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Posts by Joy Ang

Print of blue tulip and cicadia

Print of blue tulip and cicadia

Original painting of roses and butterfly

Original painting of roses and butterfly

Original painting of roses at twilight

Original painting of roses at twilight

Coral color peony with bee print

Coral color peony with bee print

Lots of new flowers stocked in my online shop. From fine art prints to large originals.

If you are looking for a little color for your space, consider checking out my store. nimasprout.shop

1 week ago 159 65 3 4
white knight in the woods with a dragon hunting him

white knight in the woods with a dragon hunting him

a collection of my landscape paintings

a collection of my landscape paintings

character concepts from the last of us part 2

character concepts from the last of us part 2

character concepts from a catan expansion

character concepts from a catan expansion

Hey all I'm looking for work!
I'm experienced in character design and costume for games and film as well as illustration for books and TTRPGS. I'm based out of BC Canada looking for freelance or full time. My portfolio is linked in the first comment, thank you for shares!

1 month ago 2073 560 17 18

Yes!! I loveddd TF2 and L4D

1 month ago 0 0 0 0
Four panel comic of four kids buckling their seatbelts in a car. In the first panel, one girl, Nami, says, “We’re learning about where cephalopods actually came from!” In the second panel, one girl says, “They came from space, Nami.” In the third panel, a boy leans toward Nami, who has a frustrated expression, and says, “Pfft. They came from a magic dimensional rift deep in the abyss.” In the final panel, the driver, Nami’s sibling, says, “Alright, seatbelts everyone!”

Credit: from SCIENCE COMICS: CEPHALOPODS, © 2026 written by Casey Zakroff and illustrated by Joy Ang, First Second/Macmillan

Four panel comic of four kids buckling their seatbelts in a car. In the first panel, one girl, Nami, says, “We’re learning about where cephalopods actually came from!” In the second panel, one girl says, “They came from space, Nami.” In the third panel, a boy leans toward Nami, who has a frustrated expression, and says, “Pfft. They came from a magic dimensional rift deep in the abyss.” In the final panel, the driver, Nami’s sibling, says, “Alright, seatbelts everyone!” Credit: from SCIENCE COMICS: CEPHALOPODS, © 2026 written by Casey Zakroff and illustrated by Joy Ang, First Second/Macmillan

One comic panel in which four kids and one teen, viewed from the back, stare in awe at a wall of mollusk fossils while other museum-goers pass by. They say, “Whoa.”

Credit: from SCIENCE COMICS: CEPHALOPODS, © 2026 written by Casey Zakroff and illustrated by Joy Ang, First Second/Macmillan

One comic panel in which four kids and one teen, viewed from the back, stare in awe at a wall of mollusk fossils while other museum-goers pass by. They say, “Whoa.” Credit: from SCIENCE COMICS: CEPHALOPODS, © 2026 written by Casey Zakroff and illustrated by Joy Ang, First Second/Macmillan

illustration of a girl opening the door of her bedroom, only to see a giant fart monster lying on her bed laughing and reading her diary

Credit: from GOOD FAMILIES DON’T, © 2026 written by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Joy Ang, Tundra/PRH Canada

illustration of a girl opening the door of her bedroom, only to see a giant fart monster lying on her bed laughing and reading her diary Credit: from GOOD FAMILIES DON’T, © 2026 written by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Joy Ang, Tundra/PRH Canada

illustration of a girl running down the stairs and flapping her arms in panic

Credit: from GOOD FAMILIES DON’T, © 2026 written by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Joy Ang, Tundra/PRH Canada

illustration of a girl running down the stairs and flapping her arms in panic Credit: from GOOD FAMILIES DON’T, © 2026 written by Robert Munsch and illustrated by Joy Ang, Tundra/PRH Canada

🎨 Illustrator spotlight on Joy Ang!

Joy is represented by Kelly Sonnack and interested in illustrating picture books, covers, and graphic novels.

Check out Joy's illustrator page!

@joyang.bsky.social
@ksonnack.bsky.social

1 month ago 25 5 0 0
Video

🍦🐛🫐🌰

9 months ago 91 4 1 0
Screencap of an announcement from Publishers Weekly that reads, "Tundra Books has acquired world rights to a new edition of Good Families Don't by Robert Munsch (l.) (Love You Forever), newly illustrated by Joy Ang. The picture book tells the story about a girl who finds a big, colorful fart lying on her bed. Publication is planned for summer 2026; the author was unagented, and Kelly Sonnack at Andrea Brown Literary Agency represented the illustrator."

To the left is a photo of Robert Munsch and next to it is a photo of me.

Screencap of an announcement from Publishers Weekly that reads, "Tundra Books has acquired world rights to a new edition of Good Families Don't by Robert Munsch (l.) (Love You Forever), newly illustrated by Joy Ang. The picture book tells the story about a girl who finds a big, colorful fart lying on her bed. Publication is planned for summer 2026; the author was unagented, and Kelly Sonnack at Andrea Brown Literary Agency represented the illustrator." To the left is a photo of Robert Munsch and next to it is a photo of me.

