I recently spent the better part of this year working on a single project that is really special to me. I was asked by DAW Books to illustrate one of my favorite novels, ‘The Name of the Wind’, by Patrick Rothfuss, for a special 10th Anniversary Edition of the book.

In total, I created 23 original paintings for the story, and dozens of concepts.

It’s not often a project comes along that one can truly say is “A Dream Project”, but this one really was. It was an official version of one of my favorite novels, and I was given near total creative freedom…  And it was horrible.

I don’t mean to say that working with the Author or the Art Director was horrible. They weren’t. They were both amazing as could be, and are regarded as the best in their fields for good reason. But the pressure of trying to adequately portray source material when you are reeeally in love with it, is an unbelievably stressful task. Nothing you do seems to do it justice. It’s like trying to explain to your friend why your favorite movie is so amazing, but you can only pantomime it. It’s frustrating, and horrible.

Further more, I was given so much creative freedom, that should the final illustrations not look good, I had absolutely no one to blame but myself. Cue the self doubt!

I confess, I choked. A lot. I started this project over multiple times, trying to find the right approach, the right style, the right medium. I would think that I finally got it, only to decide two weeks later that it wasn’t good enough and had to start over… again.

Eventually, deadlines dictated that I had found my ‘chosen style’ whether I liked it or not.

It’s like trying to explain to your friend why your favorite movie is so amazing, but you can only pantomime it. It’s frustrating, and horrible.

Fast forward 6 months, and I’m left with a completed series of paintings that may not be everything I had hoped they would be, but will hopeful make some new reader fall in love with the book as deeply as I have.

I figured I would do a walk-through of my process for our readers, missteps and all.

PART ONE: PLANNING

The project started with me re-reading the book. It had been 10 years since the book came out, and I definitely needed a refresher. I chose to listen to it on audio book so that I could easily sketch as the book was narrated to me.

I put in my headphones, and kept a small journal. Whenever there was a scene in the story I thought would make a nice image, I would jot it down in the form of a crude thumbnail as quickly as I could. Some scenes were so close together, that the sketchbook pages often took on the appearance of a comic. I quickly filled the book with a combination of compositions and note taking.

If there was a lull in the story, I would work on character likenesses, props, creatures, cover concepts and various other items.

When you read a story, it’s easy to have an image of a character in your head that you ‘feel’ is accurate. But therein lies the problem, it’s often a ‘feeling’, and not an actual visual arrangement. When you try to actually capture that quality in a single, stationary image, it becomes a lot more elusive.


PART TWO: COVER CONCEPTS

Once I had gone through the book I immediately began working on cover concepts, which the publisher would need far in advance of the interior art for promotional purposes. I knew by now that I wanted to try a slightly different style than what I usually do, and possibly a different medium as well.

To me, the story in ‘The Name of the Wind’ feels much like an opera. In fact, the main hero’s life even mirrors that of an old ballad told within the book. Additionally, something about the world the hero lives in feels very early 1900s to me. Because of these two things, I kept coming back to visual concepts that I felt were reminiscent of old Parisian Opera posters. That, and embossed leather books harkening back to early adventure novels like those of Jules Verne.

Something about ‘The Name of the Wind’ just feels like an old story. I wanted the book to feel that way too.

Below are some of the cover concepts that I submitted for the 10th Anniversary Edition.

Soon after submitting concepts, the plans for the look of the book changed a bit, and the Publisher hired several more artists to work on the project. Nate Taylor added some maps and appendix art, and Sam Weber ended up painting the final cover.

Although the concepts that you see here never actually made it to the final cover, these images still served to develop and really dictate the look that I wanted the interior art to have. As I would move forward, I would have these unused images in mind.

Stay tuned for the next installment…

Part Three: Selecting Scenes

Coming Soon!

To view a gallery of all the finished works, visit: