Illustration Station– Lil’ joan meets Betty Boop

Posted on January 2nd, 2012 by Jonathan  |  No Comments »

Joan meeting Toothfairy copy

Joan singing with Betty Boop copy

These are illustrations from the story “Lil’ Joan Meets Betty Boop”. I’m proud of the my Betty Boop reindition here. Made her from scratch with references on hand. I’m not sure if I got her proportions spot on tho. Betty Boop is supposed to have a freakishly-huge baby head, which is sadly lacking here. She just has a moderately huge baby head.

Illustration Station–Grandma Theresea

Posted on December 22nd, 2011 by Jonathan  |  No Comments »

Grandma Mom and baby copy

Grandma and the kangaroo copy Kangaroo tripping poacher copy

These illustrations were done for Grandma Theresea. I’m quite fond of the last one with the kangaroo and the poacher. It’s particularly hilarious. Click for bigger view!

Illustration Station–Three Friends

Posted on December 16th, 2011 by Jonathan  |  No Comments »

Three friends copythree friends vs grendel copyGiving grendel back the wand copy

These are illustrations for the story Three Friends. Click for a bigger view! My favorite is the guy with the cherry-blonde hair. I like how he looks in profile in the second image.

Illustration Station – The Planet of Happiness

Posted on December 15th, 2011 by Jonathan  |  No Comments »

Christie and Lou in car copyLou and Christie meet Mr Natal copyChristie and Lou in rocket copy

These are three illustrations from The Planet of Happiness

After a brief scare

Posted on December 15th, 2011 by Jonathan  |  No Comments »

Jonathannelsondesigns.com is back online! Stay tuned for more posts of my more recent illustrations.

Illustration Station – Captain Ethan and the Red Ruby

Posted on November 6th, 2011 by Jonathan  |  No Comments »

Here’s another set of illustrations I did for Captain Ethan and the Red Ruby.

cOMING TO YOU LIVE FROM WINDOWS LIVE WRITER

Posted on November 4th, 2011 by Jonathan  |  No Comments »

Just checking to see if this works at all. The alignment seems to be off when I’m using Live Writer but I dunno how it’ll look online so I’m crossing my fingers and publishing this. Like the illustrations I’ve uploaded so far?

Illustration Station – Jabari and the Aoko Fruit

Posted on November 4th, 2011 by Jonathan  |  No Comments »

The first set of illustrations I did for a client on Fiverr was of a story written by Gabriela Royes named Jabari and the Aoko Fruit. Jabari is the little girl.

Jabari and the Aoko Fruit Image 2

An update

Posted on November 4th, 2011 by Jonathan  |  No Comments »

Hey faithful readers, what you been up to?

I’ve been very busy with school lately so I haven’t been able to focus on this site as much as usual.

Until I can arrange some form of gallery hosting on this site, I’m going to upload my latest illustrations by about three a day as posts and then above in the pages bar I’ll make one that only features those posts, kind of like a makeshift gallery if you will.

With that said, stay tuned for more updates!

How to make a newsletter

Posted on October 1st, 2011 by Jonathan  |  No Comments »

How to Design an Effective Newspaper or Newsletter

from wikiHow – The How to Manual That You Can Edit

A basic overview about how to lay out a good-looking, well-structured page using desktop publishing software. A primer on information architecture, layering and all the other things that will help people read the words you put on the page. This is not a how-to on using desktop publishing software.

Steps

  1. Open a desktop publishing program. Quark XPress, Microsoft Publisher, and Adobe InDesign are the most popular and professional but there are free alternatives such as Scribus and even word processors such as OpenOffice.org Writer. Are you on a broadsheet or a tabloid? Or an 8 1/2 x 11? Good news is, design principles apply to every page size. There are some small differences, but not many.
  2. Organize. Plan your content. What is the most important story? The next? The next after that?
  3. Consider your “art.”
  4. Know — and use — a grid. 5 columns. 6 columns. 4 columns. Mind you, a 10 column grid is really a 5 column grid that allows for 1/2 columns, and a 12 column grid is 6 columns with 1/2 column slots. 1/2 columns can be useful for running information boxes, mug shots, etc.
  5. Keep the design on the grid. What does this mean? For example, on a 6 column grid, run a story over 3 columns and another story over 2 and a story over 1.
  6. Create a dominant headline. Consider 60pt, even 70pt, but probably no less than 52pt for the most important story. The hierarchy of story headlines should be at least 6pt difference. If the biggest story is 52pt, the next highest should be 48, 42, 36 and so on. Some consider a 10pt or 8pt size difference to be preferable.
  7. Back to the photos — dominant vs. secondary. Hopefully, a photo editor will make that call, but if not, what photo advances the story the best? Look for emotion, dynamics and movement, unusual angles and intense or intimate moments. Then play them big. Don’t be afraid of, say, 4 columns wide on a 6 column grid. Huge? Yes. Worth it? Yes.
  8. If you have multiple photos, the second photo should not be greater than half the size of the dominant. If the main image is 4 columns wide, the secondary should be roughly 2. Maybe 2.5. Not 3. 1 Might be too small. Strong headline order + big photos = strong, basic page.
  9. Add layering. What is layering? See tips.
  10. Have someone else look at the page. A copy editor, for example, to proof the headlines and layers and body copy for, hopefully, minor errors like grammatical mistakes. You never know what factual errors may come up, and as a designer, its usually not your job to “proof” a story.
  11. Send the page to press.

Tips

  • You’ll be given stories to lay out. While you may not be responsible for “proofreading” them for grammar, you had better be sure to read them. You will be able to add context and information — your design will be more informed. This is critical: newspaper design is an architectural thing, not really a paint-pretty-pictures thing.
  • Avoid lumping photos in the ubiquitous, non-descriptive “art” category. Consider “photos” and “graphics.” But many editors etc. do call it all “art.”
  • Grids allow a mass of empty newsprint to take on an organizing form.
  • Headline hierarchy is essential to a well-organized page. Without it, how will a reader know what is important and what’s not?
  • Research respected publications and compare how they do layout, Often a proven method is what readers expect – this is a great source for Daily Newspaper Covers
  • To layer: Add subheds, or “decks,” or “dropheds.” These are two three or four lines of additional display type — 20-24 pt — that add context to the hedline. You can run them 1 column deep, or on the other extreme, you can strip them all the way across a page. They allow readers to get a better grasp of the story while doing a lot less work than reading the whole story.
  • Add infoboxes. Pull information out of the story and bullet-point it; bold key numbers and explain WHY these numbers are so important. Readers want information quickly; breaking it out for them is simply doing your job.
  • Mug shots are good for identifying who the players in a story are. Mugs are small, 5p-6p-7p sized headshots. Crop tightly. Add a sentence or two giving context about who the mug-ee is and why they are being featured. Mugs run this way function as additional layering — information pulled out, brought forward, thrust in front of the eyes of your readers.

Warnings

  • Photoshop cutouts can be awesome — they add a powerful dynamic to a page. But be very, very, very careful about how and when you apply this technique. Photoshopitis is common.
  • You only really need one headline font. One body copy font. One infobox font. Maybe another variant for cutlines. More fonts doesn’t make anything better.

Things You’ll Need

  • Computer
  • Patience
  • Stories, photos

Related wikiHows

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