Cinda Jo Bauman: Children's Book Writer & Illustrator, Cut-Paper Artist, and More!

What I’ve Learned Creating the Book Cover Art for GALLOP

A thrilling ride on an untamed horse gives Eli a moment of peace from the anger over his parents’ divorce, especially with the setting sun on his face and the rising moon at his back. I gotta admit, I’m in love with this piece I created with cut-paper for the cover of GALLOP!

This is your sneak peek. I’ve edited the final photo to remove blemishes from glue specks and unwanted paper seams. I can’t wait for you to see the finished cover. The title will be on top and the series name on the right side!

Here are some things I’ve learned creating this piece:

  • The background composition is the hardest part and it takes me forever to decide what I want. Once I get that part figured out, I love creating the main characters. In this case, they are the boy and the horse.
  • I learned not to be afraid to play. If I trim something too small, or glue on the wrong color, I can just go over it. I’m learning not to make everything so precious!
  • It’s okay to ask for help and advice! This is SO necessary, I’m not sure why I get embarrassed asking.
      • My daughter, Brittany, has a GREAT eye. She can instantly tell me when something is off with a proportion or angle.
      • My husband, Greg, will come hang out on the giant beanbag in the art room while I work. Once in a while he’ll say, “That looks funny…” Eventually, I see what he meant and I can correct it.
      • My cousin, Teresa, was an art teacher. She has helped me with all three cover pieces. She gets to see the very rough and usually very ugly first sketches. She always has tips and suggestions that are spot on.
      • My friend, Jill, from my old illustrator’s group is a watercolor artist. She helped so much with improving contrast and suggesting changing lines that were causing confusion.
      • My friend, Martie, has owned horses and raced horses for years. The knowledge she’s shared with me has made such a difference in the final details. She has been surrounded by horses and can tell me things like, “maybe a skoosh wider at the forearm/knee junction.” This is information I can’t always get from reference photos.
    • I can use whatever colors I want and like! The colors don’t have to match what they would be in real life. Actually, I like it better when they don’t! That realization is what is making me an artist.
    • And lastly, few things compare to the feeling I get when I finish an art piece.

    You’ll be hearing more about GALLOP in future posts. Thanks for reading!

    Envy

    Happy Monday!

    Today, I am grateful for fans and air conditioning, and I’m praying for those who are suffering from this heat. Since I’m stuck indoors, I’ve been studying the painting on the wall that I finished a few weeks ago. I’ve also been watching videos of my new favorite artist, Vladimir Volegov, on YouTube. He recently posted videos of himself painting a family portrait, and it is exquisite! That’s not a common word in my vocabulary, but it came to mind as I watched him work. The painting glows. I could feel the warm sun on my skin and hear the water lap against the rocks as I watched him paint. Then, I looked at my own painting again. Insert sad face. I’m proud of my painting, but it’s going back to the art room tomorrow. I know it will be years before I can paint like Mr. Volegov, but I am inspired to try to see the way he sees and learn to add more liveliness and vibrancy to my work. If only it could be as easy as he makes it look! I’ll keep you posted.

    I’ll keep you posted.

    As a 13-year-old everything is changing. Feelings are more intense, and there are new daily challenges. It becomes obvious that the things most kids find simple are not simple for you.
    Going for a walk or entering someplace you’ve never been to makes your heart pound. It’s embarrassing when your hands and voice shake when meeting people. If you finally get the nerve to talk with someone, later you replay everything in your mind, all night long. You might like having friends, but that would require doing things.
    Why can’t your family understand you don’t want to be this way and quit pushing you so hard to be like other kids?
    If this just described you, then you will be able to relate to my book titled, FETCH, because it also describes Frankie.

    The first review posted for FETCH, and I LOVE it!

     “Fetch:Hope & Horses” is a great read.Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2024

    I was almost immediately able to identify with Frankie. Her story is filled with real life ups and downs of a teenager who suffers from panic attacks. She is likeable and her association with the horse , Fetch, is incredible. I enjoyed the entirety of her journey with her friends, family, and Fetch. The author brings the characters to life in an easy flowing manner that makes reading the book very enjoyable. There is always another exciting event in Frankie’s life that adds to the story. I cannot wait for the next book.

    And here is part of another reader’s WONDERFUL review that captures Frankie’s dilemma:

    Frankie Learns How to Cope With Anxiety — One Breath at a Time Reviewed in the United States on June 27, 2024

    “Fetch” is a story about 13-year-old Frankie who was hoping for a new start when her family moved from Tennessee to Montana. But Frankie finds she has taken her anxieties with her — along with the memories of the worst day of her life.


    The reader is not made aware of what happened that day until much later in the book, leaving us wondering and affording us just a little bit of the same angst that Frankie feels constantly in her life. For Frankie, everything in her life is overwhelming. Everything in her life is simply too hard. Every day she just wants to be left alone because life is too hard around other people. Frankie is sure she is different from everybody else and that there is no place in the world where she fits.


