Ilustración Contemporánea
Ilustración Contemporánea
Ilustración Contemporánea
ILLUSTRATION
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Look 35, a runway study of a look from Giambattista Valli, by Michael Hoeweler.
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CONTENTS
7
10
Zo Taylor
72
Danny Roberts
14
Masha Karpushina
76
Jad Baghdadi
18
Adriana Krawcewicz
80
Michael Hoeweler
22
Sarah Beetson
86 Samantha Hahn
28
Audria Brumberg
90
Stina Persson
32 Kitty N. Wong
94
LULU*
36
Sarah Hankinson
98
Julie Johnson
40
Pippa McManus
46
Wendy Plovmand
50
Silja Gtz
54
Niki Pilkington
58
Gerardo Larrea
62
Yaeko Abe
66
Luis Tinoco
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Fashion illustrations
allow the design fantasy
to come to life. It is a
road map to new ideas;
and one sketch can
often spiral, cultivating
a unique emotional
connection, influencing
an entire collection.
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THE ART OF FASHION ILLUSTRATION
INTRODUCTION TO
FASHION ILLUSTRATION
A fashion illustration does something that a photograph can never do: It provides a direct
connection to the designer and brings the energy and style within the clothing to reality.
The illustrators job is to nd the balance between the drawing as a whole and the details
in it that bring the garment to life.
Fashion illustration provides the rare opportunity to savor a moment in history, long after
the relevance of the clothing itself. The Art of Fashion Illustration includes interviews and
illustrations from those who have seized this opportunity: both the emerging masters
the illustration worlds next big namesand the icons, a group whose body of work has
already made their names recognizable.
Whats surprising is that many of the featured artists didnt nd their fashion calling
until it was presented to them as an option in college. With hindsight they wonder if they
should have seen the signs all alongthe moments as a kid when they would tear the
advertisements out of fashion magazines or collect beautiful images of models.
Although their paths to becoming illustrators may have been dierent, one of the most
refreshing characteristics of all the artists interviewed is that style is a signature dwelling.
Some rely on traditional techniques such as pen and paper to realize their images, while
others prefer to use digital options. Some love infusing rich and bold color, and others prefer to create in black and white. But the common shared experience among all the artists
is that illustration is a career where diligence and perseverance pays o, and one in which
the artists should never underestimate their ability to draw.
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Editorial illustration
for Danish fashion
magazine, Eurowoman,
by Wendy Plovmand.
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THE ART OF FASHION ILLUSTRATION
PART 1
THE EMERGING MASTERS
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London, England
Zo Taylors work has appeared in various publications including the New Guardian, the
Independent, Dazed and Confused, and Le Gun. She has been commissioned to design a series
of images to be printed on T-shirts, tote bags, and dresses for the Marc 2acobs fashion
line, and has collaborated on a number of projects with fashion designer Luella Bartley.
Box Taylor nds it dicult to describe her technique. It eventually emerges instinctively for
everyone if you do enough drawing, she says. Taylors work can be identied by her frequent
use of pastelsshe prefers chalky ones such as charcoal and uses them to create contrast,
incorporating the duality of very light strokes and stronger lines throughout an imageand by
her detailed background drawings. These two characteristics are not often seen in fashion illustration. Unlike other illustrators who create their fashion silhouettes on a blank background,
Taylors work always sets a scene. She attributes this to the fact that she didnt train as a fashion
illustrator. Her illustrations have a sense of drama and narrative and capture a scene the way
fashion photographs do. The setting suggests something beyond the clothing, and the models
in her illustrations become characters. I sketch out the whole composition and then focus on
the persons face, building the elements of the drawing togethera mark on the dress here, a
shadow on the tree therelike a painter, I guess.
Pastels An illustration
of a Louis Vuitton SS12
outt for an article in the
column In the Cut for
Anothermag.com.
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Taylors home studio space, where she often works late into the night.
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Tweed A Zo Taylor pastel on newsprint, an illustration of a Prada SS12 outt for an article about
oral appliquus in the column In the Cut for Anothermag.com.
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PERSISTENCE IS KEY TO
SUCCESS: MASHA KARPUSHINA
London, England
Have a dream. Find the steps to get
to that dream and make it happen.
I think this pretty much sums up
the way I try to lead my life now.
Masha 3arpushina works from home at a desk with heaps of material all around it in a
corner of her living room dedicated to her work. A scene she says is not a pretty sight, but
functional. It is here that she starts sketching. If she is creating work for a client, she will send
the sketch for approval and once it is approved, she will redraw that same image by tracing the
outlines of the image onto a better quality paper using a light box, and then add more details
and make any small corrections. All corrections happen at the sketch stage, and once it is nal
she will scan the image, clean it up digitally, and send it to the client.
Londons Masha 3arpushina proves that opportunity comes in many forms. Her rst
illustration job was for Duncan McNamara at East Londons streetwear fashion brand,
Illustrated People. The job with Duncan started by coincidence. At the time, I was
working for a trendy FrenchBrazilian-owned club called Favela Chic in Shoreditch.
For their rst New Aears Eve party they wanted an extravagant invitation printed
on a pair of knickers, recalls 3arpushina. In Brazil, its considered good luck for
the year to wear a new pair of underwear on New Aears Eve. She worked with
McNamara on the invitation, and he oered her a job. She designed her rst T-shirts
for Illustrated People. It was easy, fun, and really rewarding. There was no pressure,
and the briefs were really loose, so essentially we could draw whatever we wanted. A
dream job, she says.
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August CThis pieceE was about the world of the real and surreal, the waking state and the sleep, our dreams, and realities. I used my two-year-old sons drawings
as part of the collage to give it some young and pure energy, 3arpushina says. Mashakarpushina.com.
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Although shes had great success with illustration, working with brands such as All Saints, Armada Skis, and
Illustrated People, 3arpushina has also taken time away
from drawing. My youngest son is just over two. Children
change something. They make you really appreciate time
so you work dierently.
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Delirium Jacket Armada Skis asked me to draw a black and white print
for their skis. It was a success so we extended the same print to t a jacket,
3arpushina says. The print itself is a combination of previously drawn
artworks; its a kaleidoscope of emotions. Mashakarpushina.com.
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CREATIVE INTERPRETATION:
ADRIANA KRAWCEWICZ
London, England
Adriana 3rawcewicz says her style is constantly evolving and she nds it exciting to allow
herself to change as an artist. She describes her technique as a graphic playground of
constructivism. Starting out as an illustrator she experimented with media, technique, and
approacha time she calls a roller coaster ride. Her work is known for its juxtaposition
of color and graphic elements. Although she feels more comfortable working in black and
white, color brings out a dramatic eect in her pieces.
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Inmences
When 3rawcewicz was eighteen years old and living in the
United States she was greatly inspired by the U.S. fashion magazines. They really appealed to my sense of creativity and made
me look at illustration from a fashionable point of view, she says.
Shes not a fan of realistic illustrations of models in garments.
I personally nd them boring and lacking depth. For her, a
fashion illustrators role is to use creative interpretation and to
leave realism to the photographers. The need to interpret fashion
illustration in her own way was a process of exploring that took
years. In the beginning she says it was hard to pin down what the
genre was really all aboutis it a portrait or is it an illustration of
a garment? But she experimented with media and technique and
found her voice.
Like many other fashion illustrators 3rawcewicz has been inuenced by Renu Gruau, whom she calls the pioneer of fashion
illustration, and designers 2ohn Galliano and Mary 3atrantzou,
and illustrator Antonio Lopez.
Good Advice
Draw, observe, and experiment. I think technique and solid
skills are the key to developing a signature style, and I truly
believe in the power of experience.
