Cover: “Champion” by Robert J. Crane

Just finished up the third volume in Robert J. Crane’s  Sanctuary Series, “Champion.” Watch for the new cover in both print and ebook!

Stay tuned for Volume Four’s cover coming soon!

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BLURB: The world of Arkaria is a dangerous place, filled with dragons, titans, goblins and other dangers. Those who live in this world are faced with two choices: live an ordinary life or become an adventurer and seek the extraordinary.

As the war heats up in Arkaria, Vara is forced to flee after an ancient order of skilled assassins infiltrates Sanctuary and targets her. Cyrus Davidon accompanies her home to the elven city of Termina and the two of them become embroiled in a mystery that will shake the very foundations of the Elven Kingdom – and Arkaria.

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The print version:

Cover: “The Silver Eyed Prince” by VJ Dunraven

I recently started working on the covers for author VJ Dunraven’s Highest Royal Coven of Europe series. Here is book one, “The Silver Eyed Prince.”

Look for it coming soon to print and ebook!

BLURB: Do you believe in Destiny?

Elizabeth Hamilton certainly did not—until she met the dashing Prince William Erik XIV. The handsome but arrogant Prince pursues her in spite of the disparity in their social status. Against her better judgment, she found she could not resist falling for him. Then, just when she thought he sincerely cared for her, the secret of her identity unravels along with the discovery of his real intent, plunging her life into a dimension beyond her comprehension. Disoriented and heartbroken, Elizabeth is desperate to know the truth. Does he truly love her—or did he simply woo her out of the dire need to accomplish an inevitable royal obligation?

Prince William Erik XIV, sole heir to the throne of the Highest Royal Coven of Europe, has a crucial agenda. He has been searching for his Twin Flame, so that together, they can fulfill their destiny. The long-awaited Purification must come to pass in order for his people to continue to enforce the Divine Providence. Nothing must keep him from his goal—the preservation of humankind and the balance of nature depend upon him. The Prince had everything under control—until he met Elizabeth Hamilton—and discovered she was nothing like the one he had envisioned and waited for—for over a hundred years.

 

The print version:

The matching facebook timeline image:

Cover: “Avenger” by Robert J. Crane

Check out the new cover for volume two in Robert J. Crane’s The Sanctuary Series, “Avenger“.

Now available in print and ebook!

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BLURB: The world of Arkaria is a dangerous place, filled with dragons, titans, goblins and other dangers. Those who live in this world are faced with two choices: live an ordinary life, or become an adventurer and seek the extraordinary.

When a series of attacks on convoys draws suspicion that Sanctuary is involved, Cyrus Davidon must put aside his personal struggles and try to find the raiders. As the attacks worsen, Cyrus and his comrades find themselves abandoned by their allies, surrounded by enemies, facing the end of Sanctuary and a war that will consume their world.

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And the print version:

Cover: “Defender” by Robert J. Crane

Author Robert J. Crane asked me to help him redo his current covers from “The Sanctuary Series”, along with the future volumes. He wanted a more uniform, “no question it’s a series” sort of look. The first volume in the series is “Defender“. Take a look at it’s shiny new cover, and keep an eye out for the next in the series coming soon.

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BLURB: The world of Arkaria is a dangerous place, filled with dragons, titans, goblins and other dangers. Those who live in this world are faced with two choices: live an ordinary life or become an adventurer and seek the extraordinary.

Cyrus Davidon leads a small guild in the human capital of Reikonos. Caught in an untenable situation, facing death in the den of a dragon, they are saved by the brave fighters of Sanctuary who offer an invitation filled with the promise of greater adventure. Soon Cyrus is embroiled in a mystery – someone is stealing weapons of nearly unlimited power for an unknown purpose, and Sanctuary may be the only thing that stands between the world of Arkaria and total destruction.
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The print cover:

Cover: “Bridge of Blood” by Philip McCormac

Another thriller brought to you by Greyhart Press, “Bridge of Blood” by Philip McCormac.

Look for it coming soon to print and ebook!

BLURB: Who will be the demon’s next victim?

  • The terrorist leader with his network of informers, who has the power to murder or kidnap anyone in Northern Ireland.
  • The convent girl who fishes an old relic from the river near the bridge.
  • The former Special Investigations Squad sergeant who led an armed mission that went disastrously wrong.
  • The missionary priest and exorcist who spreads the word through the jungles of South America, before his weaknesses are discovered and he is sent back to Ireland in disgrace.
  • The detective inspector who falls in love with her new sergeant.

 

After 350 years of imprisonment, the demon, Laldaboth, is free to terrorise Ireland. Who will succumb to demonic possession and who will resist and fight?

Purity of heart is no ward against this demon… purity is delicious temptation…

The print version.

Cover (Partial):”A Fairy’s Guide to Disaster” by A.W. Hartoin

Partial? Yes a partial cover. Well, it is a full cover, but I only did part of it. Author A.W. Hartoin had commissioned a stunning front cover by artist/illustrator Matt Campbell for her upcoming Young Adult Novel “A Fairy’s Guide to Disaster” the first in her Away from Whipplethorn Series.

