Walter Wick The creator of I SPY!. As a child… Walter Wick grew up in rural Connecticut with three...
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Transcript of Walter Wick The creator of I SPY!. As a child… Walter Wick grew up in rural Connecticut with three...
As a child…
• Walter Wick grew up in rural Connecticut with three older brothers and a younger sister
As a child…
• He loved exploring the nearby woods. He walked the neighborhood on stilts he made from tree limbs
• He also made skateboards out of old roller skates that he took apart and fastened to pieces of plywood. He says he “loved to tinker and build”
In High School…
• His first serious interest in art began with drawing and painting in high school
• His brother Robert, who worked part time at a camera store, introduced him to photography
In College…
• He studied photojournalism and landscape photography at the Paier College of Art in Hamden, Connecticut
• After graduating in 1973, he worked as a lab technician and product photographer in a commercial studio in Hartford
Oops!....Wow!
• One of his first images came about almost by accident. He was organizing screws, paper clips and other odds and ends. As he began sorting, he liked the way the objects looked spread out on his light box. After hours of careful arranging, he took a picture. This photograph of odds and ends was the spark that helped inspire the first I Spy book! But that would take another 10 years.
Discovered!
• In 1985, the "Odds and Ends" photograph caught the eye of Jean Marzollo, the editor of "Let's Find Out", a kindergarten magazine. She asked him to do a colorful photograph of fasteners for a poster
I SPY is born!
• This poster, in turn, caught the eye of editors in the Scholastic book division. In 1991, he and Jean Marzollo collaborated on I Spy: A Book of Picture Riddles
On his own…
• A Drop of Water: A Book of Science Wonder
• Walter Wick's Optical Tricks. • Can You See What I See?: Picture
Puzzles to Search and Solve
A Genius at Work
Next are some behind the scenes photos of how Walter Wick creates the pictures for
his books
• Here Walter Wick is making things appear to float on the page by gluing his treasures to a piece of glass
I SPY: FANTASY
I SPY: FUN HOUSE
• Walter Wick had to use barbecue tongs to place his treasures on the set so he didn’t knock other pieces down with his hands or arms
I SPY: SPOOKY NIGHT
• Some materials used in this set were: wood, wire, Styrofoam, moss, and a rubber bat
• With the help of two assistants, this set was designed, built, and photographed in seven days.
I SPY: MYSTERY
• Inspired by childhood memories of his grandfather's attic, Walter Wick built an attic in his studio with an old window and paneling
I SPY: SCHOOL DAYS
• Walter Wick used the kind of toys found in a typical classroom for this set
• He wasn't sure what to do at first so with the toys piled on a table, he began to experiment
I SPY: SCHOOL DAYS
• After about two weeks of trial and error, his contraption started to come together
• He continued for several more days to refine the design
I SPY: SCHOOL DAYS
When the balloon popper was finally complete, I took the final picture and Jean Marzollo wrote the riddle. I then decided to see if the machine would
work. Do you think it worked?
I SPY: TREASURE HUNT
• For this one, Walter Wick needed the help of a full-time assistant and three freelance model makers
• Model maker Bruce Morozko built the boat
I SPY: TREASURE HUNT
• Walter Wick made the water out of sheets of rippled Plexiglas (often used on shower doors)
• Look at the lighthouse in the picture at the right. It's too small and much too close to the boat. But in the final picture the lighthouse appears distant!
I SPY: CHRISTMAS
• This is one of Walter Wick’s favorites
• Some of the dolls are his wife's childhood toys. Others were borrowed from neighbors
• He dressed the set like an old toy shop window
Works Cited
• All pictures and information were obtained at:
http://www.walterwick.com/index.htm
• All the clipart is from Microsoft Office