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While at art school Sarah Beetson was initially using a number of techniques to create her
work, none of which she was in love with. During life-drawing classes, students were taught the
blind contour drawing technique, in which the artist places the pen or pencil on the paper and
looks at the subject, drawing blindly without taking his or her eyes from the subject. This
technique can be totally haphazard with moments of clarity, a mess of abstract lines with a
perfect hand or eye within it, she says. I decided to combine this technique with a number
of other materials and styles I liked to work with, and hence my style was born.
Beetson begins an illustration by creating a background. She works on paper, wood, photographic prints, or fabric and often uses spray paint, tissue paper, or collage techniques for the
background. She creates the line work of the piece using Pilot G Tec C pens. The rest is a
combination of an exhaustive list of materials which I am constantly adding to, but often includes acrylic gouache, markers, gel pens, crayon, stickers, vintage magazine clippings, beads,
and sequins.
Unlike some illustrators who prefer black and white, Beetson is drawn to color and says it is the
most fundamentally important element that drives her to create illustrations. She favors bright
hues, pastels, and neon colors.
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At one point she considered leaving London until bartending friends who were using
Londons abandoned buildings to live in and as studio space let her squat for a short
time. She saved enough money to rent a new at and take on a job that began as a
one-day-a-week portfolio assistant and blossomed into an international role as a talent
scout for an illustration agency. She still works at the agency today and is responsible
for reviewing thousands of submissions from artists.
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Starting out as a fashion illustrator wasnt easy for Sarah Beetson. After receiving an
illustration degree she found herself living in London and struggling to climb the creative ladder. The term impoverished artist is an understatement, she says, recalling
how she existed on little money, which she cobbled together from numerous bar jobs
while interning in the fashion industry full time and paying rent in Londons pricy
housing market. I relied on tips to cover bus fare to work and I fed myself by eating
whatever free food was oered at my job. I literally ate one decent meal a day.
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Beetson worked with Stella McCartney in the early days of her label, where she learned the
value of research in shaping the foundations of any creative project. She created large-scale
paintings and illustrations for a fashion marketing company with top name clients and has
illustrated for major newspapers including the Globe and Mail (Toronto), the Times (U3), the
Telegraph (U3), and the Miami Herald. She has won the Creative Review (U3) Best in Book
prize for illustration in 2011, and was invited to exhibit the best from the last ve years of her
work at an exhibit in Paris called Rainbowspective.
Beetson has been inuenced by designers and artists in various design elds: Spanish architect
Antoni Gaudi, Austrian painters Gustav 3limt and Egon Schiele, artist 2ulie Verhoeven, famed
illustrator Antonio Lopez, writer and artist Henry Darger, 2apanese painter and sculptor
Aoshitomo Nara, and lm director 2ohn Waters.
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I met some amazing creative people in those squats, who are now successful actors, burlesque
stars, artists, fashion designers, and TV tarot sensations says Beetson. It was during this time
that she developed her portfolio, and found illustration agents in Canada and in London. It
was so hard at the time, but Im glad I went through it as it makes me so thankful for where
I am today. It was worth it for the career I was able to develop, she says.
Good Advice
In the beginning, take on every job youre oered to elevate your position as an illustrator
and raise your prole. 3eep developing your work and strive forward even if you are having
trouble breaking into the industry. Approach the clients you want to work for. Find innovative
ways to present your work. But above all, keep creating it, follow advice when you receive it,
and keep moving forward.
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A DIFFERENT PATH:
AUDRIA BRUMBERG
Los Angeles, California
It can take up to a week for artist Audria Brumberg to complete an illustration. Her work is
identiable by her unique style, which includes both realistic model gures, based on images
of friends or old photo shoots, and abstract patterns, based on sketching items in nature.
With an arsenal of materials that include pen, paper, scanner, light box, and her computer,
she starts her illustrations with a sketch that she then scans in to her computer to digitally
manipulate. She will draw every piece of the illustration separately and then vector out anything abstract because creating a vector image will allow her to scale the individual pieces of
the drawing so none becomes blurry or pixilated. She considers this piece-by-piece procedure, with all the pieces coming together to create the nal work of art, the fun part of the
illustration process.
Electric Brumberg
notes, This piece
was inspired by New
Wave music and the
early 90susing
solid lines and bright
colors in the background really makes
the woman pop.
Audria Brumberg began her path to illustration via graphic design. She never thought
about illustration as a career but as she became active in the graphic design community
in New Aork, clients began to notice her illustrations.
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Inmences
Brumberg came to New Aork from the west coast during the
recession, which made nding work dicult at rst. It took
good, old-fashioned networking including meeting other
designers and artists, getting referrals, and sending lots of
emails to break through at a time when artist commissions
and freelance projects were drying up.
Her style is organic and photo-driven and with what she calls
an art nouveau feeling. Brumbergs work has a very signature
lookand can often be recognized by how she illustrates the
subjects hair, which is dripping in texture, a style she developed when she was a child and continues to use in all her
work. Her unique style has led to commissioned illustrations
for a Berlin department store and a fashion lookbook, as well
as art direction for popular fashion brands and websites.
Brumberg nds inspiration in architecture, product design,
and 70s punk album covers. She takes a minimalist approach to her graphic design work following the work of
2apanese designer and curator 3enya Hara and German
industrial designer Dieter Rams. When I do illustrations I
throw all the rules out. Its like I have a split personality when
it comes to my work.
Good Advice
Constantly look at what other designers are doing and
develop good taste, says Brumberg. Follow design blogs and
study the campaigns created by fashion designers to develop
a good aesthetic and an eye for good work. Expose yourself
to more and more good work. But she cautions that its important to stay true to your own style and develop your voice
because that is what people will hire you for.
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B.
New Wave This piece was inspired by
shapes and the exploration of textures.
C.
Wonder Mixed media with ink, pen,
Illustrator, Photoshop, and Photography
by Audria Brumberg.
D.
Peach This started as a sketch that
then I incorporated the model. I love
how shes intertwined with the lines
around her, Brumberg says.
E.
An illustration for a lookbook. Brumberg notes, I kept the model black and
white to bring attention to the clothing.
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A.
Suduction CsicE I really love the
20s and Art Deco. This illustration
embodies a modern-day apper, says
Brumberg.
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AN ALWAYS-EVOLVING STYLE:
KITTY N. WONG
Hong Kong
Hong Kongbased illustrator Kitty N. Wong starts her illustrations with what she calls a very
rough draft but proceeds to the nal version quickly, otherwise she feels the spontaneity is lost
and the energy can never be captured again. Although her style is always evolvingand she
likes to experiment with dierent techniquesthere are two constants in her work: Her images
tell a story and the lines she creates are smooth, uid, and relaxed. As Wongs condence in
illustration evolved, so did her work and the result is an infusion of color and patterns. She
counts humor as part of her stylesomething she says is rare for a fashion illustratorand the
evidence is the witty fashion comic strips she has been commissioned to create.
Perhaps one of the most promising new illustrators in the eld is Kitty N. Wong. Still
only in her twenties, the Hong Kongbased artist, who grew up in Canada, has already
made a splash creating custom sketches depicting designer runway looks for a top
fashion blog, as well as published pieces for the Hong Kong Tatler, Dazed Digital, and the
National Post in Canada.
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Comme des Garons A fashion comic created in ballpoint pen and colored digitally, from a series for Dazed Digital
Halloween, If Fashion Week was a Horror Film featuring Comme des Gartons, SS14s darkest collection.