Where do I come in? Well she had asked me if I could do the Typography (the text), along with the back and spine for the print version. I thought instead of doing a plain solid color back and spine, we should continue the original painting to wrap the girls hair around it. Take a look!

BLURB: Tiny fairies. Huge adventure.

Matilda Whipplethorn is about to get what she’s always wanted, and it’s a bad thing. Being a babysitter isn’t much of a dream for the average thirteen-year-old, but Matilda is anything but average. She’s half a centimeter tall, invisible to the human eye, and hearing-impaired. Her mother won’t let her forget any of that. So for Matilda, adventures are in short supply. Finally agreeing to let Matilda take some responsibility, her mother gives her a list of emergency procedures for babysitting. The only problem; humans aren’t on the list.

Minutes into her first job, humans appear in isolated Whipplethorn Manor. They tear her home, the fireplace mantel, right off the wall of Whipplethorn and Matilda’s afternoon babysitting job goes long term.

When the mantel ends up on display in an antique mall, the security that Matilda always took for granted is gone. She can lock the doors, but that doesn’t keep the kids in or spriggans and the fly-eating phalanx fairies out. Matilda’s up for an adventure, if only she could hear it coming.

The full print cover.

My daughter is dying to read this. Look for it coming soon to ebook and print!

Who Knew? Boredom + Sick = Creativity!

I have been cooped up the past couple days with the flu. I try to lay down, but I’ll either start a coughing fit, or all the pressure will build up in my head, pounding and throbbing till I swear it’s going to blow. Or I start the cold chills and for some reason find myself restless. The rare few times I think I can settle in and rest, the kids get to me. So needless to say, I’ve spent a LOT of time curled up on the couch with the laptop, and haven’t gotten much sleep.

I have gotten a lot of cover work done while I neglected my day to day household duties in fear of the water balloon I call a head finally bursting. (There are a few I’m waiting on the back blurbs before sharing, not to mention the ones mid-progress. They’ll be on here…eventually) But over the past couple weeks I’ve been wanting to create something for me. Create my visions instead of someone else’s. Whether it be photography, photomanipulation, or any kind of digital art. Needless to say I’ve been too busy to take the extra time at the computer to do so. Not to mention ideas flit in one side of my head, and back out the other like an illusive butterfly. So when I do have a chance,  I can’t remember what they were!

Part of my job (can you really call this a job? man am I  lucky!) requires me to constantly learn new things and/or techniques in Photoshop. So I watch a LOT of tutorials. Some things I retain and use, some I don’t. I have had a particular interest in digitally painted hair lately and have watched/read numerous tutorials, trying several techniques over the past month or so.

Yesterday evening I was sitting here, bored, yet didn’t want to “work”. Husband still at work, kids watching a movie, and the dog sitting there staring at me. Creeps me out sometimes when she does that. Just sits there, a foot or so away, staring. I was looking at her, noting the shadows and highlights of her fur. Yes, I look at everything in terms of shadows first, highlights second, gets annoying at times. Sometimes I even imagine painting or “etchy penning” (don’t ask!) over things I’m looking at. Other times it’s camera angles. How would I move to get a better angle? Depends on which frame of mind I am in.  Suddenly the hair tutorials popped into my head. And I wondered….

I know from past trials and errors that I struggle with nose or muzzle proportions when I freehand. And I am WAY out of practice freehand drawing. So I grabbed the camera and took a picture of the dog. Loading the picture onto the computer and opened up photoshop. This is the image:

This was just for me for practice, I wanted to get the feel of the brush strokes using my tablet. I will freely admit I cheated. I cropped the image, cleaned it up and painting a black background around her. Then I used the Mixer Brush tool, set at very wet-heavy mix, with custom brushes I made and started painting directly on the photograph. In layman’s terms:  Imagine having the photograph in front of you. Now imagine all the ink created to print said photo magically turned into wet paint, still retaining the image. Now take a paint brush, going over the whole thing and mix and move that wet paint the way you want it to look. That’s basically what I did. Followed by painting over details such as the eyes and nose.

My husband came home just as I finished it. When I tried to explain what I did, he said “So basically it’s a digital paint by numbers?”

I enjoyed doing it. It was fun and relaxing, and I wanted to do another. I asked a friend to send me a picture of her dog so I could play some more. She sent me a few images to choose from and I chose this one.

Isn’t he cute? He’s just so white and fluffy. I don’t even like small dogs and I went “Aww..” While I was looking at it, I thought, why can’t I paint new instead of making the photograph “wet paint”?

Now some may say I still cheated because I started out basically “tracing” it. This time, I created new layers and did general paint blobs of the colors, using my custom brushes for the occasional stray hair sweep. Each color had it’s own layer, leaving the original as the bottom layer to go back and view for reference. Once I painted each color, I merged the layers and started adding in the details using both the regular paint brush (for added colors and details) and the mixer brush. Finishing touches again were painting the eyes, some highlights, and some extra stray hairs.