    But throughout the book, Frankie is introduced to other people, some who also have to overcome their fears and loneliness — a horse, new friends, kind neighbors, mentors, and the constant of every 13-year-old girl’s life — a boy she like-likes. And Frankie begins to believe that maybe, just maybe, she will learn to fit in.


    FETCH is for sale now on Amazon and other online bookstores like Barnes and Noble, along with SHUFFLE (book 1 in the series, previously titled ONLY MY HORSES KNOW)

    If you read them, please share an online review to help others find my books.

    Please click the link below to enjoy Margo’s blog post about rebranding and retitling books along with the article I wrote.

    https://editor-911.com/blog/f/retitling-and-rebranding-a-book-series-how-do-you-do-it

    The author’s copies of “Fetch,” the second book in the Hope and Horses series, will arrive in a week. I should be thrilled, but instead, I’m feeling a bit overwhelmed about the need to promote my books. I searched “self-promotion for middle-grade horse novels,” and now I’m even more stressed out! There are so many great ideas, but honestly, I’m not comfortable with most of them. Despite that, I’ve been brainstorming to come up with a list of goals:

    1. Learn to talk about my books without freezing up.
    2. Make appointments with the local libraries to donate a copy of each book. I might even create bookmarks or stickers to leave at their check-out desks.
    3. Update the YouTube videos for “Shuffle” and create a new one for “Fetch.” I think it’d be cool to be with horses when I talk about my horse books. Something funny might even happen, but hopefully not that I step in something or get bitten! Then I need to figure out how to get the videos to schools and librarians.
    4. Compile a list of small boutique bookstores or gift shops to contact about selling my books.

    This all takes a lot of courage, and I’m still working on gathering it. I’ll keep you posted on how it’s going! If you have any tips for a shy introvert like me to market independently published books, I’d love to hear them. Thanks for listening!

    Shuffle (previously Only My Horses Know) Available now

    Fetch: Available June 18th

    The Kindle Edition listing is up on Amazon now, and it will be available for purchase June 18th! Release date for the print book is pending. I told you it was getting close. I can’t wait to hold this book!!

    About the cover art

    Like the cover for Shuffle, I created the cover art for Fetch using cut-paper sculpture and then photographed it until I got the shadow effect I liked. Normally, I like a stronger shadow with my cut-paper art but his piece had more detail. The strong shadows were confusing, so I decided to soften them.

    How do you think it turned out?

    What are the books about?

    Book 1, SHUFFLE (previously titled Only My Horses Know and available now), is about how Kylie learns to accept her mom’s mental illness after struggling to keep it a secret from everyone, even her best friend, Joey. Spending time with her horses is the only time she can get away from the worry, exhaustion, and stress that a twelve-year-old shouldn’t have to endure alone. She has an idea of using their horses to help with everyone’s healing, but it is such a big dream that she will somehow need to reach out for help. But that will require sharing her secret. 

    In book 2, FETCH (available soon), Frankie’s anxiety has gotten even worse since the horrifying day that turned everyone against her and took away the one thing she loved – baseball pitching. Even here in Montana, she’s most comfortable hiding inside. When her family convinces her to venture outside, a mystery horse in the woods fetches her baseball! She can’t believe it happened and is sure no one else will either. Surprisingly, she makes friends with Kylie and Joey, who unlike everyone else, never treats her like she’s different. She really likes Joey and doubts he will ever like her back, especially if he hears about what happened at her last baseball game.   

    Book 3, GALLOP (written and will be edited soon, availability TBD), introduces Eli. Eli is angry. His parents are getting a divorce. His best friend, Sam, now has his dad, and his mom’s best friend, Sam’s mom, now also has his dad. That’s messed up enough to make any teen angry and sad. Add to that his mom moved them to a rural town where he has no friends and no plans to make any. Kylie, Joey, and Frankie are determined to change that. Eli discovers that riding crazy fast on a horse is the only thing that gives him a break from the anger and sadness. Even that could change if the horse he connected with gets sold. He must come up with a way to keep that from happening and find a way to forgive the people who turned his life upside down. 

    I’ll keep you posted!

    Thank you for letting me share my excitement. Yippee!!!

    I have been working on a HUGE (3’x4′) painting. Since I’m at a spot where I don’t know what to do next, I’m taking a break to do some book marketing.

    The second book in the Hope and Horses series is on the final round of edits and they are very near complete. I am getting excited! Well, more excited!

    Book one, Only My Horses Know, came out a few years ago. We decided that the cover needed to be rebranded for consistency with the next two books, and to allow for a larger and bolder title font. I liked “shuffle” because in this story, the main character deals with her mother’s mental illness which keeps them shuffling between good days and bad days. She also shuffles between having to be the responsible adult in the family and being a carefree pre-teen. The horses they train shuffle about as horses do, and one horse even shuffles between being calm and being afraid. More to come on this decision in the publisher’s newsletter, but here is the result:

    Shuffle (previously Only My Horses Know)

    What are your thoughts on the new title and cover? Please leave a comment!

