Red Riding Hood, a game

in art •  8 years ago  (edited)

“If you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairy tales. If you want them to be more intelligent, read them more fairy tales.” - Albert Einstein

And let them play the game too.

A couple of years ago I started to figure out a way to combine my love for fairy tales with my illustration in an unexpected way.

I decided to turn one of my favorite classics, Little Red Riding Hood, into a board game.

In elementary school I was always excited by shadow box projects. I loved dioramas and those big painted background settings in natural history museums as well - anything that invited the spectator in to another believable world. The idea of creating a 3D fairy tale landscape experience was intriguing. Why not make it interactive?


Initial concept sketch

What do board games have? I was not sure how to put this all together. I really wanted a storybook experience where the game itself would be housed. In order to keep it from being huge and cumbersome, I designed it to be like a giant storybook that opened. Inside would be the game and its pieces. But I needed a clever "cover." I didn't want a simple boring flat top. My 3D wheels kicked into high gear.

I picked up some artboard panels that were like box lids. I stacked two on top of each other, right side up. On the bottom I would store the pieces and instructions. The top would hold the shadow box like setting. Hinges would hold them together.

Each were primed with gesso and set aside as I made a design for the tree to attach on the top.


The top of the box - the game is inside

I designed a box with a cutout tree on top with the background painted in.

On Etsy I found antique millinery supplies, things a hat maker would have used to adorn fancy hats long ago. Those became my leaves for the tree fastened on top of the wooden case.

It was difficult to put the thatched roof on the cottage. I’m still figuring out the best way do it. I wanted to create a little world that invites you into the setting of the story, somewhere deep in the Black Forest.


Thatched cottage detail with coconut fiber roof - each tiny stalk had to be applied with tweezers. I'm going to make it a few layers deep

Next I ordered a tiny pair of antique hinges from Ebay and coated the outside of the box with a light stain.


One of the hinges that holds the box together

How to design the game board? A long folded cardboard piece wouldn't work to keep this project in a manageable size. I came up with the idea of using four masonite pieces that fit together in puzzle fashion. I had to decide the mechanism in which the players could advance. How about another masonite square with an antique spinner? I could color coordinate where the spinner landed with the colors on the path.


In progress


Close up of spinner my husband made with a CNC router

To keep things interesting, if the spinner landed on the crow or the spilled picnic, the player would move back a few paces.


What the different colors indicate

I painted the inside of the box green like moss, and fitted the divisions inside so that all the pieces would fit snugly together.


A view inside


Detail with vintage dice

I had my husband help me cutout the wooden pieces with his jigsaw, and then I painted them.


The game pieces. I want to do a whole series of hand painted fairy tale characters like this. They would be perfect lining the shelves in my studio

Since Little Red Riding Hood, also known as Little Red Cap, was originally published in German, I thought it fitting to include written instructions for the game in both English and German, then hand bind them using red bookbinding thread. Tiny silver charms add the finishing touch. My best friend's mother helped me with the German translation.


Game instructions


Template piece I used as a guide for making the holes for the binding - this way you know exactly where to put the holes for sewing the signatures (groups of folded paper) together


It's easiest to put it in the middle of the group of open pages. Make sure it's exactly to scale. It will save endless mistakes if you are careful first


Inside view showing the red thread binding


Some bookbinding tools of the trade - from left to right: My beloved Japanese hole punch (mainly used for harder board cover material), bookbinding thread, awl for making smaller holes in paper, template guide for hole punching in the binding shown with needle, and bone folder. A bone folder is a fabulous little tool everyone should own; it gives you sharp creases when you fold paper if you rub it over the fold


Wonderful samples of bookbinding thread you get when you place an order from Colophon Book Arts Supply - nice to be able to feel it and see the colors in person

This was the most fun I have ever had in combining my love for book illustration with bookbinding. I plan on doing many more projects like this with different fairy tales in the near future.

All images were hand painted with acrylic paint.

Illustrations and book project ©Johanna Westerman 2016

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To everyone who has commented, thank you from @fairytaleife. As some of you may know, my two teenagers Sam and Catherine made an account to post about their travels under the name @worldly. I didn't notice that they were still logged in on my computer. So all the replies and comments coming from me show up under @worldy. But know it's me, their mother. Thank you all for your support and encouragement.

I love this so much!! Your work is absolutely incredible, I am so inspired by you! Thank you for coming on here and sharing.

@kaylinart, thank you so much. I am equally inspired by your posts. I'm glad we have crossed paths here!

@kaylinart, that's me - was signed in to my kids' account. :o

I couldn't agree more!!!

Glad to see art blogs getting attension. Great subject nitche . Thank you for sharing your process.

I also enjoy @fairytalelife blogs.

Thank you, @paquito

Thanks, @paco.

This is so amazing! I love it. It's so creative and charming. I would totally play this game, and buy it for my friends and family. You truly have a gift, and I thank you for sharing it with us.

Wow, @stephmckenzie. That's the ultimate compliment and I thank you from the bottom of my heart. I'm so glad you think so.

The artwork is astonishing. The attention to detail in the game board, the hand-crafted book, the concept... Adorable.

What an incredibly creative idea. You should totally sell these!

Didn't know that fairytale can make our kids smart. Thanks for this information, I appreciate every little thing that has something to do with the development of our kids.

Oh yes, @juvyjabian. I know this to be a fact. Thank you for reading and getting inspired.

  ·  8 years ago (edited)

I like how @fairytalelife has made the game very interesting and interactive. Further adding to their development.

