Jack Hunter’s illustration of Styrofoam in the landfill.
Elizabeth Fram’s recycled art. Send your recycled art to: info@earthdaycarol.org
We’d love to post it on the blog!
Thank you to translation coordinator, Stu Fram. Stu is a senior Human Ecology major at Middlebury College. At school, he hurdles for the track team, sings in an a cappella group, and runs an organization called EatReal that works with Dining Services to increase the amount of local food served in the dining halls.
Illustrator Jack Hunter is developing the characters in Earth Day Carol. Here’s a sketch of the ghost Plastic Future.
Elizabeth Fram’s beautiful recycled art is now available on the site. Elizabeth exhibits her intensively hand-stitched textile collages nationally. She currently lives with her husband and Greater Swiss Mountain dog, Lola, in the near net-zero house they built on a hill in Vermont.
You can see the Chinese translation up on the website. Thank you to Wenqiang (William) Yue. William is currently an undergraduate at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TN due to graduate in May of 2013. He was born in China but immigrated to the States at six, where he has been ever since.
Meet the illustrator of Earth Day Carol, Jack Hunter. Jack creates illustrations and designs from his home studio in Phoenix, Arizona. He often combines traditional and digital media when making art.