Thursday, November 19, 2015

Educational illustration

I recently completed an educational project with a publishing house. My relationship with educational illustration is decidedly love-hate: Deadlines and budgets are always extremely tight and the illustrator has very little to no conceptual input.

On the flipside, I get a huge kick out of the practical application of the illustrations. Kids from everywhere in South Africa- some in remote areas  with very little visual stimulation - will see and use these illustrations. So the illustrations HAVE to be good enough. I still remember the influence that some textbook illustrations had on me as a child - especially biological and historical sketches that looked unfathomably difficult to draw. So I am very aware that kids will see this, maybe try and copy it (like I did) and base some of their perceptions on it. Which sometimes freaks me out and sometimes excites me.

Below are some drawings portraying a Xhosa wedding. And here, a link to the wonderful blog of the photographer Monica Dart  (www.monicadart.co.za) whose Xhosa wedding images I used as reference.

Big thumbs up to Conceptual eyes!

I recently collaborated with a company called Conceptual eyes (www.conceptualeyes.co.za)
And was I impressed. Conceptual eyes is a one of a kind South African company. They use all kinds of creative techniques (graphic facilitation, graffiti artists etc)  and methods to tailor make creative communication solutions for businesses. Obviously, the part that I am the most interested in is that they use graphic facilitation as one of their strategies – which is what I was sub contracted for.

Compared to the overseas market, graphic facilitation is relatively unknown in South Africa, with only a few practitioners going it on their own as freelancers. Conceptual eyes bridge a very important gap for me. They do the hard yards in terms of hustling the corporate market and bring in the creatives to do what they are good at.


Most importantly, they are educating the market about graphic facilitation and what it can do and is simultaneously creating an appetite for it in the marketplace. And as a result, everybody benefits.
And they treat you like absolute royalty.A big thumbs up to conceptual eyes!



Monday, November 16, 2015

Hepstar whiteboard animation

Fine-line recently produced a whiteboard animation for Hepstar, a digital travel insurance distributor. The animation was used at a trade show in Singapore, to highlight the details of what Hepstar has to offer. It was lot of fun and I learned quite a few about how the travel business works. 
So go ahead, have a look!


Wednesday, November 4, 2015

2015 - almost done

To me, it still feels to like April, as if the year is just getting momentum. But somehow we're in November already and time is running out for tying up the loose ends of 2015. Good luck with the end of year craziness - It's enough to drive any one to carbs.