I hadn't thought about it that way myself too. I suppose it should be obvious if you think of it in terms of a child instinctively doing that they need to do for their own mental development. In other words, they are instinctively doing that they need to do to grow smart.

Then when you think about it, we parents may even be suppressing or discouraging it just by the act of not reinforcing creativity like we could. What I am trying to say is that we might encourage other things more that are not so much in line with their natural tendency to be creative such as doing as they are told or getting ready for school quickly.

It's really got me thinking.

@skum, that's exactly my point - "we parents may even be suppressing or discouraging it just by the act of not reinforcing creativity like we could." We often coddle our children more than we realize by homogenizing the very stories that let their imaginations soar. Fairy tales are stories children can naturally relate to. They encourage problem solving skills and show models of societal expectations that are encouraged and discouraged. Unfortunately, our education system is quick to label kids who think outside of the box and diagnoses/treatment plans are quickly implemented, often leading to medications that dull their creativity just to make them easier to manage in class. I'm glad this post inspired you. I'm thinking I might write more about this subject.

That's me, by the way :)

LOL, I was wondering what the go was with the other name.

This is amazing; i LOVE it- and looks like a lot of fun to make! upvoted!

Thank you, @magdalenaruth. It was fun. I can't stop fiddling with it.

“If you want your children to be intelligent, read them fairy tales. If you want them to be more intelligent, read them more fairy tales.” - Albert Einstein

What a great quote. When I think of my children and the development of their brains, I mentally picture their little neurons firing away in their heads. I like challenging them with new things and interacting with them a lot by having fun together. It’s hard to describe but I think the more positive brain activity and stimulation they can have the better off they will be later on in life so I can definitely relate to this quote.

“A couple of years ago I started to figure out a way to combine my love for fairy tales with my illustration in an unexpected way.”

In my opinion encouraging creativity along with getting other things right such as spending quality time with your children so they develop their self-confidence, as well as spending time just having fun with them sets the foundations up for an intelligent, healthy adult.

So many of today’s societal issues I suspect would become less evident over time if children were receiving all of the positive mental stimulation they need. Such a very well thought out and executed project your game is. Down to every detail. The depth of layering and the feel of different textures along with the interesting pictures and bright colors. There is something so pure about the imagination of children, before life gets in the way LOL.

@pierce-the-veil: Wonderful Sentiments @fairytalelife.

Your post is an excellent example of "Partnering" as opposed to "Parenting".

I've done a few radio shows on this topic...

It is nice to see this being put into practice.

Accordingly, Up vote for you.
commercial photography locations

I love this video!! Struggling with acceptance for my vision to do more and homeschool... I have totally zero skills to do it and people around me say I will screw up my kids.

Total social pressure.

@pierce-the-veil: I believe in you @bethsarim, all the skills you need are inherent within you and I truly believe that it is all negotiable.

Much love!
@pierce-the-veil

What a great idea @fairytalelife The kids should love it, I know I do!
Two thumbs up!

This is awesome. I do a lot of little projects around the house, for myself and my daughters. I turned an old gazebo into a clubhouse for my older daughter, complete with pavingstone floors, electricity and furniture. My younger daughter is big on Cinderella, so you just gave me an idea for my next project!!!

@jeremyfromwi, that is something i would love to see. Your daughters are fortunate to have a dad who understands them so well! Thank you.

@jeremyfromwi, @worldly is me, the way.

Making a fairy garden is a fun one :D

This is beautiful, awesome, and educational. I can visualize a Hansel & Gretel and many other stories taking new life with your idea.

@jaysanz, you know that one is on my list. Thank you. I really appreciate it!

This looks great! What will happen with the game next? Are you offering it for sale, will people (children?) play it?

Thank you, @bitbutter. I'm not sure yet. Perhaps this is my prototype? :)

Wow, this is seriously beautiful and inspiring. Often times I think of taking on projects like this but you had a vision and followed through and executed it perfectly. I am seriously inspired. Thanks for this.

Thank you, @lauralemons. It wasn't all smooth sailing. I put it away for a while out of frustration but may be time to revisit. You know how that goes.

Wow, its incredible @fairytalelife. I made something like that for my son, BUT of course it was not so perfecty done, unfortunately can`t find it to make photo

Incredible, @fairytalelife!!! I would love to have one of these for my nephew. I like the Einstein quote too! Thanks for sharing your gift.

Thank you, @ericvancewalton. That Einstein quote - my favorite quote of all time. Are you surprised?

Not at all, @fairytalelife! I'd like to have it framed underneath your owl print. That would be an awesome pairing!

SOOO this is awesome! My wife will love this. After I show her I guarantee she decided to make a fairy tale game with our daughter.

@exitmass, then that will make me very happy! Maybe you can post it?

And thank you!

I will!
Although our daughter is only 1 and a half.. I could see her ready for it sooner rather than later.
My wife is already marking us down on the calendar to visit the waldorf school in October for open house -- we don't plan on sending her there until she's 7! But the plan is to home school until then.

Ah yes. Another like-minded parent :)

Oh my god. Your work is so beautiful! Thank you for sharing with us.

I love this! Up voted and followed ☺️

Wow this is amazing!!

Thanks, Raz!

awesome! congrats!

Such an awesome project! The lid is so beautiful. Thank you for sharing the whole process with us by adding photos to your post. Love it!

@fairytalelife, this is absolutely brilliant, I love it!! I want one .

Thanks, @natureofbeing. Maybe someday! ;)