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Inmences
Wongs soft and ethereal, yet realistic illustration style was
cultivated through years of practice. Shes been drawing since
she was a child and would spend time in high school researching
fashion online. Looking up runway photos and sketching my
ideas was my hobby. It was the most accessible way for me to
participate in the fashion world as a young girl living in a small
Canadian suburb, says Wong. Although she took fashion illustration classes at Torontos Ryerson University and completed
an undergraduate degree in fashion design, she says she doesnt
believe a person can be formally trained in fashion illustration,
and says most of the important things she has learned have
been by drawing and by observing other artists work.
After graduation, Wong honed her skills working as an assistant
designer drawing fashion sketches and technical drawings for a
trading company. But the real turning point happened when she
quit her job and started to freelance.
My favorite parts about working from home are my commute
and the huge long desk my dad and I builtits big enough so
I can separate my work spaces, Wong says. I have a painting
side for all the messy analog processes and a computer side
where I clean up the images and write.
Starting out as a freelance illustrator was intimidating, and I
felt like I had no idea what I was doing, but I met some good
people who gave me a few jobs either for trade or for small
amounts of money. I was able to get started and build my condence and skills, she says. For illustration, the barrier to entry
is set much lower than for something like starting your own
fashion line. Aou just need your sketches, time, and some social
skills, and you can be on your way to getting clients.
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THE ART OF FASHION ILLUSTRATION | PART 1: THE EMERGING MASTERS
Every few days Wong nishes a new piece, and although she
says it doesnt feel like much, over time shes been able to build
up her portfolio. When I was working for someone else, I neglected my own practice and, at the end of the day, I had nothing I was truly proud of to show for my time. I really treasure
this ability to make art. I could have easily gone through life
without realizing what kind of work I was passionate about.
Wong feeds her need to draw by keeping random pieces of
scrap paper in her purse so she can make a quick sketch and
a notebook next to her bed to jot down ideas in the middle of
the night. She also says its important to see a lot of art and
make a lot of art. In Hong Kong she has done just that, visiting what she calls phenomenal private art galleries. Her inuences are varied, and include everything from vintage items
from the 1950s to the works of inuential designers and artists
such as graphic designer Louise Fili, famed fashion illustrator
Renu Gruau, and painter Henri Matisse.
Good Advice
Looking back on her career so far, Wong says the biggest challenge was feeling unsure of herself and being intimidated. I
thought there were all these rules I had to follow. There are no
rules except the ones you set for yourself.
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BORN TO ILLUSTRATE:
SARAH HANKINSON
MelZomrne, Amstralia
I treated each illustration job
as a path to gain exposure and
therefore more work.
Sarah Hankinsons technique uses a combination of traditional drawing and mixed media,
and she is known for her distinct line workshe likes to use strong and condent lines that
vary in thickness to add contrast, interest, and strength to her illustrations. The use of a beautiful line can make an illustration, she says.
Her work stands out with the bold splashes of watercolor she incorporates. I love watercolors
and the expressive nature of the medium. I tend to not think too much about which colors to
use. I just go with what feels right
She begins her illustrations by using a dangerously sharp 2B gray lead pencil to draw the
model on soft watercolor paper. Hankinson prefers this type of paper because it accepts water
well, not crinkling too much. I use a smooth paper so my line work isnt fuzzy and the pencil
glides more easily across the paper. She then brings in color to add interest to the piece. After
scanning the image I play around with the curves and layers in Photoshop to adjust the contrast. In art school one of the rst things Hankinson learned was how to use contrast to her
advantage. She says contrast can create a strong, clear focal point in a piece and can make a
at image pop. She adjusts the levels in her scanned piece in Photoshop to create just the right
contrast and make the piece look more visually appealing. I try to make each piece a balance
of light and dark, thick and thin lines, empty and full space.
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Boom Boom Room This illustration was inspired by my trip to New Aork and getting ready for the perfect night out, the artist notes.
Gypsy Water is my favorite perfume, and I love having a cocktail while Im getting ready. The Boom Boom Room is a bar at The Standard
High Line, a hotel in the Meatpacking District; it has amazing views of New Aork City and is the perfect venue for a night on the town.
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Illustrator Sarah Hankinson grew up with a dressmaker for a mom, so she was always around fabrics
and clothing, and while studying she worked part-time
in fashion stores to feed her love for the industry. I
love fashion and I follow many models so it was natural for me to draw these images and take my career
on this path, she says. I feel like I never really made
this choice, I just fell into it. I have been drawing for as
long as I remember. She likes the intimacy of fashion
illustration. It can express a look or feel instantly.
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Inmences
Good Advice
Starting out in the eld was daunting for Hankinson. Although
it can take a while to reach success, she says if you have the
motivation to push and market yourself work will come.
She Wore Red The inspiration was Australian fashion designer Alex
Perry. I loved the dress, the color, and movementits just so beautiful and
was really fun to illustrate, Hankinson explains.
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Pippa McManus creates illustrations that stay etched in your memory long after youve
looked at the beautiful images. Her well-known works include illustrations of women on a
monochromatic acrylic background with the focus on the womans hair and eyes. She always
includes owers somewhere in the piece. When she creates an illustration she goes through
what she calls her mental rolodex of past fashion editorials and fashion shows, choosing various reference images from pieces that she lovesthe face from one image, the pose or hair
from another. When creating a commissioned piece she makes a small pencil sketch based
on her reference or assigned subject and then describes the composition and style so that the
client can see how the end product will look. If she is painting or drawing for herself, shell
just start creating on her canvas. I was taught in art class in primary school never to use an
eraser, so that means I have to work Cthe illustrationE out thoroughly rst or let my mistakes
become part of the piece.
Pippa McManus has been illustrating professionally for more than a decade. She studied ne art, fashion, and textile design at the Western Australian School of Art Design
& Media. In addition to attending fashion week shows in Sydney, where she sketches
the fashions as they come down the runway, her work has been featured in magazines,
exhibited in galleries, and even replicated on fashionable tote bags.
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Byzantine Barbara I was quite obsessed with model Barbara Palvin at the
time I did this. She was just starting to get some big contracts like Victorias
Secret and LOreal where she was portrayed in quite an overly sexy and
seductive way, so I wanted to do an innocent Barbara. The client forwarded
me some beaded and embellished gowns and jewelry that she liked, so I chose
what I liked from her selection and dressed Barbara. I used metallic paint
pens for the complicated jewelry. Unlike a loaded brush they dont run out as
frequently, says McManus.
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THE ART OF FASHION ILLUSTRATION | PART 1: THE EMERGING MASTERS
Good Advice
McManus tries not to refer to other illustrators work for
inspiration, because she doesnt want to be inuenced
by them. I absorb things I see quickly and sometimes
subconsciously. So if I only look at designers creations
and models, Im much more likely to turn that into something of my own rather than draw from other illustrators
techniques and styles, McManus says.
Blueberry The piece was 1200 x 1500 mm (47 x 59 inches), so its huge!
explains Pippa McManus. I got to be quite free with the acrylic paint and
make the most of the paint running down the canvas at a fast rate, using
spray bottles lled with water and sponges to drag sections.
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Feathers
I came across a great
shoot of a girl wearing
a feather headdress,
which I had never
drawn before. I love a
bit of a shoulder up
girl because its coy and
innocent, but sexy at the
same time (especially
when there are freckles
involved). In the shot,
the girl had ecks of
gold across her cheeks
so I thought this was
the perfect time to
experiment with gold
leaf. Id never used it
before and didnt bother
doing a trial run rst.
One of the best things
I learned while studying
was mistakes lead to
great things! It did take
a while to get the hang
of working with gold
leaf because I couldnt
get a solid piece down
but in the end it worked
out perfectly, says
McManus.
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Veronica in Lace
This is probably one of
the sexiest pieces I have
done! At the time I was
shopping for lingerie to
wear under my wedding
dress and could not nd
a single thing I liked
anywhere. I searched the
Internet, I went on a trip
to Hong Kong, trawled
every little bespoke lingerie label I found on Instagram, and still nothing!
McManus explains. So I
think I had underwear on
the brain, and when Im
obsessing over something
it comes out consciously
or subconsciously in my
work. I made up this
bralette from everything
I had taken in over my
underwear search, and it
left me wondering why
couldnt the things I conjure up just appear out of
thin air the way they do
when I paint them? This
is the rst background I
had ever done that wasnt
a at solid color, and the
feedback on it was awesome, says McManus.
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Wendy Plovmand uses a technique that she describes as a mix of hand-drawn elements, which
she creates using pen, pencil, and watercolor, and then scans to digitally manipulate in Photoshop. Her work begins by researching words and images that shell use as reference or inspiration for the piece. She works in layers, adding detail upon detail to create what she describes as
a collage technique. Something unique to her style: She will often incorporate one piece from
a previous work in a current workcreating a symbiotic relationship between her art pieces
and manifesting a kind of family hierarchy.
She likes it when fashion illustration merges with other art styles and techniquesinventing
something newwhich could be why her illustrations dont follow any specic rules regarding
movement or texture. She uses a lot of black and white in her work but likes to discover new
color combinations that surprise her, and enjoys working with certain color palettes such as
pastel colors in one work or almost monochrome colors in another work.
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Inmences
Although she describes her signature style as supernatural fairy
tale meets pop meets nature, with a hint of darkness, Plovmand
has been inspired by some of the leading artists in the pop art
movement including Andy Warhol and Keiichi Tanaami and
she admires younger illustrators like Klaus Haapaniemi and
Kustaa Saksi.
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Good Advice
Plovmand says you need to have a brave and stubborn
soul to achieve success in life as an artist. As an artist and
illustrator you will always feel challenged, says Plovmand.
Lots of times artists have had economical challenges but
somehow with will and good ideas and stubbornness we
have managed. And even now I sometimes have a month
where I think, Hmmm, it would be nice to have a paid
job now, and then everything turns around, and suddenly
I need to decline projects because Im too busy.
She takes a wider view on what fashion illustration encompasses, saying it can be art, graphic design, communication, textile design, and interior designer. Today the
borders between the creative elds are eliminated creating
a bigger audience and many more possibilities for your
work. There is no limit for what you could do with it!
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Madrid, Spain
Silja Gtz has three dierent major styles or techniques. The rst she describes as a mix of
drawing and collage, where she works with dierent pens, brushes, and various papers; the
second uses a combination of black silhouettes with intricate black and white drawing; and
the third is a colorful swirling line drawings she creates in Photoshop. Even with these variations, Gtz says she is always adapting to the client and the subject so its hard to maintain
one recognizable style. Still my work is very personal and something of me always seeps
into the outcome.
Editorial commissions usually start with a short description of the text her image will accompany along with the approximate size needed. I generally have a solution right away, which
may not always be the best one, but it gives me a starting point. I toy around with this idea,
look for material online, and start drawing dierent elements. As the illustration is taking
form, some things are discarded, others added, and everything is scanned and colored or
rearranged in Photoshop. Its quite a lot of back and forth between the drawing desk and the
computer, she says.
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Inmences
Silja Gtzs start in the eld of fashion illustration was surprisingly simple. It happened to coincide with a very propitious moment for illustration in magazines and
advertising, she says. Illustrations had been all but forgotten for many years, but in
the late 1990s people suddenly thought they were fresh and exciting again. She sent
out a self-published illustrated book to potential clients, and showed her portfolio to
editors. Right away I received some assignments from Cosmopolitan, Elle, and others,
and I couldnt believe my luck, she says. Then she landed a steady job as a magazine
designer in Hamburg, Germany, and gained even more experience. This led to more
illustration opportunities and to leads in the publishing eld. Gtz eventually became
a full-time freelance artist in Madrid, working for clients such as the New Yorker; Vogue
Japan, UK and Australia; Marie Claire Spain; and Bloomingdales.
Good Advice
Be careful what you publish
online, because it may haunt
you later. She also advises
working outside of fashion.
Try to apply your style to
as many subjects as possible.
That way youll learn more
and keep your work interesting for you and others.
My workspace is not ideal at all, its a rented at and theres lots of things I would change if I could. But it has
good light and lots of shelves, which is great. I nd I really dont need the perfect surroundings for working, as long
as Im alone, surrounded by my paper samples, scanner, printer, pencilsand can listen to the radio, says Gtz.
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This piece was created as the subject of a short story for the New Yorker magazine. The illustration isnt the one that ended up running with the article,
but Gtz likes this earlier version the best.
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Niki Pilkington describes her work as playful, detailed portraits of fashion and the girls
who wear it. She is known for her pencil portraits and the sculptural elements she adds,
something not often seen in fashion illustration. I like to include three-dimensional
elements in my work because the added dimension gives my pieces an extra something
that you dont come across very often.
She enjoys the hands-on, crafty part of putting her work together and likes coming up
with new ideas. Im a sucker for dierent papers, glues, and tapes. Craft work is always
a nice relief from my detailed, slow pace style of drawing. And its a bonus that I love
the nal outcomethe shapes and shadows they create on the nished illustrations are
always dierent and always a challenge.
Pilkington starts her pieces by consulting a notebook of ideas, a place where she scribbles
down everything from images to words, themes, and colors. From there I will draw a
rough sketch, adding lots of text and I usually make lots of changes once I see the layout. There is always strong color in her work and she is fond of neon colors. She almost
always renders the faces and detailed sections of the illustration in pencil, preferring to
express the rest of the image in color, pattern, and texture. When she is ready to work on
the nal piece, she always begins with a fresh piece of paper. I dont like working over
roughs because theyre always so messy.
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In her young career Niki Pilkington has already worked for some
of fashions top names including
Topshop, Sir Paul McCartney,
and Ted Baker. For Topshops
London stores, Pilkington created
a window display featuring
life-size drawings of models
dressed in the current collection.
For McCartney, she rendered
illustrations for a special-edition,
remastered album based on his
old family photographs. The
photos were scanned at several
stages, then animated for a DVD
that accompanied the album,
she adds.
But it was a genius marketing
initiative by fashion house Ted
Baker to celebrate the launch
of its SS12 campaign that
catapulted Pilkington to even
more commercial success. The
company wanted to collaborate
with acclaimed illustrators to
create a digital fashion portrait
service known as Teds Drawing Room. Customers tried on
pieces from the new Ted Baker
collection and posed for a photo
in one of the stores photo
booths. The images were sent to
Pilkington and other illustrators
who worked together in a studio
drawing their favorite photos.
The customers received a digital
copy of the illustration and then
later a signed, framed original.
The entire process was lmed
and streamed live on the brands
Facebook page, and people in
more than twenty-three countries tuned in to watch the
process. It was very fast paced,
and the end result was tons of
beautiful portraits in a variety of
styles, she says.
Calon Ln Yn Llawn Daioni/A Pure Heart Full of Joy (Welsh Song) Graphite, colored
pencils and pens. This is part of a large collection of pieces I created where I researched my Welsh
heritage and illustrated old idioms, sayings, and lyrics. This collection continues to grow as I come
across more beautiful words and forgotten proverbs each time I return home.
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Inmences
Drawing has always been a big part of what I am and what Ive
wanted to become, says Pilkington. The fashion part came along
a little later when I realized my love for it and how I could combine the two. I feel I come up with more original ideas when I look
away from illustration. I think thats what keeps my work looking
special. As a beginner her biggest challenge was coming up with
what she wanted to create. Having a blank page and knowing
that I could put absolutely anything on it is the scariest thing of all.