    I have a big favor to ask you. Amazon and Goodreads websites did not carry over the reviews from the first title, so now my poor book has zero ratings! I would appreciate it so much if you could take a minute to post a review. If you have already reviewed the book, you can still access Only My Horses Know to simply copy your review to paste it into a new review for Shuffle. If you have read it but not reviewed it, please take a minute to write a review or give me some stars. Amazon requires that you have made a certain dollar amount of purchases to be able to post reviews, so if that doesn’t work for you, please use Goodreads.com. All you need is to create a simple account there. Or, even better, do both!

    You may notice that Amazon has Shuffle categorized as young adult. This will soon be corrected to middle-grade since this story is geared more towards tween aged readers.

    My first goal is to hit 50 reviews since I read it triggers Amazon to give the book more visibility. So come on 50!! Your support means the world to me, and I would hate to lose those first wonderful reviews. Plus, if you could share this post, I may get new readers which would be super. Here are the links to Amazon and Goodreads:

    https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/208828802-shuffle

    Thank you, thank you!

    Whisky Painting

    Hello Whisky! I’ve been waiting a long time to see you finished.

    I remember watching a movie where someone had a trick horse named Whisky. I thought that if I ever got a horse I would use that name. I never got a horse, so I painted one!

    I started this painting years ago, when I took the intuitive painting class that I’ve talked about before. It was almost finished but I was so afraid of ruining it that I got stuck! A few days ago, I felt brave enough to try again. I made corrections, then I came back and corrected my corrections … several times. I may still tweak a few areas, but I’m happy for now.

    Painting Class

    I’ve been painting more lately thanks to a class I took from Heather Sink of Craving Art Studio. Her paintings are full of light and beautifully visible brush stokes. Scenes of the south eastern coast are full of people and horses enjoying the water, boats and marinas, and marsh grasses that you can almost feel their movement in the gentle water waves. When I see them, I think, This is the way I want to paint!

    What I Learned

    She taught me to paint the underpainting in contrasting colors and then to let some of those colors show through. Painting with oil paints again has been a fun challenge. Acrylics dry too fast since I’m a pokey painter. But then, oil can take forever for the layers to dry. My solution is to do the underpainting in acrylic and finish the remaining layers in oil. I love the smooth texture and easy blending of oil paints.

    The paintings Heather instructed turned out really well, I was shocked, ha! Now I just need to remember what I learned for future paintings made from my own references. Here are some photos of paintings from the class.

    Cut-Paper Art

    Creating with cut paper is my favorite. The mini projector I ordered to help with projects came yesterday. It can transfer photos of my sketches right from my phone to the wall where I can trace them larger. Super simple! It will save so much time scaling up art large enough to avoid cutting such teeny-tiny pieces.

    Upcoming Books

    I can’t wait to show you the cover art for book 2 and 3 of the Hope and Horses Series and share the news about what’s been happening with book 1. My publisher, Editor-911 Books, will be posting the article I wrote soon that will tell more about the storylines of the Hope and Horses series. Stay tuned! Here’s a sneak peak of the art for book 2.

    I hope this will encourage reluctant artists like me to stick with it! We all learn at our own pace (mine is that of a tortoise) and create when time and life events allow (I lost both parents and my only brother in 2022. Most days I am still not feeling very creative). I don’t think there’s a rule about how much art you create to call yourself an artist. I’d love to hear about what blocks you from creating and how you’ve overcome them in your own time.

    Happy creating!

    Hello! A few things have happened since my last post. The two most exciting things have to do with the title of this post: The End. 

    First, came The End of my working career. I’ve been blessed with working fulltime, long-term jobs since I was 16-years-old.  On June 30th this year, I RETIRED! It’s been amazing these past few months working on projects whenever I wanted to and when I actually felt creative – napping when I didn’t feel creative. Let’s be honest, naps are great! 

    Secondly, after three retirement checks, I finally realized that my retirement was permanent, real, and wonderful!  The time had come to wake up and spend more time focusing on the next book in my Hope and Horses series. So, I prayed and forced myself to finish the first draft of my second book. At the bottom of the manuscript, I typed: The End. It’s at least fifty re-writes from being finished, but those two words gave me great SATISFACTION! 

    Other news: 

    Only My Horses Know has two promotions going on.  

    The ebook version is free on Amazon for a limited time. Here is the link if you or someone you know would like to download my book:  https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08Q5WD8DR

    Also, since readers have told us they wished this book could be available in schools, because the theme is mental health, and it addresses the stigma that comes with mental illness, Editor-911 Books now offers a sponsorship program that hopes to help that happen. For more information, please click here: https://editor-911.com/sponsor-books-for-kids 

    I’ve sold out of the first two boxes of author copies, and just received more. Please give me a shout if you want to order a signed copy. 

    So many of you have supported me by purchasing my book and sharing my posts on your social media, thank you VERY much! 

    Have a blessed day! 

    Cinda 

    I am so thankful to Linda M. Rhinehart Neas for asking me to write a guest post on her blog, Words from the Heart! Please click below to read Writing About God for the Secular Children’s Audience.

    https://contemplativeed.blogspot.com/2021/06/guest-post-by-cinda-jo-bauman.html