Monday, 28 January 2019

Behind the Scenes: Part 3

 (Click HERE for Part 2)

Part 3

...In the following few years life took an upward turn when I met the love of my life online, and then in person. We soon moved in together and one day while I was spending time with his then 5 year old daughter who loved books, I decided to write and illustrate a book for her that included her favourite teddy, a dog called 'Floppy Dog'. It was a treat to return to cartooning again even if my drawings were crude at that stage, and she was delighted to have her own personalised story. The following year, we had a new addition to our family in the form of a crazy cockerspaniel called Jasper, and he inevitably gained the star role in the next year’s book.

     

A short time later whilst talking to my (now) husband about wanting to find something that I could do for work from home, he reminded me of cartooning with my Dad, and of the book, and suggested cartooning. I was horrified at the thought, as my cartoons were far from good enough to sell. He simply said with a smile “so get good enough to sell them then.” He, and the rest of my family, had the confidence in me that I lacked, and with other options so limited, I decided to give it some serious consideration. The stories for his daughter had taken me a very long time to complete because it required sitting up, so it looked like this might become a repeat of ‘Silver Linings’, but thankfully I was about to discover something that would eliminate that problem…

I began an online cartooning course, tutored by American professional cartoonist Franklin Bishop, and his enthusiasm for my work went a long way in helping to build my confidence. In August 2008 I was delighted to receive a diploma with distinction in cartooning, and during the year-long course I was even more delighted to discover drawing tablets. By plugging a drawing tablet into my laptop, I could draw directly onto the computer. The benefit of this is that over time and with adaptations, I gradually taught myself how to draw laying down (with a few frustrated temper tantrums along the way 😄 ). Finally I had found something that I absolutely loved doing, and that enabled me to do whilst being horizontal. Now the only tricky problem was getting good enough to be able to sell my work!

I joined an online forum for cartoonists, and met some wonderful professional cartoonists who were a huge support to me and gave me lots of tips along the way. The best advice I was given was to keep at it, keep practicing, develop a critical eye for your own work and to keep trying to improve. It was a road full of frustrations and wobbly confidence, but I eventually reached a point where I was ready to launch “Scotty’s Cartoons”.

Two years on, I had enough regular work to be able to make the decision to specialise in my preferred area by becoming ‘The Dog Cartoonist’, and my passion for cartooning grew in leaps and bounds. Now, a decade on from doing the cartooning course, I can’t imagine that I would have been any happier in my original career choice all those years ago than I am now. After all, I get to look at cute dogs every day, anthropomorphise their characters into cartoons, and delight their owners!
(Click HERE for Part 4)

7 comments:

  1. Inspiring story, Helen, a fine example of how willpower can prevail and make things happen.

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  2. Thank you, Noel, and for your support on the forum over the years too. :)

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  3. Really enjoyed reading that, Scotty - made me want to start all over again (I had it WAY too easy!). You are a credit, first and foremost, to yourself and that very wise husband of yours, but also to the cartooning profession. Keep up the excellent work! x

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    1. Thank you Brighty, and for all your help along the way! My apologies for only just having seen your comment! x

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  4. Great to read Scotty. What a good attitude you have for adapting to fit your circumstances. I love your dod drawings, full of worth and humour.

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    1. I meant DOG drawings but I equally like your drawings of Dods

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    2. Thanks Glenn, haha! :) x

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