Once the idea is gured out, Im fairly happy to get down to the
business of drawing.
Good Advice
Its important not to take criticism to heart. Try to use it to your
advantage and learn from the feedback you get. Dont be afraid of
negative comments when youre starting out, Pilkington advises.
Not everyone will like what you do, and to be honest, it would
be a boring world if everyone did! Listen to feedback you get, and
build from thatand remember, no one likes a show o!
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A UNIQUE PERSPECTIVE:
GERARDO LARREA
Lima, Perm
Gerardo Larreas work not only stands out, its bold lines and colors command attention. He
breathes life and energy into his drawings with his use of contrasting colors, the black outlines
he prefers, and the shapes he creates. His bold lines give character and strength to his illustrations and work nicely with the graphic style that he captures. When I started to illustrate my
outline was a bit thinner but now I like it bolder.
Larrea usually begins a piece by collecting pictures of the fashion collection hes working
onbut he wont read about the designers inspiration to avoid being biased. He creates small
sketches in his notebook, writing down details or thoughts he has about the theme of the work.
Then he begins to work up the actual illustration, rst with pencil and then delineating the
lines with marker, later adding color digitally. He creates the characters rst and then works on
the background of the piece. When Im working on an illustration I work as if Im taking a
fashion editorial photograph and the background is a location or studio integral to the character; for me the background is a tool that helps to rearm the concept.
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Who Run the World is inspired by the Chanel FW13 collection and four women who decided to
make the world go round; it has a medieval look.
Art Pop Inspired by the Celine SS14 collection. Characters cross, hide, and reveal, forming a kind of artwork between paint strokes and color, says Larrea.
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Good Advice
Have passion for your work, believe in
yourself, and dont give up.
The Fight Club depicts two sophisticated and powerful women, showing o their strength
in a boxing ring.
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MAKING A NAME:
YAEKO ABE
New Jersey, USA
Being loose and spontaneous is
my favorite way of drawing.
Aaeko Abes intricate line drawings reect a rened simplicity not often seen in fashion
illustration. When drawing for himself he doesnt create any preliminary sketches but on
client-commissioned pieces he will create several rounds of sketches. After I get an approval
on a sketch, I move on to the nal drawing, usually using a black ink pen or a calligraphy
pen. Abe often uses dierent types of ink pens, and later adds colors with markers before
adjusting the nal piece in Photoshop. Being loose and spontaneous is my favorite way of
drawing, he says.
Aaeko Abe is one of fashion illustrations newest talents. The New 2ersey artist began to
illustrate professionally in 2012, and became interested in pursuing it as a career while
attending the Fashion Institute of Technology. He has created illustrations for Elle Girl
Japan and Elle Russia magazines and a mural for British fashion company New Look.
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Hair Power This was a result of looking at hairstyle magazines and wanting
to experiment with typography without thinking too much about the mechanical
aspect of it, Abe says.
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Inmences
The works of British illustrator Aubrey Beardsley, author
and artist Shel Silverstein,
and illustrator Annika Wester,
have all had an impact on
Abe, but he says guring out
his own style was, and still is,
his biggest struggle because
he likes to explore dierent
materials and a variety of
subject matter.
Good Advice
Keep on illustrating and
utilize all your time. Also, be
polite to even the meanest of
clients.
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Fashion Collage
I created this during
one Fashion Week after
seeing great outts all
around the streets.
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SOPHISTICATED GLAMOUR:
LUIS TINOCO
Barcelona, Spain
Luis Tinoco always starts a sketch in pencil to create an initial impression. Then he applies
color, and later retouches the piece digitally. He calls his illustration style realism and sophisticated glamour, using watercolors and paint to create a fresh and contemporary fashion style.
Tinoco says the colors he uses in his work change depending on what he is creating and what
the fashion color trends are each season. Although in his watercolor work, lines are often absent,
with other mediums he will incorporate noticeable lines to create depth and to accentuate
forms or highlight a specic area of the illustration.
Luis Tinoco has been drawing since he was a child but his interest in fashion came
later when he began working in advertising agencies as an art director, which has led
to his work on client accounts such as Carolina Herrera, Rimmel, and United Colors
of Benetton, among others. His work encompasses everything from illustrations for a
cartoon series to childrens books to illustrations for the biggest names in beauty and
fashion including Glamour Spain and Glamour Germany magazines.
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Christian Louboutin
This is Tinocos take on the
fashion-forward shoes.
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Good Advice
For Tinoco, one of the biggest challenges as
a fashion illustrator is keeping abreast of all
the fashion trends in an industry that changes
seasonally and has new colors, fabrics, models, styles, and designers all the time. Enjoy
your work and make others enjoy it too.
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PART 2
THE ICONS
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Danny Roberts creates his illustrations using a technique called blind contour, which involves
looking at the paper as little as possible and instead keeping his gaze on the inspiration piece.
He uses pen, ink, watercolors, and mixed media for his illustrations. Roberts is known for the
special quality of his line work. His lines are condent; some play with sizehe makes them
thicker or thinner for added dimensionand some play with edgeswhich are seemingly
invisible or unnished, allowing the viewers imagination to ll in the rest. Color is often an
afterthought for Roberts. For the most part, I think and visualize in black and white, he says.
My use of CcolorE is very dierent depending on the piece. I usually use it as a tool to highlight
or contrast parts of the piece.
Danny Roberts, who along with his brother David is the creative team behind Igor +
Andre, began illustrating while in college. In a short time, the native Californians
work has been featured in some of the most elite fashion magazines in the world,
including Teen Vogue, Vogue Italia, Vogue Paris, Vogue Japan, Elle, and Womens Wear Daily.
While still in his twenties, he forged deals with some of the biggest names in fashion,
illustrating a line of Gwen Stefanis Harajuku Lovers handbags and forming a partnership with Forever 21 that showcased his fashion illustrations of bloggers on T-shirts.
He also worked with IMG Models to illustrate the fresh faces debuting in an upcoming
runway season.
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Roberts pencil, pen, colored pencil, ink, watercolor, and oil paint drawing with clothes from
Marchesas Fall 2012 collection.
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Inmences
Danny Roberts calls fashion the door into a dream world. He
has an inspiration library of more than 150,000 images on his
computer, admires fashion photographers Man Ray and Steven Meisel, and counts models Gemma Ward and Lily Cole
as two of his illustration muses. Although fashion, especially
the modeling world, often demands perfection and software
programs have made it possible to blur photographs to hide
human aws, Roberts says illustration is making a comeback
because people are drawn to imperfections. He says imperfections mimic our own lives. When an image is perfect, its
harder for people to connect with it.
Roberts had always been interested in fashionhe even
started a T-shirt company when he was in junior high
schoolbut it wasnt until he was studying fashion design
at San Franciscos Academy of Art University that he found
and nurtured his talent for illustration. He fell in love with
drawing in his rst gure drawing class. Although he always
doodled as a kid, he says, It was in that class that I really
learned to draw. And once he committed to drawing every
day, his work improved.
At rst, Roberts admits it was strange to get started, mostly
because I wasnt quite sure how. A big break came when he
was commissioned to create an Alexander McQueen portrait
for a Sunday Times magazine cover story that chronicled the
famous designers nal days. Roberts says McQueen has had
the most inuence on his work.
Good Advice
Roberts advises artists to practice every day, and dont judge
a piece until it is nished.
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The Velvet Dress Girl Design was created for Robertss Whats
Contemporary collection and was featured in L7Kiel magazine.
