While I can do illustrations, I choose not to unless they are simple or the need is sudden and there is no time to contract with an illustrator. If I do illustrations, I generally take a computer graphic and modify it to the need. Like inte...
http://www.bookdesign.com/html/faqs.html
It depends on the book itself and who did the artwork. There are two issues involved when it comes to art in books, and that is that sometimes the art is worth more when it is left inside the book, and in other cases the art is worth more...
http://joellesteele.com/QA-Art.htm
Ms. Beaton: I got started in hand-stitched illustration when I wrote a book The Felt Book which filled a gap in the market at the time when there were 100s of craft books but nothing on felt. I included a couple of felt pictures and was ins...
http://sewmamasew.com/blog2/?p=862
I mostly make drawings combined with collage and then finish it off in the computer, but think I really want to go back to fully hand-made. I think I like that the best.
http://pingmag.jp/2006/04/17/przemek-sobocki-storytelli...
I start with a rough sketch but most of the magic happens in the computer. I redraw everything and repaint it. Editorial illustration is done primarily on the computer. A majority of the work is still hand painted in acrylic.
http://www.straight.com/article-76589/the-illustraighto...
Matthew Stotland: We had a sneaking suspicion that artists so musically talented, would have leaps and bounds of creativity that could not be satisfied solely by music. So far, our hypothesis has been dead on. Usually there is someone in th...
http://www.electronicbeats.net/Music/Features/The-Yello...
I have always enjoyed the hand-drawn approach to design, by this I don't necessarily mean rough. I have kept a sketchbook for the last eight years and many of the pieces that appear in these magazines are from the sketchbooks. I like the im...
http://www.shift.jp.org/en/archives/2004/12/supermundan...