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Wednesday
Jun252014

Angela Rozelaar

24th June 2014: Angela Rozelaar is an illustrator who constantly creates and experiments with different styles and subject matter. Capturing the essence of a character and dealing sensitively with decorative elements are only two of the factors which make Angela such a popular artist. More recently she has been working in a more painterly style and her bird with cherry blossom promises a beautiful new approach.

Leading card company Woodmansterne have recently commissioned Angela to create imagery with a 'School' theme; 'Thank you Teacher' and 'First Day at School' - with great results to complement an existing new baby image published by Woodmansterne earlier in 2014.

Angie grew up in Kent, and has since lived in London, Brighton, Devon, Sweden and France. After a childhood spent mostly drawing, she went on to study at Chelsea Art School.

Since then, her path to becoming a full time illustrator has been a meandering one via jobs in various London theatres and galleries. It was when she began working with a local primary school on a project to support literacy that she rediscovered the world of children's book illustration and her love for character design. She started posting her work on her blog and from there she launched her career as a full time illustrator, attracting early commissions from educational publishers and moving on to illustrate novelty and picture book titles for publishers in Korea and the UK. 


Angie joined Yellow House in 2012 and is now based in Normandy where she shares an old farmhouse with her family, seven cats (yes, seven) and a little brood of hens. She works from her studio in a converted hayloft and loves using an expanding assortment of materials to create her illustrations, including gouache, inks, watercolour, all sorts of pens and pencils and a computer.  

 As you can imagine, Angie has lots of exciting projects in the pipeline! Please contact Yellow House Art Licensing for more details


 

Friday
Jun202014

Welcome to Summer

 

20th June 2014: In honour of British summer-time starting tomorrow, we've asked serial blogger, Craig McCann to share his associations and thoughts about the season we all love -  Summertime.

As the Ella Fitzgerald ‘Summertime’ song starts :-

“Summertime, and the livin' is easy. Fish are jumpin' and the cotton is high.”

"As the second of my invited posts, this season is all about the feeling of warmth and countryside abundance. Expressing this perfectly are bright paintings by Brian Sweet and Alison Clements 

For me, a child of the seventies and eighties, summer makes me think of long hot, seamlessly-everlasting school holidays. Also spending long days watching the Banana Splits show on TV and drinking fizzy drinks from the ‘Alpine Man’, who delivered them in bottles from the back of a wagon and gave you pennies for the returned empties !

Back then, apart from a fortnightly trip to the beach, the ‘great outdoors’ didn’t seem to figure too largely in our awareness of the world. As an adult I appreciate it daily, therefore it’s great to see stunning illustrations, positively radiating heat and the buzz of nature.

The modern idea of daylight saving was first proposed in 1895 by George Vernon Hudson. British Summer Time was first established by the Summer time Act of 1916, after a campaign by builder William Willett. His original proposal was to move the clocks forward by 80 minutes, in 20-minute weekly steps on Sundays in April and by the reverse procedure in September. Allowing us to have more sunlight so that evenings have more daylight and the mornings have less. Typically clocks are adjusted forward one hour near the start of spring and are adjusted backward in the autumn.

Summertime also meant ‘fun’. It meant jellies and ice cream, being at the beach even more, deckchairs, holiday vacations, sunbathing, swimming and buzzing, sweet smelling garden flowers.

 


I love Morag Lloyds’ ariel views of these sunny warm islands. They have a wonderful textile and patchwork quality to them. More of the beach themes here.

 

These fun and quirky collages by Jane Robbins, take me back to exploring rock-pools at the beach and the seabirds and sea-holly-foliaged sand dunes in Jenny Tylden Wrights’ work, mark the long sunny evening skies in rich ambers and rosey reds.

Finally, a couple more child-centered illustrations from Alex T Smith, Angela Rozelaar and myself. Reminding me of riding bikes or falling asleep in the long grasses, having adventures in blow up boats and all the sun-filled colourful clothes and warm busy prints that always appeared at this time of year.

 

I hope this post has evoked a few memories of Summer for you, why not share them with us and leave a comment."

Yellow House is delighted to welcome in Summer-time which is interestingly a time of year when our artists and designers are busy working on their Christmas-themes deisgns - it's always a bit odd designing snowflakes and wintery animals in the heat of June!