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Sometimes 2ad Baghdadi will drape fabric on a mannequin for ideas and silhouette inspiration
for an illustration, other times he will reference old sketches and art. He works on loose sheets
of paper, which tend to pile up in his studio. He has a distinct illustration style; his technique
includes using exaggerated movements in the subject and silhouetting itin fact, not being
afraid to exaggerate the subjects form is some of the best advice Baghdadi says hes ever
received. The use of color in his work depends on the subject, but he tends to incorporate
vibrant colors within loose bold lines. Find your voice and try to perfect it, he advises.
2ad Baghdadi has been illustrating since he was a teenager. Im a CfashionE designer,
so illustration was always the perfect way to express my personal style and designs,
he says.
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Michael Hoeweler starts a new work by drawing small sketches in his sketchbook and planning
out the image in his mind. After I have a solid composition, I seek out reference images and
take photographs to help root the illustration in reality. Once the general idea of the illustration is planned out, Hoeweler will size up the sketch on a larger piece of paper, and draft an
underdrawing with graphite pencil. Then he nalizes the illustration working in graphite only,
or nishes the drawing with sumi ink and pen.
I like color, and I use it when Im asked to, but most of the work I do in my spare time is
exclusively black and white. I tend to work with color semi-realistically, or as an accent wash
to lay over a black and white illustration, he notes. Once an illustration is nished, Hoeweler
scans the nal and does any needed edits in Photoshop. He calls his technique traditional,
with a digital nish.
Michael Hoeweler is known for striking black and white illustrations that showcase the
clothings smallest details. When beginning a piece, Hoeweler says, I write out words,
ideas, and content that I would like to focus on. I also write the narrative of the illustration and what I want to communicate.
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Hoeweler lays
out the gure and
composes the main
subject matter in
the illustration.
He draws in the
clothing over the
gure, tightens
the drawing, and
begins laying
down at areas
of watercolor.
He goes back
in with graphite
and charcoal to
bring the original
drawing to the
surface, adding in
small details as
he works.
As the nal
drawing comes
together, Hoeweler
goes back in with
gouache to bring
out the light source
and highlight
details, such as the
bead work in the
gown. After it is
complete he edits
the illustration
digitally.
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While studying art at Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore, Hoeweler created illustrations for Out magazine. The art
director helped him hone in on techniques and approaches that
were both distinctive and commercially viable. I really learned
that fashion illustration can be just as thoughtful, conceptual, and
creative as any other kind of illustration. The art directors advice
opened up a world of possibility to me, and allowed me to make
fashion illustration about more than just beautiful clothing. While
I was at the magazine, I also met some great editors who would
become future clients.
Inmences
er
h
ce
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Working with the inspirations and concepts behind Rodartes Fall 2010 collection, Michael Hoewelers illustration memorializes the
women who worked at the maquiladoras, the factories, in Junrez, Mexico.
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Samantha Hahns style is a decidedly feminine mix of delicate quill lines with an economy of
lush and vibrant watercolor. She begins her work by nding references or taking a photograph
to capture the physicality or expression she wants to use. She will search for fabric textures or
patterns to reference before she begins painting. With watercolor, you only have one chance
to get it right, so if the illustration isnt working, Ill just paint it over and over until it clicks,
she says. Her aim is to make it look eortless with an ecient use of lines and shapes. Then
she will scan the piece into Photoshop and play with it digitally, sizing it and enhancing or
modifying the colors, before sending it to her agency or the client.
At rst the illustration world seems vast and you have to nd your point of entry and
carve out your niche in the market, recalls Samantha Hahn. Through trial and error
and her willingness to accept rejection and learn from it, to grow and try again, she
found her voice. Once you are situated rmly in the industry, she says, work will beget
work. Thats where I am now, she says. Instead of spending a huge portion of my
time trying to get work, I spend it doing projects that more clients will see. When your
work is published its like a public vetting. Clients nd you and see what you can do and
believe that you will perform well for them as well.
Her work includes a published book, WellRead Women" Portraits of FiKtions Most Beloved
Heroines, a collection of 50 of her evocative illustrations, and commissions from clients
such as Renery 29, New York magazine, The Cut, and Vogue Nippon.
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Marc Jacobs by
Samantha Hahn
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The Row by
Samantha Hahn
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Marchesa by
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Hahn admires Andy Warhols early illustration work for the renowned shoe company, I.
Miller and Harpers Bazaar. I also love the
artists who worked in the heyday of illustration: Maxeld Parrish and Coles Phillips,
she says. Clients often hire her for the watercolor and ink style she uses in fashion and
beauty but she has illustrated for a range of
clients with dierent objectives. I recently
completed a series of black ink illustrations
for the Paris Review. I like to try dierent
things, but Im known for my feminine,
colorful watercolor illustrations. Hahn says
she is obsessed with color and isnt afraid
to explore or experiment. She loves playing
with palettes from warm monochromes to
pops of cool jewel tones.
Good Advice
Put the work you love doing out there and
it will speak for itself. Hone your skills. Get
your craft to where your taste is. If you are
going to make it in the market you have to
have the taste to know whats good and why
the professional artists are getting work,
Hahn says. When you are doing good
work, target it to companies and publications you want to work with and pound the
proverbial pavement with your portfolio until you start getting work. Work begets work.
Give yourself dream projects and imagine
who your client is. Make your site and your
portfolio look as professional as possible.
Everything you do should look like it was
done with the same hand even if you use a
variety of media and styles. Dont be afraid
to submit and submit. Eventually you will
knock on the right door and it will open for
you. The cream rises to the top, she says.
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Stina Persson may be one of the most well-respected and widely known female illustrators. She
works in many mediums and her techniques include drawing, painting, collage, andwhen
necessarythe computer. I draw a gazillion sketches and then choose the best one to work
on, she notes. I love working with color and it comes to me easily, which is why I do lots of
watercolor. Of course, I also love the rawness and edginess of ink, as well as the structural feel
of collage.
Stina Persson studied ne art and fashion in Italy. While studying fashion design and
feeling like a mist, her drawing teacher suggested illustration. Luckily, for the art
and fashion world she followed his advice, moved to New Aork, and studied illustration.
It took time for Persson to be successful, but a teacher at the renowned Pratt Institute
in Brooklyn prepared her, explaining that it takes three years until work comes in steadilyand when it happened more quickly, she was thrilled.
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Although her own style is unique and has
been called a fusion of traditional and edgy,
introducing a modern look to illustration,
Persson counts her friends and colleagues
Sara Singh, Tina Berning, and Cecilia Carlstedt, and eminent masters such as Antonio
Lopez, Renu Gruau, and Paul Rand as
inuences.
She notes that the eld of illustration is a
lot bigger than people might think. Most
of my clients dont come from the fashion
world, but just want illustrations with air
and a contemporary look, she says. Over
the years Persson has worked with top
magazines Vogue Nippon, Harpers Bazaar, Elle
UK, and Marie Claire, and corporate retailers
American Eagle Outtters, Bloomingdales,
and Macys.
Good Advice
Take any job you can get. But never work
for nothing. A client will never pay for something they earlier got for free, no matter
what they promise, she says. Develop a
personal style and seek inspiration not from
other illustrators but ne artists.
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EVOLVING STYLE:
LULU*
Berlin, Germany
LULU* is known for her hand-drawn illustrations that she describes as retro minimalist
combined with a 60s vibe and nely tuned digital work. Her illustration process begins with
an analog sketch, and when she feels the image is right, she will scan it and work in Photoshop
to develop it further. She says her work has evolved over the years and she likes the idea of
changing and trying new things.
LULU* does it all. She creates illustrations for advertising, animation, and editorial
design, but considers fashion the most beautiful and poetic of all the elds. Her rst
impressions of form and color were formed in her mothers ower shop in Solingen,
Germany, but it was while studying at the College of Fine Arts at the University of
Knste in Berlinwhere Vivienne Westwood was a professorthat she immersed
herself in fashion drawing.