I grew up reading and loving the books of fellow Canadian, Robert Munsch. So excited to now be working on this 🍑💨💨💨

11 months ago 97 2 6 0

Yeah!!

11 months ago 1 0 0 0

Some years do be like that! Nice! Nursery plants can be great. Got some late zucchini starts last year and they gave me tons of produce for almost no work 🙌. Hope you're able to get some tomatoes this year : )

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
Picture of my garden where the morning sun back-lit pansies with various beautiful colors - purple ones with a yellow and black center while others are shades of lilac, pink and aubergine.

Picture of my garden where the morning sun back-lit pansies with various beautiful colors - purple ones with a yellow and black center while others are shades of lilac, pink and aubergine.

A picture of newly transplanted basil starts. They sit in fresh dirt in a medium-sized terracotta planter in the garden next to other larger black planters with roses that are just starting to put on leaves and a brown metal raised bed.

A picture of newly transplanted basil starts. They sit in fresh dirt in a medium-sized terracotta planter in the garden next to other larger black planters with roses that are just starting to put on leaves and a brown metal raised bed.

Close up photo of a rhubarb, highlighting the long red stalks amidst lush, large and verdant leaves. New leaves emerge near the base of the plant.

Close up photo of a rhubarb, highlighting the long red stalks amidst lush, large and verdant leaves. New leaves emerge near the base of the plant.

The garden is coming alive 🥰

(L-R) Pansies, freshly planted basil I grew from seed and rhubarb stalks that are ready to be harvested

1 year ago 72 6 6 0

So gorgeous 😭😭

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
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Oh wow, hah! Love that roof 😮‍💨

1 year ago 2 0 0 0

If you see this, post something 🌸 pink 🌸

1 year ago 209 22 1 3
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My current interior design style is ~ squiggly ~

1 year ago 62 2 1 1

Thank you ☺️

1 year ago 2 0 0 0

Thanks, Nicole 🥰

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

😂

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

Aw! I wouldn't be able to sell prints of this

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
A digital painting set in a dense forest with light sparkling through the trees shining on the following chibified monsters:

- A Red dragon near the top left
- A flying Monodrone Modron with a Rust Monster hanging on to its legs
- An Owlbear hanging on top of a beholder
- A Flumph looking surprised
- A displacer Beast
- And a Mimic with a dumb, open-mouthed smile and its purple tongue hanging out

The monsters are all looking over the shoulder of a young girl wearing an archer's garb as well as a boy in a wizard's hat holding a staff with a purple gem at its top. The children have a glow on their faces as they excitedly look at a massive tome bound in red dragon scales.

A digital painting set in a dense forest with light sparkling through the trees shining on the following chibified monsters: - A Red dragon near the top left - A flying Monodrone Modron with a Rust Monster hanging on to its legs - An Owlbear hanging on top of a beholder - A Flumph looking surprised - A displacer Beast - And a Mimic with a dumb, open-mouthed smile and its purple tongue hanging out The monsters are all looking over the shoulder of a young girl wearing an archer's garb as well as a boy in a wizard's hat holding a staff with a purple gem at its top. The children have a glow on their faces as they excitedly look at a massive tome bound in red dragon scales.

A piece I made for the 50th anniversary edition of Magic The Gathering's Monster Manual.

Thanks to AD, Fury Galluzzi - @furygalluzzi.bsky.social, for this very fun assignment!

1 year ago 935 143 17 0

Thank you, Fury ❤️!

1 year ago 0 0 0 0

That's exactly what they taste like 🥰

1 year ago 1 0 0 0
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Aw, thank you !

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

Thank you 🥰 !

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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Excited for when the garden will look like this again

1 year ago 245 7 7 0

Aw, thanks, Trevor! I didn't realize it was out 😆

1 year ago 1 0 0 0

Such a great palette of hellebores 😭🙌

1 year ago 1 0 1 0
a black and white scratchboard drawing of a mountain range at night
in the foreground, bright moonlight shines on rocks 
in the background tall rocky mountains are illuminated by moonlight and between the foreground and the background there is a faint moonbow and raindrops shimmering in the light

a black and white scratchboard drawing of a mountain range at night in the foreground, bright moonlight shines on rocks in the background tall rocky mountains are illuminated by moonlight and between the foreground and the background there is a faint moonbow and raindrops shimmering in the light

A Moonbow

12x16" ink on claybord

1 year ago 1662 411 15 1

lol nope !

1 year ago 0 0 0 0
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Me: ho cookies??
J: no cookies

1 year ago 21 0 0 0
Text: TANGENTS
In geometry, a tangent is when a line touches a curve at a single point.
(images illustrating this, with a curve and a circle touching the lines)
The point where they touch is called the tangent. in a drawing, this is what I call a “bump-up” tangent (more on that
later), but the term “tangent” is a bit more flexible when applied to visual art.
When an artist (or art critic, or art teacher, etc) mentions a tangent, they’re generally referring to any relationship between lines (or elements) in a drawing that interact in a way that the artist didn’t intend.
When I was a teacher, I found it helpful to differentiate the various offenses that fell under the catch-all term “tangents” and give them each a name, to make identification of problem areas in a drawing easier.

