This is the second of three books I've now done for Koala. Often, where I find appeal in a story is not always in the story itself, but usually the setting and/or characters. This story is set in a swamp, and I'd never done a book with a swamp setting, so that was enough to spark my interest. It's that simple (and somewhat shallow I know!). There was discussion at the start to change the setting of this story to Africa with African animals, but I'd already done Africa with Who Flung Dung?
and Cheeky Charlie
, so I pushed to keep it in a swamp. Now that I've done a swamp book, I'm less inclined to do another one. If I do, it has to be far different from this one.
And the supporting cast...
Originally the stork character was a Goose. I liked the Frog, Duck, and Turtle characters, because they were all very different visually, but a Goose felt too similar to the Duck. We threw some alternatives about, and we'd settled on a Flamingo for a little while...
I liked the long legs, because they'd bring a distinct characteristic to the swamp monster at the end, but I felt the Flamingo stood out (no pun) too much. I suggested a Stork, and that was settled.
I start my finished pictures by first working out the palette of each character...
I agonised over this Alligator's colour. I really didn't want to do a green Alligator, as every single cartoon Alligator is green in colour, and I thought it was painfully unoriginal to make him green. But no matter what I tried, nothing else seemed to work except green. Now, I'm pretty happy with it. It's grown on me, I can't see him any other way. As compensation I made sure I was slightly more adventurous with Turtle...
I put away the inks and went full acrylic with this book. I added finishing touches with Gouache.
The above is a test picture. I did this back last September when I was invited to draw at a Librarian's Conference with a few other illustrators. I got a free feed that day! And here's how it appears in the book:
The eventual colour palette is dominated by greens — I referenced the Everglades of Florida mostly, which are rich in greens.
'See You Later Alligator' is out this year...