The Children's Book Review

Inside the Studio with Kaley McKean, Illustrator of Howl like a Wolf!: Learn to Think, Move, and Act Like 15 Amazing Animals

The Children’s Book Review | May 28, 2018

Kaley McKean is an illustrator based in Toronto. She received her BDes in Illustration from OCAD U in 2012, and since then has been working in the realms of editorial publications, children’s literature, and product design. Her work features bright, minimal colour palettes and hand-made textures. She is inspired by medieval bestiaries, folklore, traditional handicrafts and the natural world. She will happily draw you any animal.

Inside Kaley McKean’s Studio

I live in the top two stories of a Victorian row house in Toronto’s west end. The upper story is comprised of a little storage area and an attic room with vaulted ceilings and a skylight. It has proven itself to be a really ideal studio space for myself and my husband, illustrator Nolan Pelletier. When we moved in a few years ago, one of our first projects was to build an 8-foot desk along one wall to serve as a shared work-space. Since then, the space has been filled out with a pillowy sitting area by the front window, my sewing desk and a couple of sturdy industrial shelves to accommodate an ever-expanding collection of books and ephemera. The walls and shelves are plastered with original art we’ve collected and various curios. I don’t do minimalism.

Author sitting in a room

The space is well-lit and airy. The fact that it’s upstairs, separate from the main living area, is helpful for getting into work-mode.

I try my best to stave off cabin fever by leaving the house now and then. I like to take walks on the lakeshore, which is only a few minutes away, or work in our little rented allotment garden in a nearby park.

Kaley McKean’s Creative Process

I like to tidy up my half of the desk and the rest of the studio before starting a new project, or at the very least neaten the assorted piles of detritus that remain from whatever I worked on last. Shortly after doing this I comb the shelves for reference material and create fresh new piles.

I begin by sketching on paper to feel out composition and concept and develop the look of the illustration a bit. I don’t really nail anything down at this point, just work up a solid starting point. From here I move on to more developed roughs. My work relies a lot on colours and textures and how they interact, so working digitally here allows me to easily experiment and problem-solve before I go to final.

It’s important to me to see my own hand in my work, so there’s a lot of back-and-forth between digital and traditional media as I put together a final illo. I favour ink, watercolour, and graphite, which I use to create textures, washes and various hand-drawn elements. These are scanned in and compiled in Photoshop, at which point I bring in my colour and mess around until, several hours and podcast episodes later, I get the look I want.

Howl Like a Wolf was my first book, and with most of my past experience being in quick turn-around editorial illustrations it was a real change of pace (and a pleasant one!) to spend more than a year sinking my teeth into a single project. That being said, my process wasn’t much different – each stage was just a lot longer. I made a point of taking as much time as I could at the beginning to develop a unified style and approach that I felt I’d be able to carry through the whole project. From there, it was just a matter of developing the book a few chapters at a time, helped along by my fantastic art director Alethea Morrison, who made it a very smooth process.

Learn more about Kaley McKean

www.kaleymckean.com | Instagram

Howl like a Wolf!: Learn to Think, Move, and Act Like 15 Amazing Animals

Written by Kathleen Yale

Illustrated by Kaley McKean

Publisher’s Synopsis: What does it feel like to “see” with your ears like a bat or go through a full body transformation like a frog? Can you wriggle in and out of tight places like an octopus, camouflage yourself like a leopard, or do a waggle dance like a honeybee? This creative and beautifully illustrated interactive guide makes learning about animals fun for children ages 6 and up. Fifteen animals explain their amazing feats and invite kids to enter their world by mimicking their behavior — an imaginative approach to learning that fosters curiosity, empathy, and dramatic play.

Ages 6-9 | Publisher: Storey Publishing, LLC | 2018 | ISBN-13: 978-1612129051

Available Here: 

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