An earlier version of these examples was published online in 2011 under the title “The Schweizer Guide to Spotting Tangents.”

Text: TANGENTS In geometry, a tangent is when a line touches a curve at a single point. (images illustrating this, with a curve and a circle touching the lines) The point where they touch is called the tangent. in a drawing, this is what I call a “bump-up” tangent (more on that later), but the term “tangent” is a bit more flexible when applied to visual art. When an artist (or art critic, or art teacher, etc) mentions a tangent, they’re generally referring to any relationship between lines (or elements) in a drawing that interact in a way that the artist didn’t intend. When I was a teacher, I found it helpful to differentiate the various offenses that fell under the catch-all term “tangents” and give them each a name, to make identification of problem areas in a drawing easier. An earlier version of these examples was published online in 2011 under the title “The Schweizer Guide to Spotting Tangents.”

Text:
Long-Line Tangent
The “long-line” tangent is when the line from one subject in the drawing leads into the line of another.
(image where the line from a figure's wide-brimmed hat"becomes" the line of the roof)
See how the hat of this fella runs into the line of the roof? that’s bad!
(image where they do NOT intersect)
Not so bad!
Try to avoid near-tangents, too! Even if a line doesn’t actually connect with another, “close” isn’t great, either.
(image illustrating this point using the same iconography as above)

Text: Long-Line Tangent The “long-line” tangent is when the line from one subject in the drawing leads into the line of another. (image where the line from a figure's wide-brimmed hat"becomes" the line of the roof) See how the hat of this fella runs into the line of the roof? that’s bad! (image where they do NOT intersect) Not so bad! Try to avoid near-tangents, too! Even if a line doesn’t actually connect with another, “close” isn’t great, either. (image illustrating this point using the same iconography as above)

Text:
Bump-Up Tangent
A bump-up tangent is when one element of a drawing bumps up against another.
(image where the outside a figure's elbow touches a wall)
When the bump-up is the result of different subjects touching, correct it by making one clearly overlap the other.
(Same image repeated twice, but in one the elbow is in front of the wall, and in the other behind it)
Either of these works just fine!
Sometimes using the principle of “what’s closer?” overlap won’t always be the best solution. you can do that (like the nose in the example) or you can just redraw the offending lines (like the lapel).
Images: a drawing with tangents, and that same drawing with the tangents eliminated

Text: Bump-Up Tangent A bump-up tangent is when one element of a drawing bumps up against another. (image where the outside a figure's elbow touches a wall) When the bump-up is the result of different subjects touching, correct it by making one clearly overlap the other. (Same image repeated twice, but in one the elbow is in front of the wall, and in the other behind it) Either of these works just fine! Sometimes using the principle of “what’s closer?” overlap won’t always be the best solution. you can do that (like the nose in the example) or you can just redraw the offending lines (like the lapel). Images: a drawing with tangents, and that same drawing with the tangents eliminated

Text:
Beyond just the drawing itself, make sure to avoid bumping your image against the formal components of the comic: word balloons, sound effects, panel borders, etc. They’re in the image, therefore, regardless of what stage they’re introduced into the art, they’re PART OF THE COMPOSITION, and need to be treated as such.

(Image: example drawing where the balloon and panel borders are creating bump-up tangents with the drawing)

There are many publishers who insist on live (editable) balloons and dialogue text to make easier foreign sales and online publishing; I vehemently disagree with this approach, because it makes flexible what should be the sole purview of a cartoonist: the intersection of lines in the art, and lines in the art, like it or not, iNCLUDE the lines that surround a word balloon.

For this reason, LETTERiNG SHOULD BE DONE BEFORE iNKS. Then your inks can accommodate the balloons. This was standard practice until the advent of digital lettering, and while there’s nothing wrong with digital lettering, its placement in the pipeline order generally results in a poorer overall comic than would be the case were it done between the roughs/pencils stage and the inks.

Text: Beyond just the drawing itself, make sure to avoid bumping your image against the formal components of the comic: word balloons, sound effects, panel borders, etc. They’re in the image, therefore, regardless of what stage they’re introduced into the art, they’re PART OF THE COMPOSITION, and need to be treated as such. (Image: example drawing where the balloon and panel borders are creating bump-up tangents with the drawing) There are many publishers who insist on live (editable) balloons and dialogue text to make easier foreign sales and online publishing; I vehemently disagree with this approach, because it makes flexible what should be the sole purview of a cartoonist: the intersection of lines in the art, and lines in the art, like it or not, iNCLUDE the lines that surround a word balloon. For this reason, LETTERiNG SHOULD BE DONE BEFORE iNKS. Then your inks can accommodate the balloons. This was standard practice until the advent of digital lettering, and while there’s nothing wrong with digital lettering, its placement in the pipeline order generally results in a poorer overall comic than would be the case were it done between the roughs/pencils stage and the inks.

Revised the ol' "Schweizer Guide to Spotting Tangents" lecture. 1/2

1 year ago 790 285 15 15
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Ohh! This looks just like what's going on with the blue shift sweet peas. Thank you for sharing!

1 year ago 1 0 0 0