt picture book (abridged from the story by Ibsen, words by Yo Kawasaki, Hyoronsha, 1991)

From Bella Baxter and the Lighthouse Mystery (written by Jane B. Mason / Sarah Hines Stephens, Aladdin paperbacks, Simon & Schuster, 2006)

From The Little Mermaid  (Hans Christian Andersen, Hyoronsha, 2006)


From The Boat in the Tree picture book (written by Tim Wynn-Jones, Front Street 2007)

From Charlie Bone -  The Castle of Mirrors (海にきらめく鏡の城) (written by Jenny Nimmo, Japanese edition published by Tokuma Shoten 2007) 

From Daldy to the Rescue (Douglas Walker 2021)

From Deodar's Voice (Douglas Walker 2021)

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Since shifting my blog platform to the in-built system on my Wix-run site, I've left this Blogger blog largely untouched, however I notice the imported images from here lost some quality in the transfer, and all the image captions were lost, so I'd like to keep this old ship afloat!

Here's some nautical themed images from the archive!
1

Dearest readers, I have some news to announce!

Blogger has been the home for my blog for many years, but with a new website – it’s time for a new blog too.
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Happy New Year of the Rat everyone! It’s a delicate new decade, promising lots of challenges, let's keep it in safe hands!

Things have been slow and steady here,  the last weeks up to Christmas I've been tied up with house repairs and curating Pictures at Play, the biennial SCBWI exhibition in London. But from the new year onwards it will be solid focus on new ideas and art projects.

Here are the rest of my Inktober drawings for 2019.

During the month, though I never seemed to have much time for contemplation, I was repeatedly asking myself, where is the essence of what I do? How can I connect with that mysterious flow of creativity, when things seem to just come together, almost by themselves, without me having to think too deeply - let the rhythm flow.

That is the goal of all our art of course, and one of the attractions of Inktober.

It's that time of year again, and once more I entered the maelstrom of feverish scribbling that is Inktober. Here are the first fifteen of my daily drawings (Days 16-31 to follow).

If you've not heard of Inktober before, it's a social media challenge, where participants create and post online a drawing made in ink (of whatever kind), one a day throughout the month of October, using the hashtags "Inktober" and "Inktober2019".
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I'm approaching the end of our current month-long visit to Japan, so here are some more train sketches.

For me it's been a month basically looking up old contacts, finding the current buzz of what's going on for illustrators, and peering through the busy noise of central Tokyo, where I'm staying.

Usually nowadays I stay in areas outside the circle of the Yamanote line, though I was based within it for over half the 21 years I was "permanently" living here.
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Some more train sketches from my current sojourn in Tokyo.

I've been here over two weeks now and it's been a remarkably wet and cool July until now, the rainy season just carried on and on, with some significant downpours adding to the general drizzle. The cooler than expected weather meant getting about town was more efficient (if you could avoid being poked in the eye by umbrellas) but the general gloom was definitely sense in the mood of train passengers....

I'm back in Tokyo throughout this month, and, as is my habit, have been drawing people on trains again.

As I'm staying in a central part of the city this time there are not so many long commuter train journeys, so sketching has been sporadic, on short journeys with bustling trains, when people move, get on and off more frequently, and (in many cases) block my view of my drawing model. So I'm getting a lot of false starts like this!

You've just got to get on with it....
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To all my followers,

Wishing you all the very best for a whale of a summer!

In the Chinese zodiac the pig (or wild boar as it’s celebrated in Japan) is known for being compassionate, artistic and jovial.
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