Ladybird's Flight: 2017

Sunday 31 December 2017

Thank You and Hello to Leanne's Writer and Artist Page.

Thank for spending time visiting Ladybird's Flight I will be taking a break from regularly adding content to this site.

I began this site to explore my creativity and while I am still exploring my creativity I now explore it on my website Leanne Barrett: Writer Artist Reviewer and my business Facebook page.




Website: leannebarrett.com 
Facebook: facebook.com/leannebarrettwriter

So please scoot on over to my other website where you will find out about my writing, illustrations and many other things that I am exploring.

Thanks!

Leanne Barrett




Sunday 10 September 2017

52 Week Illustration Challenge: Week 36

Week 36: Printing

Raining cats and dogs. 

For this week's illustration I wanted to create something that could become elements for a stencil. Later I would like to explore reprinting this design in a variety of colours where the clouds, cats and dogs are in a monotone colour (like this one black on white) on coloured paper OR printed in a variety of colours. 




See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Monday 31 July 2017

52 Week Illustration Challenge: Week 30

Week 30: Home

Mouse's House underneath the veggie patch. 

This was one of those pictures inspiration just hit me and I drew it in bed before I began my day. It however is unfinished and without colour as I ran out of time to complete the illustration before flying to Melbourne.



See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Wednesday 19 July 2017

52-Week Illustration Challenge: Week 29

Week 29: Swing 
This week I wanted to focus on doing a more 'illustrative' type of picture. The illustration is a girl swinging off a rope into water.



See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Thursday 6 July 2017

52-Week Illustration Challenge: Week 27


Week 27: Bush Countryside
There were a lot of ideas swirling around in my head for this theme. The distant hills, the mid-ground of farmland with its lone paddock tree and leaning on fences made out of wood from local trees are very strong images for me. We may have farmed sheep but a lone cow seemed right for this illustration.




See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Wednesday 28 June 2017

52-Week Illustration Challenge: Week 26

Week 26: San Francisco

For me San Francisco is the Golden Gate Bridge, cable cars, information technology companies like Cisco and the iconic houses on the tv shows Full House and Charmed.


See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Thursday 22 June 2017

Harmonious Circles

Today I attended my second Sylvia Marris art class.

We painted circles in harmonious colours using acrylic paper and paints plus I added in some watered down ink. We used stencils, pens with stamps, brushes and q-tips to assist in the design creation.

I loved exploring the different ways that circles can be used.





To see more about the creation of this artwork go to my Art Explorations page.

Wednesday 21 June 2017

52-Week Illustration Challenge: Week 25

Week 25: Past
This week I had firm idea that I wanted to paint a pair of dinosaurs and when I sat to sketch the idea was already fully formed in my mind.



See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Saturday 17 June 2017

Dinosaur Illustration Ready to Paint

Ready to begin painting the PAST theme illustration on a quiet Saturday night at home alone. With Guardians of the Galaxy 2 playing in the background - cranked up the sound a little bit.


To see complete illustration see here.

Friday 16 June 2017

Developing Plot


Today post it notes help me develop my plot and identify the holes in my story.
See more about my process here.


Wednesday 14 June 2017

52-Week Illustration Challenge: Week 24

Week 24: Multiculturalism

This week I wanted to show my Polish heritage. This illustration shows the national dress that my aunts, my little sister and I have all worn. My Polish grandparents arrived in Australia in 1950.


See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Interviewing Characters that Count


After being inspired by the Cate Whittle workshop that I attended on the weekend I interviewed my new character, Lillian May Stewart, who is in year 5. (Note: Lilly's name might be changed as there are currently a few younger reader books whose main characters are named Lily.)

Now that I have interviewed Lillian May Stewart I have a much better understanding about her personality, likes, dislikes and how she reacts to situations. Lilly is beginning to become a believable character, not just some light weight, flimsy little girl.

To see more about this workshop go here.


Thursday 8 June 2017

52-Week Illustration Challenge: Week 23

Week 23: Texture

This week's illustration comes from the art class I did with Sylvia Marris.
Once I completed the piece I felt wow that has great texture so here is my whimsical painting. This is a style I'd really like to explore again the parring back to shape and line to create images.


See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Monday 29 May 2017

I'm a reviewer again!

I'm so pleased that I have been able to begin to review children's books again for Kids' Book Review.



Thank you to the Kids' Book Review Team for welcoming me back to the fold after so many years away while I was President and Vice President for CBCA ACT Branch.

So far I have reviewed three books for KBR which can be viewed on their Website or Facebook page or using this link.



Saturday 27 May 2017

Aleesah Darlison's Canberra workshops

I recently attend two sessions with Aleesah Darlison, author Guest Speaker and Owner of Greenleaf Press.

