About Chris Haughton

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So far Chris Haughton has created 182 blog entries.

Post-carbon future

I have been asked by the excellent New Internationalist magazine to create a two page spread to show how our post carbon cities may look.
Together myself and Jess have come up with some ideas of how it could look, but we thought it would be great to see if others can add ideas to this. If you have any ideas yourself please add to the comments below or retweet/fwd to friends who may have suggestions. I only have till monday to finish (!) but hopefully we can gather some ideas. Thanks!

postcarbon

what we have so far…..

1 quiet revolution urban wind generators

2 BedZED style zero carbon housing

3 Urban allotments

4 Chicken. the post-carbon pet! (above the chicken is a roof clad with solar panels)

5 Carless roads. Cycle track/tram/pedestrianised with local markets

6 Public transport. elevated trains/trams/underground system

 

This is the final image

newinternationalist

 

By |2020-05-13T12:50:04+00:00October 22nd, 2010|Tags: , , |3 Comments

Offset 2010

Im doing a panel discussion in Dublin at the amazing OFFSET design festival. Myself, Niamh Sharkey and Childrens Books Ireland are doing a panel talk at 12pm on Sunday 3rd Oct about childrens books.

Offset is one of the best design festivals anywhere and Im very very proud to be asked to participate at it again. It is quite incredible that something of that scale has been created in Ireland. Check out the line up of speakers !!!! DJ Shadow / David CarsonGary Baseman / Steven Heller / Scott Dadich (wired magazine) / Daniel Eatock / Studioaka / Poke David O’Reilly ….cant wait.

Our event ‘GETTING YOUR BOOK FROM IDEA TO PUBLICATION’ is here

You can watch the talk i did last year at Offset 2009 here ..basically…. ahem…

There is also a write up about Offset in the Irish Times yesterday here

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By |2020-05-13T12:50:04+00:00September 29th, 2010|Tags: , , , |0 Comments

V&A Late Night Friday Double Print

As part of London Design Festival and Designersblock, I’m doing a little double print for the V&A late night Friday tomorrow night. The event is all based around ‘pairs’. My prints were printed on to two giant A2 playing cards and will feature in a giant game of memory with 30 other illustrators and artists. The winner will win the set of two prints and a book. You can see more about the event here.
 
Fri 24th Sept from 6-9pm at the V&A. FREE EVENT
 
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By |2020-05-13T12:50:04+00:00September 23rd, 2010|Tags: , |0 Comments

Art for Tibet

I have one of my new fair trade rugs in the Art for Tibet show in New York. Its in Tribeca 21-25 Sept (facebook event is here). Richard Gere (!) and Shephard Fairey (Obama ‘Hope’ poster) have a piece in it. 
I still havent seen a totally finished rug in person so i cant wait till my shipment arrives in London. My friend Shan sent me this pic of it being unrolled and installed. 
You can bid on the pieces here. All money from the auction goes to the excellent super-pro-active (!) activist group Students for a Free Tibet. My piece is called Red Poppies.

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By |2020-05-13T12:50:05+00:00September 21st, 2010|0 Comments

A Bit Lost: Languages / Awards

The blog post about how i came up with the idea is here

Here are the first few pages…

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You can order it in the countries/languages below
the original language edition is korean

엄마를 잠깐 잃어버렸어요 in KOREA  >>> here

A Bit Lost in UK/IRE                                >>> here or from local bookshop
Little Owl Lost in the USA /CAN            >>> here
Little Owl Lost in Australia                     >>> here
Little Owl Lost in NZ                                >>> here
Ihan Hukassa in Finland                         >>> here
Mama Kwijt in the Netherlands               >>> here
Un Peu Perdu in France                           >>> here
Kleine Eule Ganz Allein in Germany      >>> here
Un Poco Perdido in Spain                      >>> here
Um Tanto Perdida in Brazil                     >>> here
Ar Strae Beagán in Ireland (Gaeilge)    >>>here
Mamma Borta sweden                             >>>here
Una Mica Perdut catalan                          >>>here
OH-OH Italian                                              >>>here
ちょっとだけまいご Japanese                >>>here
小小迷路 Chinese      >>> here
Hvor er mammaen min? Norwegian (Bokmål)  >>> here
Kvar er mamma mi? Norwegian (Nynorsk) >>>here

 

Hebrew /Danish >>>coming soon

 

AWARDS………………………………………….
 
UK
IRE
 
US
 
Netherlands
 
Canada
 
France
 
 
JAPAN
 
 
INTERNATIONAL
 
………………………………………….
 

 

 
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A Bit Lost: the making of…

Before I had my idea for my little lost owl story I had actually wanted to do a different story about birds in a forest. The birds in the first story come down from their tree top roosts to the bottom of the forest and meet all the other animals of the forest along the way. They pass all the forest animals who want to eat them and eventually manage to find food near the forest floor. The last spread would then be a panoramic of them back perched at the top of the trees at the end of the day overlooking all of the life of the whole forest. I had the idea because I wanted to introduce all the animals and have the interactions of the forest in a sort of Arne Naess story of deep ecology and interconnectedness.

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This image was the trigger for the story. It’s a screen print I did for the fair trade company People tree. I really liked the image because I had the idea of hiding figures in the complex background (see the little cat in the bottom right)

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An early prototype of the pop-up for People Tree. You can see it animated here. They should be available to buy soon from people tree’s site actually.

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I liked the silhouetted running shapes of the birds. They eventually evolved into the running owl and squirrel in the finished book.

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The birds here hide from a tiger (also a snake and an elephant)

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The birds in their perch for the final image. They look across at the whole forest and see the web of all the animals that we met in the story.

In the end I sort of had to scrap the idea, I didnt like the way the birds interacted with the other animals of the forest. They were not engaging with them as such and it left a sort of lonely tone to the story. I may try it again another time but for this book I decided I wanted to do something that was more engaging and somehow a little like pantomime. Without engaging with little funny questions and cause and effect (Uh oh! is he going to fall off?/ Uh oh! Is it Mummy? etc) a very young audience tends to lose interest quickly.

The breakthrough came when I made the bird fall from his nest. That way he was lost and had to engage with the other animals in a way that wasnt about avoiding being eaten. In order to give the bird a range of expressions, forward facing eyes is much better graphically so I chose an owl instead of a bird. Also owlets apparently have a habit of falling out of their nests. I had imagined somehow that owl babies were cute until i actually looked them up on the internet

In the end my story turned out very different. Although the story had changed, there were a few things that I kept the same. The main thing was for the story to be able to be read without words so that children can understand everything just by looking at it. I also wanted there to be other visual interests in the book that children can find themselves. In the first story there were glimpses of the berries that the birds were looking for all along throughout the story, and in the final lost owl story it is the mum looking for her child.

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3

The first images of the new owl story

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Although I changed the story, you can see the patterns on the owls were similar to the original birds and I was using all the same colours.

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some character sketches

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i got some character ideas from handicrafts i bought in Mexico (this one was made by Tejiendo Arcoiris in San Cristobal)

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…more bold graphic toys for inspiration…

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a noggin…

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and a bit of henri rousseau.

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I had the idea of doing a leporello (non-accordian) fold-out so that you can follow the path that owl takes as he falls. I ended up dropping this idea too. But there is still a half page where little owl drops on the opening spread.

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Eventually I lost most of the pink colour from the owls too. By now it has now become almost unrecognisable from the original story

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some more colour tests…

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i started going a bit mad with all the trees….

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one thing i like about these is the only white on the page is the white of the eyes of the characters. It focuses attention on them in what would otherwise be a very busy image.

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Picture_8

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I did the typeface for the book with help from the brilliant typographer Andreas Pohancenik

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a test for the endpapers

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i quite like squirrel playing peek a boo in this early version of the cover.

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I did half of the book in Korea …it was published first by the AMAZING Borim Press. Check out the post I did about them here. Their set-up is very interesting.

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…and the other half in Mexico ..so i could concentrate fully on it. I had to stop working on other jobs so i was running out of money by now!

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i had some reference images spread out on the hotel floor and was worried the were going to get tidied up.

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the final spread of the owl falling

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in the finished pages you can see the mother hidden in the top left as her child is running around looking for her. the silhouettes of the running animals were inspired by the earlier work with the running birds.

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The panoramic final scene is also based on the imagery from the earlier story

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The final cover as it is now in English

If you want to see more you can see the first few pages of the book HERE

Little Owl Lost / A Bit Lost reviews

I have been getting some great reviews for Little Owl Lost and i thought i would try to put them all in one place


Goodreads
review here   

USA
Carthage Centre of Children’s literature  John Warren Stewig, Director
“In our world, understatement is becoming a lost art, and elegance a disappearing quality.This book has both” “Exemplary design qualities”
TimeOut NYC ‘Picture book Pick’
swiss-miss.com design blog
36pages.com Craig Frazer’s picture-book blog “has nearly every redeemable quality of an exemplary book”
Book-by-its-cover picture book blog
FastCompany feature
brainpickings.com ‘the best childrens books 2010’
PRI Public Radio ‘Recommendations for Childrens Books’ < listen to the radio programme

IRELAND
Irish Times
Great Reads for the under 10s “a stunning literary and visual achievement”
Sunday Business Post
“this stunning book from rising Irish star Chris Haughton is one of the top picks of the year”
Today with Pat Kenny
radio show < listen to the radio programme
Kim Harte picture book blog
Hughes and Hughes staff picks
 

UK
The Telegraph Books of the year 2010
The Guardian Reading with kids
Preston illustration blog
Katriona Chapmans blog
Daddy be good blog

AUSTRALIA
Readings bookshopBest Kids’ Books 2010′ full article here
Timelessbooks.com
book blog
Nest studio
blog

FRANCE
TOURNER1 review in french english translation

SPAIN
Club Kirico blog
Pizca de papel blog

NORWAY
Bokmerker
blog

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