After working for Tyler Brlu, founder of the famed fashion magazine Wallpaper, at his
branding and advertising agency Winkreative, LULU* became known as one of Germanys illustration talents, creating pieces for clients such as Bloomingdales, Swarovski,
Vogue Pelle, and Vogue Nippon.
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Illustration by LULU*.
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Inspired by the look of Balmain Paris, LULU* says in this piece, Working with positive and
negative space was my aim.
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Good Advice
It is all about high quality work, and good use of color.
LULU* says she always has a feeling about which colors are
appropriate in a piece.
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A STORIED CAREER:
JULIE JOHNSON
Jeddah, Samdi AraZia
Julie Johnson always starts a piece by painting or drawing it by hand rst and then scanning
the drawing so she can build layers digitally. Sometimes I like a neutral palette of earthy
colors, sometimes I like blacks, fuchsias and whites. In looking at art and nature, color is what
excites me most.
She prefers to draw from a live model, but says she can easily work from her own photographs
or from memory. I use the computer very little, except for layering color and line, turning a
piece into digital form for a client, or archiving my work.
Julie Johnson has been an illustrator for more than three decades. Looking back at the
start of her career she says, There was no digital technology and no Internet. Bloomingdales in New Aork would send over clothes by bike messenger, and Id hire a model
to pose in them, do drawings, and send the drawings back with the clothes by bike
messenger. Within a day or two the art would appear in Bloomingdales ads in the New
York Times. Illustrators would walk their portfolio around to dierent agencies and clients
to nd more work.
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Julie Johnson
sketchbooks
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In her extensive career, the best advice Johnson has
received about illustrating fashion is, Stop drawing
well before you think the illustration is done. It remains fresher that way, and an overworked drawing
makes the viewers less able to ll in the details with
their imagination. Her advice for emerging talents
is to remember that talent will only take you so far.
Aou need to have a continued drive and passion
for what you are doing. Dont imitate illustrators of
the past, make your own statement, and use your
own being and viewpoint to inform your art. Love
doing it.
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STAYING TRUE:
NUNO DA COSTA
LisZon, Portmgal
I couldnt imagine a life
without drawing in it.
Nuno Da Costa starts his work researching images in magazines and books. He then creates a
loose sketch, which can be reworked a couple of times before hes satised with it. He scans the
nal pencil drawing and prints it on bristol board so he can paint it with gouache and watercolors. When he feels its where he wants it to be, he scans the painted illustration and prints
it. Sometimes he will also paint over the print. Aou can get really attached to how your work
looks and you can be scared to mess it up, and this really removes that fear.
Vogue always meant something to Nuno Da Costa. To him it has always been synonymous with style, elegance, and quality, and he dreamed that he would one day be
good enough to be published in its pages. I knew when I started illustrating that I
wasnt ready or good enough but I told myself that if I worked hard and stayed true
to who I am as an illustrator that I could make it happen. It took ten years but he got
his work published in British Vogue.
He is known for the Nuno woman and he says she is growing and maturing as he
does. Shes strong and vulnerable, modern and classic, with an edge to her. Shes
complex and contradictory, as we all are. Im learning to let go, to let her and my
work goto be not so perfect, Da Costa explains.
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Illustration by Nuno
Da Costa
Inmences
At a young age Da Costa was attracted to the
drawings on packaging and in comic books
and always loved fashion. Fashion wasnt everywhere as it is today, he says. My parents
didnt buy fashion magazines. I used to watch
this one show on television every weekend
called The Clothes Show with my mum when I
was little. I would lie on the oor drawing the
models as they walked past. One of my earliest memories is watching the Valentino show
and drawing the model in a red dress.
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Lovisa Burtt often creates her illustrations using a metal feather that she dips in Chinese ink.
She also likes to mix what she calls high and low, using inexpensive pencils with dry pastels and
colored pens on beautiful, expensive paper. She often uses the classic color pairing of black
and red. Im always fascinated with the palette of colors that other artists use and how they
thought of that. I love a sharp vermillion red, almost an orange, and I often nd myself coming back to that. When she has completed a sketch that shes really happy with shell put it in
her archive. I used to throw them away when I was nished, but if I draw a pose that I like, I
keep it because I may draw from it again. But sometimes the sketches are really ugly, then you
just have to throw them away.
Lovisa Burtt has been illustrating professionally for almost two decades, but her interest
in fashion started as a young child. I would sew my own clothes out of mums old
curtain and I would make a skirt from dads old leather jacket, she says. When I was
about eleven, a friend asked if I was going to be a fashion designer when I grew up,
says the Swedish illustrator, who now lives in the south of France. I asked him what
that was and he said it was someone who made clothes for a livingso I said yes. I
made the decision then to become a designer and I kind of just stuck with it.
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With the encouragement of her father,
Burtt went to fashion school where she
studied to be a designer but took many
classes in fashion illustration. I had a
teacher who would give us a brief when
we had an assignment. She would say,
Of course you can misunderstand, please
misunderstand, do misunderstand. She
meant that it was important to interpret
the assignment in our own way, to use our
imagination. For me it worked to break the
rules. Burtt remembers school as a place
where she was pushed to try new techniques
and experiment with style. Aou would
bring your favorite paper and pens and
brushes to class, and then the teacher would
tell you to swap with the person next to
you. Aou were confronted with what to do
with this brush you werent familiar with. It
was a really good way of learning.
After college, Burtt moved to Paris, started
her own clothing line, and began to draw
morecombining her interest in fashion
with illustration. With the help of an agent,
she began receiving illustration commissions
from some of the top names in the fashion
and beauty industry. Burtt is known largely
for her work with Vogue, Elle, Glamour, and
Grazia magazines, beauty brands Guerlain
and Sephora, and another Swedish importretail giant H&M. It was really fun
and free working with H&M, she says.
Burtt created an archive of more than 120
drawings that the brand uses on the walls
of its stores around the world, including
Singapore, Tokyo, Athens, New Aork, and
London. I like their attitude and it was
important to them to signal to the client that
fashion is fun. They like a touch of humor,
which suits me a lot.
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Good Advice
I need to be totally in my artistic bubble, to turn o everything
else, when I draw, so I usually play loud music. I nd it dicult
to work when people talk to me when I draw. Ill walk around the
task until I bite into it. Once I get started I think,OK, maybe I
can do this, she says.
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COLLABORATION:
WILL BROOME
London, England
The light box is the most high-tech piece of equipment Will Broome uses. His hand-drawn
works are recognizable for their quirky characters that make you want to smile.
Broome tries not to plan too much, and just waits to see where the drawing will take him; he
prefers not to do research and not to cloud his mind with an abundance of noise. Im not
saying I work in a total vacuum. There are things and artists that interest me and inspire me
but I prefer to just sit down and draw, he says. For example, when working with a client he
collaborates with them through the drawing process, showing them what hes doing, discussing
the many iterations and ideas the piece goes through, and the nished piece evolves from that
process. I think thats what a collaboration is about. Its the way I like to work, he says.
He will go through a phase where he works in black and white only, then will start working
with loads of color. Im not sure why. I think it might have to do with the weather. I hate the
winter; I dont like the early dark nights.
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PASSION:
CAROLINE ANDRIEU
Paris, France
Caroline Andrieu usually uses colored inks or just simple pencils in her work. I started to work
with lots of ink in my rst fashion illustrations. I like that you cant erase it, that you have to
deal with your mistakes, with the stains. The ink actually gives a lot of strength to the pictures.