Aleesah has written more than 35 books including picture books and chapter books for children. In 2016 she founded Greenleaf Press to provide assistance to Authors, Illustrators and Small Business Owners.

The first session was at Libraries ACTDickson branch on Social Media.
Alessah spoke about Social Media at an introductory level, specifically; Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Aleesah showing how her header & photo are the same on all of her Social Media platforms.
I learnt more. 
Got some great tips. 
Plus I had a chance to network with other Canberra authors. 

Cate Whittle, Krys and Brownyn

Now to apply some of this new knowledge. 

This talk helped me make some decisions and for now you will only find me here on Facebook or on my blog, Ladybird's FlightBut, I may pop up on Twitter so I can be part of the ALIA Picture Book Club.

The second session was a workshop on Creating Perfect Picture Books at the ACT Writers Centre.

A huge thanks to Aleesah for guiding us though this workshop on picture books. 



I now have a better understanding of the basics for writing a Picture Book and the way a manuscript should look - in general terms. 

This was the first time I have ever shared my writing with anyone. While this was a little scary, I felt comfortable in sharing my soul, as the people in the room proved to be supportive group.  Now it is time to actually begin editing my stories so I can begin to submit them to competitions and publishers. This course has given me more confidence to move to the next step.

The day was also a great opportunity to get to know some fellow SCBWI members better and a chance to meet new people.


Leanne with authors Genevieve Hopkins, Shaye Wardrop and Nicole Goodwin 
For more about some of our local authors please follow the links below;

Nichole Goodwin or at Tusk Books
Genevieve Hopkins
Shaye Wardrop
Cate Whittle



Friday 26 May 2017

I don't have time but I found time to have an Evening with Emma Grey

I don't have time, do you? Do you know how to say No? When someone asks 'How are you do you?' do you respond with one of these words - Busy, Exhausted? 


This is the premise of Emma Grey's book that she co-authored with Audrey Thomas, 
I don't have time: 15 minute ways to shape a life you love. The authors bring to the front of our mind that in our society today being busy is means that you're important and valuable, exhaustion has become a status symbol. We are so busy that we often neglect ourselves. We don't have time to follow our passions, make appointments that we should nor do we spend enough time with people that we love. 

On this specific evening Emma made time to speak to the Canberra Wise Women audience. When Emma came onto the stage she sat in a yellow easy chair. She spoke to the audience in a relaxed a friendly manner as though we were in her lounge room catching up over a coffee or wine. One couldn't imagine that Emma used to fear that she would forget what she was talking about or being asked a question that she couldn't answer. Because Emma has a confident, easy-going manner that makes members of the audience feel comfortable, like you've always known her.

'Let me tell you a few stories from the book', says Emma leaning back slightly into the yellow easy chair. She then began to weave her book's stories into the conversation so well that you would be forgiven to think she was just telling a stories about her life rather than about the book. That is because the stories in the book are filled with little personal stories from Emma's life to help the reader relate to the concepts within the book.

Emma shares one of the book's stories 'What am I doing here?' the Impostor Syndrome. When  I read this part of the book I felt that ah ha moment, as there have been many times that I have questioned why I was sitting at the table or attending a night like this event under the title 'Canberra Wise Women'. Interestingly the Imposer syndrome has been getting quite a bit of press recently. Including a new story that Emma had come across earlier in the week about Neil Gaiman. 

Neil Gaiman is a famous and highly successful children's writer. On tumblr site he shares a story about attending a conference and wondering what he was doing there with scientists, writers and inventors. During the conference he began to talk to a man who said, 'I just look at all these people, and I think, what the heck am I doing here? They’ve made amazing things. I just went where I was sent.' could you believe that this man was Neil Armstong? A reminder that we can all feel like impostors at times.

However by using this story Emma reminds us that we are all capable of amazing things. Emma suggests that if we put our fear of failure aside and put ourselves 'out there for something to work...see what happens,' then amazing things can happen in our life too. Including obtaining bandanna worn by Harry Styles for a girl receiving treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia.

To obtain what you want from life Emma asks us to 'Be open. Make the time. Check your heart!" Especially after the sudden death of her husband, Jeff, to heart failure. With tears in her eyes Emma told us about how she realised that she had two ways to deal with her grief 'by standing still or moving.' Emma's book gives a fabulous story about how to achieve what you need by asking for help and to move forward.

Emma is now ready to pay back the help she received after her husband's death through a new charity called Canberra's Heart. 

But Emma has been giving to people in the community for much longer than through this charity. Her book is giving people opportunities to rediscover their life  by making time for things that matter. By learning to say No we are open to being able to say Yes to things that matter to us. 

Say Yes to getting your hands on a copy of this book, I don't have time and please do the experiments as you are worth spending time on. 

Emma's children's novel Unrequited: Girl meet boyband will be released by HarperCollins Publishers on 18 September 2017. The book is currently being made into a musical by the Canberra school St. Clare's College. The musical performances will be held on Friday 3 and Saturday 4 November 2017.

#idonthavetimebook


Thursday 25 May 2017

52-Week Illustration Challenge: Week 21

Week 21: Red
All around Canberra during autumn most to the colours in the landscape are from the autumn leaves falling. Discovering a flowering eucalypt tree and it's red flowers made a wonderful change. 




See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Friday 19 May 2017

Storytellers Galore

What stories are being created by local children's writers? 

If you were one of the crowd at the 2017 Celebrate Story Creators Night hosted by The ACT Branch of the Children's Book Council of Australia then you are now up-to-date. 

For those of you who missed out here is an overview of the night.


Emma Allen, Carlie Walker, Anthony Hill, Robyn Siers, Tony Flowers and Stephanie Owen Reeder
Cate Whittle, Gina Newton and Tracey Hawkins

Stories that have power.

Emma Allen likes to write a 'slippery piece of writing,' where she uses words in new ways that gives them a creative force. She won the CBCA Book of The Year: Early Childhood award in 2013 with her first published picture book The Terrible Suitcase. This book has recently been translated into Chinese, Japanese and Korean. Allen's third book Grandma, the baby and me was featured on ABC's Playschool in an episode about 'Faces and Feelings'.

Allen is currently undertaking a PhD in Children's Literature at the University of Canberra. She likes to find new ways to do things. Things that matter deeply to her and that add to her creative drive. Her next book will be released in 2018, Digby and Claude, set in the 1930s. If it like Allen's previous books it will be amazing. 


Dyan Blacklock once said 'Be brave and amazing,' author Cate Whittle remembered this quote and persisted in getting her first book Trouble at Home published. When she got the book deal she was asked if it could be a series? She took the plunge and quickly wrote some potential book outlines. Now the fourth book of the series, Trouble and the Exploding House will be released in August 2017. 

'I feel like one of the luckiest authors around,' says Whittle and this because her Trouble series is illustrated by two great names in Australian Children's Literature; Kim Gamble illustrated the first book in the series, Trouble at Home. Gamble passed away just before the book was released in 2016 and it was probably the last book he illustrated. Whittle's 'luck' continued with the subsequent books in the series being illustrated Stephen Michael King, one of Gamble's friends. Children delight in the magical and creative stories woven by Whittle.

Free and Creative Stories.

Tony Flowers likes to work in a free and creative way with very little preliminary drawings. He is an illustrator and an author. He has illustrated many books in collaboration with Nick Falk, including the Samurai vs Ninja series which has been translated into Swedish. These stories take 6-12 months to produce but on occasion some have taken only two months to develop. With Falk now living in England Flowers is currently collaborating on a new chapter book series with R.A. Spratt, author of Nanny Piggins

As a young child Flowers liked Richard Scary illustrations and recently he began working on a picture book where some of the illustrations has a Scaryesque look about them; animals driving vehicles. If you follow him on Facebook you might have already seen some of these drawings. 

Flowers' first picture book Hello! (NLA Publishing) is a 2017 CBCA Notable book. Unlike his other books this one took 2 1/2 years to create. Why? Due to the book's inclusion of 12 different multicultural backgrounds cultural advisers were required to ensure the rigour of the book's information in both words and pictures. The book highlights games, food, traditional clothing and how to say hello, goodbye and how to count in each language. 


Books about animals.



Gina Newton is passionate about biodiversity, conservation and wildlife and she likes to highlight these themes into her stories. As a trained marine biologist and ecologist, with a Masters in Science Communication, Newton uses her expertise in helping tell entertaining stories to children. 

As a child she loved the story Chicken Little but she wanted to write a version that had a happy ending with the inclusion of Australian animals, Blossom Possum was born and it has sold 135,000 copies since it was released in 2006. 

Her most recent book release Amazing Animals of Australia's National Parks, is shortlisted for the 2017 CBCA Book of The Year Awards: Eve Pownall Award for Information Books. It is accessible to children aged 8-12 years old, hence it uses lots of visuals to convey the information while having a small word count. The information in this book has been checked by experts in the field ensuring that it is accurate and up-to-date. CBCA ACT Branch members are hoping that this book will be the second Eve Pownall Award winner for an ACT writer.


From Picture books to crime writing.

Tracey Hawkins has written a variety of books from picture books like Max meets a Monster to the award winning book about Nancy Bentley: The first Australian female sailor. But her passion is for crime writing. 

Hawkins' passion for crime writing began in her childhood, her father was a policeman. As a child it was clear in her mind that she was interested in two careers paths, one teaching and the other being in the police force. In fact she did both and now she combines what she has learnt into her writing career. 

She teachers courses in writing children's books and crime fiction, often online. She is currently writing an young adult crime novel that includes; death, secrets, betrayal, deceptions and jealousy. In the story there is one detective to solve the crime along with three victims and four suspects. At the moment she is spending hours and hours writing her novel, sometimes 12 hours a day. 


Historical Stories. 

'The girl who writes stories,' author and illustrator Stephanie Owen Reeder spends many hours researching information for her books at the National Library of Australia. She has had many books published by NLA Publishing. Her most recent book in the Heritage Hero series, Lennie the Legend: Solo to Sydney by Pony  won the 2016 CBCA Book of The Year: Eve Pownall Award for Information Books. Other books in the Heritage Hero Series include;
Lost!: A True Tale From the Bush
Amazing Grace: An Adventure at Sea

There will be 4 more books in this series including one due for release in early 2018, Marvellous Miss May, Queen of the Circus. This story outlines the story of May who was given away to the circus at the age of seven. The book will feature information about May and the Australian circuses in the early 1900s. Some of the source material comes from circus posters held in the National Library of Australia collection.

Reeder has recently signed a contract for a new picture series (not with the NLA) that will be historically based and features Australian icons. The first book will be set at Bondi Beach. 

Another historical writer is Anthony Hill,  who released his first book in 1985. Students and teachers mostly know Hill for his stories The Burnt Stick and Solider Boy but during his writing career he has naturally moved towards writing books for adults. This audience age shift in this writing has been for artistic reasons, most notably due to content. 

In the editing process for the book Captain Cook's Apprentice he was told that due to the age of the readers he couldn't describe the main character's relationship with a Tahitian lady using the words 'and they loved each other.' To clarify he said, 'so I can say they hate each other but not they loved each other?' and the response was 'Yes.' In 2018 this book will be released as a young adult edition.

Other books by Hill, including his wartime themed books, have begun to be published as adult editions, including; Animal Heroes and Young Digger

Stories from wartime.

When looking for stories about wartime experiences the series A Century of Service published in collaboration between the Australian War Memorial and the Department of Veterans' Affairs is a good starting point. 

Publisher, Merrillee Chignell and authors, Robyn Siers and Carlie Walker have used themes from the stain glass windows from the Hall of memory as way to introduce students to personal wartime stories that link to items in the the Australian War Memorial collection. 

It is planned to release a total eight books in the series A Century of Service. The series currently include the following books; 
Resource: stories of Australian innovation in wartime 
Devotion: stories of Australia's wartime nurses by Robyn Siers
Audacity: stories of heroic Australians in wartime by Carlie Walker
Ancestry: Stories of multicultural Anzacs by Robyn Siers and Carlie Walker
Two more books that that are currently being written are Decision and Comradeship


Merrillee Chignell
Carlie Walker and Robyn Siers 
A resource about wartime that is more accessible for students at the junior primary level is the book Here they come: A day to remember published in 2016 by the Canberra Department of Veterans' Affairs. This book will be available to schools in 2018 as an animation in collaboration with cartoonist Warren Brown.

To find out more about these story creators see the CBCA ACT Branch Authors and Illustrators page.

Monday 15 May 2017

52-Week Illustration Challenge: Week 16

Catch-up Week 16: Experiment
My hair wasn't always blue.
The experiment was also using brown paper and acrylic paint (not used this medium for 20+ years)




See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Friday 12 May 2017

52-Week Illustration Challenge: Week 19


Week 19: Music
The Music Fairy played her lute, she took the notes and placed them on the score.



See the 52-week Illustration Challenge page for more information about this art work that I have created.

Thursday 11 May 2017

Still touching hearts: an evening with May Gibbs

Over 50 people gathered to celebrate the author and illustrator May Gibbs.

The National Centre for Australian Children's Literature brought together two passionate speakers on May Gibbs; Jane Brummitt and Tania McCartney.

Jane Brummitt donated the artwork below to The Centre. The painting is an original May Gibbs artwork, created in 1915 as a preparatory painting for an illustration in her first Australian book Gumnut Babies, published by Angus and Roberston. 

Belle Alderman AM, Jane Brummitt and Tania McCartney

Tania McCartney also made a donation tonight. She donated the May Gibbs quilt that she won last year from a fundraiser raffle by The Centre.

23 October 2016 - Tania McCartney: Winner of the May Gibbs Quilt

Both ladies gave an inspiring talk at tonight's event
  • Jane Brummitt - Gifts of May Gibbs
  • Tania McCartney - Mamie: a celebration of May's life for modern children 

A post showing more about this May Gibb event will be available shortly.