Grace Cho is an advertising professional at one of Canada’s most prominent agencies, Rethink. On her own time, Grace is a sought-after illustrator who has done work for the New York Times, H and M, Netflix and more. Grace is based in Vancouver, British Columbia.
Paula Becker
Paula Becker loves to create fun, whimsical illustrations for a variety of projects, including books, magazines, posters, greeting cards and educational curriculum. She has illustrated more than thirty books for children and her work has been published in many children’s magazines. Paula lives in Pointe-Claire, Quebec.
Caroline Bonne-Müller
Caroline Bonne-Müller was born in France, raised in the Netherlands and has also lived in Malaysia. After studying fashion design in Amsterdam, she worked as a fashion designer for fourteen years. She has been fascinated by picture books since she was a child, but the idea to illustrate them one day was planted after she had her three children. Caroline has illustrated several picture books, including Portrait of an Artist: Claude Monet; Beatrix and her Bunnies: The Story of Beatrix Potter; and So Much More to Helen! The Passions and Pursuits of Helen Keller. Her illustrations have also appeared in magazines, on greeting cards and even on jigsaw puzzles! Caroline now works and lives near Lucerne, Switzerland, looking over a lake and mountains, with her husband, three kids and four cats.
Miki Sato
Miki Sato is a Japanese Canadian illustrator who uses a variety of different papers and fabrics to create layered, three-dimensional-looking illustrations. She enjoys experimenting with new textures and incorporates materials such as embroidery thread, glass beads, cotton balls, and sand into her illustrations. Miki lives in Toronto, Ontario.
David Huyck
David Huyck adores stories of all kinds and any way he can get them. He loves books, comics, animation and movies, and he especially likes when there is a mystery to be solved or a bad guy to vanquish. Some of his favorite stories have been improvised by his friends, sitting around a table with a pile of twenty-sided dice.#Growing up outside of Chicago, candy, cartoons and Legos were almost as important to David as pencils and drawing paper. In more recent years, he has also successfully experimented with printmaking, painting, sculpting, computer programming, and teaching all of these things. His artwork has appeared on T-shirts and toys, in magazines and books, and one thing he made went on a trip to the South Pole.#David lives with his family in a 118-year-old house with bees in the backyard. If he’s not drawing or making stuff in his subterranean studio, he probably joined his family for a walk in the woods, or he rolled a critical fail trying to attack the eye of a Beholder.#Instagram/Twitter: @huyckd Website: davidhuyck.com