By this time, it’s just about bedtime for the kids. Hubby wants to watch some tv with me, and I am coming off of my cold & sinus meds. So I put the computer away. My stuffed uppededness gets awful again, so I wind up taking more meds, which in turn leaves me WIDE awake when it’s time to hit the hay. So instead of tossing and turning and keeping my husband up all night, I stay up and start yet ANOTHER painting.

I started with the background, completely freehand, no reference, no photos (the branches in the corner are a brush though). I decide I’m going to do a wolf next. I searched deviantart.com for stock images of wolves for reference. I came across this one from MoonsongStock , and figured it would work. I cropped the image to what I wanted and blew it up till it was barely recognizable from pixel bloat. Once again, I will admit, I used the photograph to trace the general outline so I didn’t have a misshaped  muzzle. After that I used it purely as eyeball reference (I looked at the original to see where to shade and highlight) and painted away.

So there you have it, what happens when you’re (we’ll for me at least) cooped up in the house sick with nothing better to do…er nothing better that you want to do at least. I might play more with full digital painting, if and when I have time.

[NOTE: This next one was added after this post originated. I just didn’t feel like doing another new post.]

Pretty much the same method as the wolf, but was trying out different brushes. The image I used for reference for the deer came from Stock by Kelesaii on deviantart.com, found here.

Cover: “Tylenol Man” by Scott Bartz

Author Scott Bartz contacted me about continuing his series on the Tylenol Murders. This is book 2, “Tylenol Man: A 30-Year Quest to Close the Tylenol Murders Case.”

Look for it coming soon to print and ebook!

 

BLURB: The man who led the investigation into the 1982 Tylenol murders has repeatedly called James Lewis the prime suspect. Lewis had sent a letter to Johnson & Johnson, the maker of Tylenol, demanding $1 to stop the killing. The letter was viewed as a hoax, and officials said Lewis was not a legitimate suspect. But when the investigation went cold, a handful of Illinois authorities began to state publicly that Lewis had been the prime suspect all along. In 1989, the U.S. Parole Commission declared that James Lewis was indeed the Tylenol killer. However, no evidence was ever presented to link Lewis to the murders. Lewis was thrust into the spotlight again in 2009 when the Tylenol murders investigation was reactivated and the FBI searched Lewis’s apartment in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Is Lewis the Tylenol killer? Or, has he been unjustly vilified by frustrated investigators seeking a scapegoat? Lewis has repeatedly refused to be interviewed about the case – until now. Drawing on personal interviews with Lewis, thousands of archived news articles, court documents, and dozens of emails between Lewis and the FBI agent who spent much of his career trying to solve the Tylenol murders, this compelling narrative provides a behind-the-scenes account of the 30-year investigation that targeted James Lewis as the prime suspect for the Tylenol murders.

And the print version:

Cover: “H2O” by Irving Belateche

Author Irving Belateche contacted me about creating a cover based on the painting “Seal Rock 2” by Albert Beirstadt for his upcoming book, “H2O”. Of course I couldn’t just leave the painting be and added my own lil twist to it.

Look for it coming soon to ebook and print!

 

BLURB: Roy Walker is curious. But in a world where knowledge has disappeared, curiosity will get you killed.

Generations ago, the Passim Virus wiped out most of humanity. The survivors banded together to form The Territory and, now, decades later, no one questions why knowledge has disappeared. Why should they? They’re lucky to be alive.

But Roy doesn’t feel so lucky. He’s haunted by the murder of his father and he’s ostracized by everyone in town. He asks way too many questions, especially about the water pumped out by the town’s desalination plant.

Then Roy finds a tantalizing clue that leads him down the coast of what used to be the state of Oregon. He’s stunned at what he discovers. Everything in The Territory is a lie and everything around him is a front. But to uncover the dark secret behind this front, Roy must venture deeper into the wilderness where marauders and the deadly Passim Virus wait to kill.

It’s there, outside The Territory, where he discovers the truth about his father’s murder and where he meets his unexpected destiny — To free humanity from the bondage of a powerful enemy.

And the print cover:

And the matching Facebook Timeline Cover Image:

Cover: “It Takes Two to Strangle” by Stephen Kaminski

Another cozy mystery brought to you from Cozy Cat Press, and one of their newest authors, Stephen Kaminski.  “It Takes Two to Strangle:  A Damon Lassard Dabbling Mystery”

Look for it coming soon to ebook and print!

BLURB: When the owner of a traveling carnival is strangled––not once but twice––on opening night of the summer fair in Hollydale, the police surmise he was not well liked.  As the head of Hollydale’s citizens association and local liaison with the carnival, Damon Lassard feels obligated to help his dear friend, Detective Gerry Sloman, solve the crime.  Damon is determined to bring the killer to justice, to the fascination of his mother, best gal pal Rebecca, and lovely local weather girl Bethany Krims.  To unravel the threads underpinning this peculiar mystery, Damon will travel far from Hollydale as his quest to find a murderer leads to the discovery of long hidden and horrific crimes.

It Takes Two to Strangle introduces Hollydale’s lovable neighborhood leader, Damon Lassard, and twists the dabbling detective through an intricate maze of greed, deception, and murder.

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And the print cover: