Want to buy or sell something? Check the classifieds
  • The Fedora Lounge is supported in part by commission earning affiliate links sitewide. Please support us by using them. You may learn more here.

WWII aviation artist - favourite picture?

Stearmen

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,202
speaking of Taylor, this is one of my favorites. Puttalam Elephants. Royal Naval Air Station, Puttalam, Ceylon. Elephants were used to get the Corsairs out of the mud when they slid of the runway.
som_yeorn_e01572_large_zps2ab29486.jpg
raf-base-kalpitiya_zps3561247c.jpg
 

Stearmen

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,202
Love the big de Havilland's! Would give anything to own, and be able to afford to operate a de Havilland DH.89 Dragon Rapide.
nfk_nam_cnam_2003_290_large_zpsbc0c1a5b.jpg
 
Last edited:

MikeKardec

One Too Many
Messages
1,157
Location
Los Angeles
Ah yes, Dietz is another great painter. I like the way his work always focuses more on the people surrounding the aircraft than the planes themselves. Adds a real human element to it all.

I've always liked Jim Dietz, he illustrated three book covers that I art directed, not aviation more of a 1930s maritime/adventure flavor. Here are some really terrible reproductions ... I've got the transparencies somewhere, maybe the garage ...

51GJSDM7DGL.jpg

51y+EaLh3HL._SL500_.jpg

1989yonderingrevisededition.jpg
 

p51

One Too Many
Messages
1,119
Location
Well behind the front lines!
Another big fan of Jim Deitz. I'm in a few of his paintings, and I've posed in his personal studio which is in his garage.
For example, I'm the guy yukking it up with the medic to the far right, holding a FG-42 rifle...
jd-pr-074.jpg
 

nick123

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,371
Location
California
I've always liked Jim Dietz, he illustrated three book covers that I art directed, not aviation more of a 1930s maritime/adventure flavor. Here are some really terrible reproductions ... I've got the transparencies somewhere, maybe the garage ...

View attachment 20504

View attachment 20503

View attachment 20505

I wonder what his going rate is. :)

I'm having an amateur try at writing a book, and my ego is so inflated I'm already thinking about cover art. lol
 

MikeKardec

One Too Many
Messages
1,157
Location
Los Angeles
I wonder what his going rate is. :)

I'm having an amateur try at writing a book, and my ego is so inflated I'm already thinking about cover art. lol

Hopefully your ego and dreams of cover art will keep you writing when lack of creative drive or too much insecurity threaten ... really, just keep going, don't ever be afraid to be bad ... that's what rewriting is for! The biggest secret in the business is "don't stop."

I'm guessing that his reproduction rate (my term for his retaining the original and your only being able to use the art for the book or it's promotion) is over $4,000. At $10,000 it's getting off the charts, not for a "fine" artist selling paintings in a gallery but for a commercial artist doing covers. I don't know if Jim is even considering commercial art any longer.

If you are self publishing you want to spend as little as possible and if you end up with a publisher, they'll pay for it ... almost certainly not over $10,000! If you pay to reuse an already existing piece of art it tends to be quite a bit cheaper.

Sorry. I went all publishinggeek on you for a minute!
 

nick123

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,371
Location
California
Hopefully your ego and dreams of cover art will keep you writing when lack of creative drive or too much insecurity threaten ... really, just keep going, don't ever be afraid to be bad ... that's what rewriting is for! The biggest secret in the business is "don't stop."

I'm guessing that his reproduction rate (my term for his retaining the original and your only being able to use the art for the book or it's promotion) is over $4,000. At $10,000 it's getting off the charts, not for a "fine" artist selling paintings in a gallery but for a commercial artist doing covers. I don't know if Jim is even considering commercial art any longer.

If you are self publishing you want to spend as little as possible and if you end up with a publisher, they'll pay for it ... almost certainly not over $10,000! If you pay to reuse an already existing piece of art it tends to be quite a bit cheaper.

Sorry. I went all publishinggeek on you for a minute!

Hey, I REALLY appreciate your words! That meant a lot. Thank you.
 

MikeKardec

One Too Many
Messages
1,157
Location
Los Angeles
Getting published has never been easier. Writing is as hard as ever!

Never be afraid of rewriting, it is your truest friend but NEVER do it until you are done with your first draft (you must get to the end, you MUST get to the end). Get done. Put it aside for a month or two, you'll see it with fresh eyes. Never ask anyone to read it then ask if it's any good ... they are not qualified to say. Ask them instead to tell you the story, just to tell you what happens. Fasten your safety belt, sometimes they say strange things. This is good input, it's what they were thinking while they were reading ... even if it's a bit weird. If they tell you you were doing something that you weren't doing and you like it, feel free to steal it. You DID make them think it. Prose is a collaboration between the writer and the reader. Later, once you have polished and polished try reading it aloud ... that's a true test of courage!

But just get done ... do not rewrite or revise any more than you have to in order to Just. Keep. Going.

Sorry for the thread jack!
 

Forum statistics

Threads
109,303
Messages
3,078,309
Members
54,244
Latest member
seeldoger47
Top