Showing posts with label illustrated. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illustrated. Show all posts

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Postcard Sale: The Cornish Litany

While I'm very busy now writing some new stories for a new book in 2012, I wanted to take a break and post some updates on previous posts ( The Cornish Litany Commission and Limited Edition Cornish Litany Postcards). As of this posting, Bindlegrim is happy to announce The Cornish Litany postcards One & Two are now for sale via Etsy.


While initially the plan was to have only 25 signed cards of each (which is still true), the printer sent a surprise bonus of an additional 16 each, and these have also been listed for sale at standard postcard prices. The image above will link you to the Etsy store where you can purchase the card or cards of your choice.

Shown here is the limited signed edition of 25, with postcard one:

Limited Signed Edition Postcard 1 by Robert Aaron Wiley of The Cornish Litany
Limited Signed Edition Postcard 1 by Robert Aaron Wiley of The Cornish Litany

And here is postcard two, again showing the limited signed edition:

Limited Signed Edition Postcard 2 by Robert Aaron Wiley of The Cornish Litany
Limited Signed Edition Postcard 2 by Robert Aaron Wiley of The Cornish Litany

If you've been following the bindlegrim photostream on flickr then you've already seen posted images of the sketches that preceded the finished product, but for those who perhaps haven't clicked in that direction, I thought it would be fun to post the initial sketches here again, in comparison with the final products show above:

Cornish Litany sketch by Robert Aaron Wiley aka Bindlegrim that originated from the Pumpkin Dream Sketchbook Cornish Litany pencil sketch by Robert Aaron Wiley aka Bindlegrim

Don't forget to see the previous posts ( The Cornish Litany Commission and Limited Edition Cornish Litany Postcards) for more information about these cards and a sneak peek of Debra Meister's book A Litany... Cornish and Otherwise.

Happy New Year's 2012 all you Ghoulies and Ghosties!

Saturday, September 24, 2011

Pumpkin Dreams for Sale

As October rolls around, and I'm busily preparing for the 6th Annual Halloween Trunk Show here in Denver, it seemed only appropriate to create a pre-show discount on this year's new illustrated Halloween poetry book The Pumpkin Dream.

Halloween poetry picture book by author and illustrator Robert Aaron Wiley

This also gives me a chance to try out this coupon code thingy that you can do as an author of a book via CreateSpace. If you order The Pumpkin Dream via CreateSpace (directly from the distributor that is) in the next two weeks (from now September 24th until October 7th) and use this code: 54G4ZYNU, the book will sell for $11.95 rather than the regular $14.95.

I've also just newly discovered these gallery modules from flickr, and here is a selection of imagery posted from the book's origins to final first edition/industry edition printings:

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

The Coincidence of Pumpkin Dream Symbolism

While I think that everyone's personal experience of life is too rich and complex to be pared down to a set of symbols, (and this seems even truer during the layered rambles of dreams), I though it was interesting to note that while searching for "The Pumpkin Dream" via search engines, I kept running across results for sites that indicate what it supposedly means to have a pumpkin in your dreams.

What the heck..., I thought I would look into it, and got a fun surprise. The supposed symbolic meaning of the pumpkin really lends itself to the events in the poem... and I should probably be approaching this as something I meant to do, but it was just too fun not to share the coincidence.



1) Openness and receptiveness to new ideas and experiences

The Pumpkin Dream: A Cautionary Tale By Mr. Bumble Bindlegrim, featuring Halloween illustration by Robert Aaron Wiley (sepia version trick or treat clock)

Well, to be fair, the generality of this statement could lend itself to a host of events -- and pumpkins on Halloween night really are the beacons of new experiences. If you light a pumpkin on your doorstep you are asking for all hosts of creatures to come a knocking. And as a trick-or-treater it's a grand adventure into a strange night (with a pumpkin pail in hand to help you reap the rewards).

In "The Pumpkin Dream", the pumpkin Jack is the catalyst of experiences far beyond the norm of door-to-door trick-or-treat. He bears it for a while, just long enough for the main character to fill his head full of candy, but after that he's got much more to share. As the situation changes, he states, "It’s time for me to lead and sow these plastic pumpkin seeds, near open graves where boney sort in Danse Macabre now cavort,” and draws the main character out into the night for experience that involves real witches and monsters.



2) A situation in which time is running out (as in Cinderella where a carriage returns back to pumpkin form) 

The Pumpkin Dream: A Cautionary Tale By Mr. Bumble Bindlegrim, featuring Halloween illustration by Robert Aaron Wiley (sepia version mouse pumpkin dream)

Okay, again, to be fair, nothing lasts forever, and there's a time limit to most, if not all, experiences. But in some ways, pumpkins, especially those plastic candy buckets, are a symbol of trick-or-treating, and that, not only is Halloween night but one night a year, but that we all end up retiring those trick-or-treating costumes as we get older.And, maybe as Jack fears, the plastic pumpkin pails too!

Nothing is so serious in this story, but the clock tick tocks (see first image), and the warnings are there! Granpa has told our main character of all the lurking dangers that await a hapless youth on Halloween night. And Grandpa ought to know - he's got a hand full of educational brochures, and elderly wisdom to back up his story, that mere mortals who adventure too far will lose their souls to all sorts of haints and witches!

And of course matters turn worse, as the willful pumpkin Jack draws our main character out into the night after the trick-or-treating is over, and commences to stir up trouble with the Halloween natives none too happy with the turn of events. Our characters are in trouble and, yes, just like in Cinderella, there is indeed a time-sensitive situation here. They may not make it back home, and the clocks is still ticking!



Well, all that aside, the story is intended for most readers as a fun romp through Halloween night - but I couldn't resist a small amount of fortuitous literally interpretation. And while the poem is actually intended to have layers so that both adults and children can appreciate it, the symbol of the pumpkin as stated here was a complete though happy accident, and I thought it would be fun to share the observations. Muahahaha... Happy Hallowe'en 2011...!!!

The Pumpkin Dream: A Cautionary Tale By Mr. Bumble Bindlegrim, featuring Halloween illustration by Robert Aaron Wiley (sepia version Escher-style pumpkin and monsters)

PS - The sepia tone images used above were from an experiment for an alternative printed edition later abandoned due to unsatisfactory printing results - however I still love the way these look on backlit computer screens, and have saved them for a possible video version of the story this future season.
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