Tumgik
#julia sarda
enchantedbook · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
Τhe Wolf's Secret by Julia Sarda
678 notes · View notes
illustration-alcove · 6 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
Júlia Sardà’s illustrations for Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
25 notes · View notes
paperstarzz · 7 months
Text
Tumblr media
Julia Sarda’s Violet Beauregarde
Linktree
26 notes · View notes
what-the-toad-likes · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media
the queen in the cave by Júlia Sardà
7 notes · View notes
onioneyez · 7 months
Text
instagram
God I love Julia Sardà
“Godfather Death” by Sally Nichols
Published in English by Andersen Press and Penguin Random House
6 notes · View notes
berattelse · 2 years
Text
Writers dream stories, awake and asleep.
Bailey, Linda. Mary, Who Wrote Frankenstein, illustrated by Júlia Sardà. Tundra Books, 2018.
2 notes · View notes
dorcupine · 4 months
Text
I was clearing out my closet this week and found some picture books; found one of my favourites, The Liszts by Kyo Maclear and I wondered if children’s picture books have fandoms, because if it had one The Liszts would be really popular.
0 notes
septembergold · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media
THE WOLF'S SECRET
Illustrated by Júlia Sardà Portabella
by Myriam Dahman
by Nicolas Digard
7 notes · View notes
s-u-w-i · 2 years
Note
Hi! Huge fan - always swooning over your characters! 💙 I'm a children's book illustrator and I'm a big fan of expressive, diverse character work that often comes from people with an animation background. Julia Sarda, Chris Sasaki, etc. I'm trying to be very targeted in my practice and I'm curious if you think life drawing is still a critical skill to develop for more stylized characters that don't have that Disney/commercial vibe. Thank you so much - appreciate any direction! 💙
Hello! I'm sorry to answer this late! And thank you, glad you like my stuff! Ah well, for me personally life drawing and classic figural drawing are really important, also I enjoy it very much. I guess it's not exactly necessary and sometimes it can even cause some difficulties with stylization if you get too stuck in the anatomy. But I think that if you know the classical drawing you can vary your style more so you don't get stuck in some stylization and then use it for everything you do. It's also best to be inspired by real people and not just other illustrators because that way you won't end up copying someone else's style. But I was taught classical drawing at school for a long long time and also I'm officially an animator so this is a very biased point of view.
38 notes · View notes
cortezzias · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
alaska arlet + the reason why you’re so afraid and at the same time attracted to monsters is because you’re a little like them.
text at cygnus / julia sarda / interaction at officer’s overlook / wintersong, s. jae-jones / text at cygnus / dark places, gillian flynn / interaction at officer’s overlook / the hour of the star, clarice lispector / julia sarda / all the flowers kneeling, paul tran
14 notes · View notes
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
antonio del pollaiuolo / yoshitomo nara / suzanne scanlon / laika in sputnik 2 / up the wolves by the mountain goats / walton ford / she-wolf by pantavola / romulus by sufjan stevens / julia sarda
2 notes · View notes
illustration-alcove · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
Júlia Sardà’s illustrations for Roald Dahl's Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.
49 notes · View notes
winningthesweepstakes · 11 months
Text
Moving the Millers’ Minnie Moore Mine Mansion, a true story by Dave Eggers, illustrated by Julia Sarda
Moving the Millers’ Minnie Moore Mine Mansion, a true story by Dave Eggers, illustrated by Julia Sarda.  Candlewick Press, 2023. 9781536215885 Rating: 1-5 (5 is an excellent or a Starred review) 5 Format: Hardcover historical fiction picture book What did you like about the book? This story almost seems like a Tall tale but better than that, it’s true! In Idaho in the 1870s, silver was discovered…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
miscellaneoustenten · 2 years
Text
Tumblr media
“Not wanting to be left out, Grandpa made lists of his greatest admirers and most fearsome enemies. The cat did the same.”
The Liszts, by Kyo Maclear and Julia Sarda
11 notes · View notes
innervoiceartblog · 2 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Things you can do in these colder darker days when away from the busyness, the hubbub and the crowds. Things that may be able to feed your wilder winter need for solace, rest, nourishment and connection.
Be alone with yourself, finding caring ways in which to learn to love the company you keep in the alone moments. Let yourself taste who you are, let yourself hear the voice within.
Sit, wrapped in jumpers and blankets, under a tree and watch, listen and discover.
Draw yourself into your heart, let your heart call you home, let it catch you with threads of kindness and care, reminding you of the safety held within.
Journal, let your unconscious mind spill across the page in inks of red, black and gold, without judgement or criticism.
Make herbal teas made up of the green allies from the garden. Rosemary, thyme, mint, dandelion. Let them strengthen, nourish and enliven you, let them tell you stories of wild medicine that is threaded through and across the land.
Light candles and fires.
Sing, sing to the night and the moon, sing to the river and the trees. Sing to the seeds taking shape in the dark, sing to the roots strengthening, sing to the insects and fungi that compost down the leaves, creating life from death, sing to your own unbecoming and becoming.
Rest, sleep early, dream.
Mull apple juice with cinnamon and nutmeg, make chilly cacao.
Warm oil with herbs and rub onto your body, showing your skin your love, whispering spells of boundaries, belonging and protection into your nerves, your muscles.
Leave gifts of gratitude in the woods for deer, bird, squirrel and your other more than human family members. Whisper a prayer of their long life into the moving shifting winter air.
Feast on foods that feed your bones, your flesh, your organs. Feed on food that reminds you of the care you receive at your own hands and the hands of the earth.
Wonder and wander through forest, riverside and meadow, let the sound of crow, robin and squirrel call you home.
————
• Words Brigit Anna McNeill 
• Art Julia Sarda •
5 notes · View notes
berattelse · 2 years
Text
It takes nine more months of daydreaming and writing for Mary to finish her story. Two publishers say no to publishing it. A third publisher finally agrees to make it into a book. The first people who read Frankenstein are sure it was written by Percy Shelley. They don't believe young Mary could have done it! Houw could a girl like her come up with such a story? But maybe you know.
Bailey, Linda. Mary, Who Wrote Frankenstein, illustrated by Júlia Sardà. Tundra Books, 2018.
0 notes