Later, when I was given a big box of colored pencils, which I hated so much when I was a kid,
I started drawing with them and enjoyed it right away. The technique is very dierent from ink
or watercolorit is more subtle, less free, in a way. I now try to draw with both techniques on
my illustrations. Andrieu doesnt sketch a lot, unless the client needs to see something rst.
Instead she likes to nish an illustration the same day she starts it. Im not very patient. I have
to be in the same mood all the way through the process, otherwise I may not nish it. I draw
rather quickly so thats not a problem for now. But I would like to work on bigger surfaces so
I have to learn patience, I think.
Caroline Andrieu started working as an illustrator little by little. She began her career
as a graphic designer and was drawing just for herself. After showing illustrations to
friends, and starting to share what she was creating on a blog, news of her work spread
on social networks and she landed her rst clients. As the art director of Condu Nast
Digital France, for the Vogue and GQ websites, she was surrounded by fashion so it was
natural to include more fashion in her illustrations.
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Good Advice
Be passionate. Fashion illustration is evolving
every day, more and more, and I am glad to be
part of it.
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Andrieu is a fan of artists Hans Bellmer andDavid Hockney as well as, more recently, of
the work of Charles Burns, Elizabeth Peyton,
and Michael Gillette. She is also inspired by
contemporary photography.
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Frizzillionaire
is a beauty illustration
about the frustrations
of frizzy hair.
Whitehursts labor-intensive process starts with pencil sketches to generate ideas and with
thorough research on the Internet, but the bulk of her work is created with a stash of modern
digital tools. She will create a tight sketch in Illustrator and then play with the pose, proportions, and composition. I ask my clients to make any major revisions at this point because
once I bring the vector le into Photoshop to render dierent elements, its a tremendous
amount of work to make changes.
Her client list is as diverse as the restaurant Sapporo and the Principality of Monaco, but the
pieces that are dearest to her are the ones she has done for the Telegraph Magazine. She says:
The illustrations have to be turned out fairly quickly because the magazine is a weekly, so I
really had to streamline my eorts, and have learned a lot from working in these circumstances.
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Good Advice
Have fun with color. Ive yet to push it far enough, though.
The way that the colors in a palette, or the lack of them, are
used helps determine how we engage with the image. At the
moment Im really enjoying colors that are acidic, tart, or dry.
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Balmain is an illustration
created for an article about
an iconic Balmain dress.
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TENACITY:
ERIN PETSON
London, England
When possible, Petson starts her illustrations using a model. If shes not working with a model,
she references a huge library of photographs from her personal photo-shoot archive. She
creates a sketch, making light and heavy marks with a pencil, adding abstract marks and color
to create the shapes and colors she sees in the garment and the gure. Color can be very intimidating because you dont want to ruin your pencil drawing. But once you add color, it gives
the illustration enough structure that you dont always have to draw in line. After her sketch is
complete, she scans the work to digitally manipulate the scale or composition in Photoshop.
Erin Petson has been illustrating professionally for more than a decade. In the beginning
she says it was incredibly hard but she was hungry for success, and she nurtured a drive
that would continue throughout her entire career. I loved sending out postcards to fashion houses and getting responses, even if they were not the desired response, she says.
To try to get work, Petson approached local businesses with her drawings, and the result
was her rst gigs with boutiques and hair salons. Her big break came when she moved
to London and landed a job with luxury department store Selfridges designing window
displays. In the years since, she has been invited by Dior to contribute to an exhibition
about Renu Gruau at Somerset House in London, and the Victoria and Albert Museum
has archived sixty of her original drawings.
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Good Advice
Really nd your style. It denes you
and makes you stand out from the
crowd, Petson advises. Learn the
business, learn marketing, intern at an
ad agency or a magazine or a fashion
house, and get your work published!
Draw every day.
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CONTRIBUTOR INDEX
Yaeko Abe
www.yaekoabe.com
Adriana Krawcewicz
www.artianadeco.com
Caroline Andriem
http://tight-sweater.blogspot.com
www.untitled-07.com
Gerardo Larrea
http://theillustratorles.blogspot.com
LULU*
www.plasticpirate.com
Jad Baghdadi
http://twitter.com/jadbaghdadi
Pippa McManms
http://pippasworkablexative.blogspot.com
Sarah Beetson
www.sarahbeetson.com
Stina Persson
www.stinapersson.com
Will Broome
www.williambroome.co.uk
Erin Petson
www.erinpetson.com
Amdria Brmmberg
www.audriabrumberg.com
Niki Pilkington
www.nikipilkington.com
Lovisa Bmrtt
www.lovisaburtt.com
Nmno Da Costa
www.illustrationweb.us/artists/NunoDaCosta
Wendy Plovmand
www.wendyplovmand.com
Danny Roberts
www.dannyroberts.com
Silja Gtz
www.siljagoetz.com
Zo Taylor
www.zoetaylor.co.uk
Samantha Hahn
http://samanthahahn.com
Lmis Tinoco
www.luistinoco.com
Sarah Hankinson
http://sarahhankinson.com
Amtmmn Whitehmrst
http://awhitehurst.tumblr.com
Michael Hoeweler
www.michaelhoeweler.com
Kitty N. Wong
http://kittynwong.com
Jmlie Johnson
http://juliejohnsonart.com
Masha Karpmshina
http://mashakarpushina.com
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GLOSSARY OF TERMS
Aesthetic
The nature of beauty, art, and taste; relating to an artists tastewhat he or she nds beautiful.
Blind contomr
A technique in which the artist looks at the paper as little as possible and instead keeps his gaze
on the inspiration piece.
Composition
The arrangement or placement of the elements in a drawing.
Editorial illmstration
An illustration a magazine or newspaper uses with an article that helps interpret the articles
concepts or elements to the reader.
Gomache
An opaque watercolor used by some illustrators.
Illmstrator
Graphic design software from Adobe.
Light box
A translucent surface illuminated from below that an artist can use to trace photos, pictures,
or past illustrations.
Medimm
The substance an illustrator uses to create his work. Examples: ink, watercolor, or paint.
Mixed media
An illustration in which more than one substance or process is used to create the work.
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THE ART OF FASHION ILLUSTRATION
Monochrome
An illustration in one color or shades of one color.
Palette
The range of colors an illustrator chooses for a drawing.
Photorealism
An illustration or painting style that mimics a photograph, using meticulous detail, to render the
subject as realistically as possible.
Photoshop
A software application from Adobe for editing photographs and illustrations.
References
Images, text, or photographs an artist may use for inspiration or as a starting point for a drawing.
Ren Grmam
A renowned fashion illustrator (19092004) known as a favorite of the haute couture and luxury
fashion worlds, who worked for Christian Dior and Givenchy, among others. His illustrations are in
museums and galleries including the Louvre.
Silhomette
The shape or outline or contour of a work.
Vismal langmage
A way of communicating with pictorial elements such as illustrations or photographs rather
than words.
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THE ART OF FASHION ILLUSTRATION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The Art of Fashion Illustration celebrates the talent of some of the worlds best artists. Thank
you to all of them for sharing their craft, their images, and being so open to sharing their
techniques with the readers. There is no such thing as a perfect experience when it comes
to writing a bookbut the team behind The Art of Fashion Illustration made it just as close
as you can get. Thank you to the whole family at Quarto Publishing Group, including
my project manager Betsy Gammons, who tirelessly got behind this bookwithout you
it wouldnt have seen the light of day. Thank you to Emily Potts for seeing the vision and
carrying the torch for this book. Thank you to Ginger Budrick, a gem of an editorial
assistant, for helping me organize so many biographies, interviews, and illustrations in one
book. Thank you to my husband, Sam, for putting up with the long hours and always giving honest feedback about my writing. Last, but certainly not least, thank you to my son,
Kai, for being born just as I turned in my nal draft of this manuscript good timing!
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