Disney Style Animals on Photos

I was responsible for character designs & layout + illustration rendering.

Collaborative project directed by Jacob Reed, portraits by Clay Larsen.

Behind the Scenes

The vision for these illustrated photos was to have the director interacting with cartoon forest animals that had a classic Disney style, like Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937). The animals would appear as the "director's film crew". Some animals were predetermined with their roles and some items were photoshopped into the scene as rough placement ideas, but the rest was open to interpretation. The overarching goal? Have some fun!

Illustrated photo concept

First I brainstormed multiple animals for the wide shot so I could determine believable placements of the characters per image. I decided to illustrate the close shot first, followed by the wide shot and finally mid shot. This rough composition for the wide shot was selected to move forward.

wide shot rough layout
 

After discussing the characters, I pulled ideas from images like these for inspiration as I designed the film crew. I referenced animals from movies like Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937), Cinderella (1950), and Bambii (1942), but also others like Robin Hood (1973) and Brother Bear (2003).

character reference sheet

The designs for the raccoon, chipmunk, and squirrel characters needed to match their intended roles and personalities. We went through the most revision stages for the raccoon actor character, going from curious little generic raccoon to cocky train robber to engaged and open-to-critique actor, to achieve the final look. We decided the production assistant chipmunk should look excited because he doesn’t always get to be near the director. And the assistant director squirrel: unimpressed but focused, just keeping everything on schedule.

raccoon character illustration render
 
chipmunk cartoon style
squirrel cartoon style
 

The bear and the moose characters were a fun challenge because they needed to not only frame the composition well, but also believably hold the placed objects. My approach was to imagine all the animals have anthropomorphic dexterity, but some of them would opt to hold items according to their unique physical attributes (ex: moose holding item with mouth instead of hoof "hand"). Reviewing the animal animations in films such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937) and Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) helped me imagine how each animal would act following this logic. I also made sure the animals were all relative in proportion to each other. I considered the sizes of these animals in real life, but also took artistic liberties similar to those taken in the animated films.

mid shot layout sketch
mid shot cartoon animals illustration

The Little Details

The following includes character details from the wide shot.

Moose with G&E belt and C-stand, tasked with lighting and rigging

The little errand birds

Turtle enjoying some donuts with otter and birds

A member of the film crew union, a shocked fly, and proof that this was not made by Disney

Bear sound tech with headphones and ComTek receiver

Stork with gaff tape rolls on belt and attentive crew members

Snake and mice gathering on the boom mic

Fox with Cam Assist tool belt, doves, and the little salamander that got fired (didn’t quite make the final comp decision)

Porcupine film crew member

An owl scribe, some trainee birds, and another film crew union member