1) Imagination and Creativity: Never leave home without 'em
First of all I should warn you that I am a little scatterbrained, I believe I was born with an advanced RPC (Random Processing Center) in the forefront of my brain. I love randomness and coming up with something different or off is fun for me and can be done a little more easily. This part of your brain, although only a fictional part of your brain (if you've already opened up another page and searched Wikipedia for a RPC in the brain-it doesn't exist), can be developed if you've never really felt random before. Have you ever heard of improv, made famous on the show "Who's line is it anyways?" where they play games that require acting out random situations and then blending them in with other situations until a humorous effect is produced? Well, I'm not putting in a plug for the show because I don't approve of the type of humor they use sometimes but it was merely an example. Throwing random situations together and then trying to act your way through them is a start on the trail to something new.
If there's demand I will include a blog entry with some quick improv games you could practice at home with your family one evening when you want a laugh. I used to play improv games weekly with my friends from college and we could always make each other laugh; I learned that some can more naturally make others laugh while some had to work on it and loosen up. Exercises should be enjoyable or you won't do them. Well, anyways I digress, back to the work at hand.
Many books have funny concepts at the core that are just random and entertaining. If You Give a Mouse a Cookie (If You Give...)
2) Note every single idea
Now we'll start covering the physical work that will get you there. Some of these steps will sound easy, that's probably because you did them as a child until you gave them up when you got other responsibilities. First you'll need a sketchbook or a notebook. When you have an idea pop into your head, scratch it out even it’s a rough idea. If you don't jot it down or start sketching it out it'll disappear. That creative genius will flow around to someone else and pop into their head, they will doodle it out and end up with the credit to their name.
Some ideas will sound funny at first when you have them but sketch them out anyways. If you usually have interesting dreams, keep the sketchbook next to your bed and when you wake up jot down the general details. The idea with the sketchbook is not to work out complicated concepts to completion but to fill the pages with a well of ideas that sustains itself. Don’t spend too much time with any one idea and don’t feel that one is so special that it can never be modified.
3) Sketch ideas, start combining them, don't fear losing the originality of some
The next step is fun. Another book that helped me learn about putting stories together was the book STORY. The author, Robert Mckee says something I think is really true and it is this; 90 percent of your ideas will be terrible and worthy of a jump shot into the trashcan. Ouch! Isn’t it so true though? I know as I’ve grown to accept that the majority of my ideas aren’t worth my time I’ve grow comfortable with the thought that I have to work hard to pump out the 90 percent quickly so I can get to the 10 percent that shows potential. Of that 10 percent that shows potential, only 10 percent will be good, etc. Do you get the picture? You’ve got to keep working hard to work through the less than great work so you can find great, original concepts. You can totally do it though. Start today and work hard to sketch out a thousand ideas so that you find 100 ideas with potential and from them, 10 great ideas.
The fun part comes from combining your ideas into an infinite possibility of combinations. If you have an idea about monkeys that can’t learn to get along, birds that are proud of their feathers, and a day that it rained shoes in the rainforest; throw them all together and see what happens. Okay, things may get wild and dangerous with raining shoes but hopefully you get the point. Sketch out all your ideas and then break them down and recombine them until you find something that rings true and exciting for you to put your energy into. You’ve got a huge pile of trash to get through before you get there so get working today.
4) Research subject matter
The other way of deepening your search for originality and adding excitement to your ideas is through research. You’ve got the whole world wide web (thank you Al Gore, you’ve truly blessed mankind) at your disposal. Use Wikipedia and other sources to learn more about your interests for characters, settings, etc. There’s so much available nowadays that it’s really quite easy to delve in and find out a whole world. If you want to write about pirates, princesses, potato chips, musical instruments of the world, strange animals of Australia, or different kinds of sandwiches; it’s all possible.
Research things you love to learn about and throw ideas together, sketch them out, mix them up and look up more about what results. Print out information you discover and love and file it so you can look back on it. Don’t feel bad copying things you find, just don’t reproduce them. You can incorporate other concepts into your work but you have to make it different, make it yours and not the other artist’s. One artist that I really enjoy is James Gurney, his style inspired me ever since I got his first Dinotopia
Finally I want to add that art skills get rusty without being exercised for a while. Get working today, even if its during your lunch break in your car or during a quick catnap, as kids don’t always follow the most faithful schedule. If they fall asleep for a nap, grab your pencil and sketchbook and work out ideas you’ve already doodled out. Don’t get frustrated by your hands and your lack of control of them. It will come back slowly. You have to earn it through hard work so worry about coming up with fresh, fun ideas in the meantime so when you have something great you have better control to work it out.
This was the first class in a series of 10 classes on illustration. Get working today and follow along with these lessons as you take a story from your mind to the pages of a book. We’ll get there together; I’ll be doing one along with you and I’ll let you look over my shoulder if you do the same. Don’t make fun of my work though; I’ll never make fun of yours. (Don’t feel afraid of giving critiques though because I will too.) Let’s make some books that will inspire the future generations to stop imagining living their dreams and make them seem more possible. Start working today.