Images

Below you can see some examples of my work. Please contact me at eleanor@eleanortodd.co.uk if you are interested in something similar - or completely different.

Pictorial map of St John's

A pictorial map of St John's Church, Edinburgh, for visitors to its Festival of Spirituality

poster on environmental issues

I designed this centre-spread for the launch of Living Lightly (www.livinglightly24-1.org.uk). Living Lightly is a lifestyle initiative from Christian conservation organisation A Rocha (www.arocha.org.uk) to encourage its supporters, as people who care about the natural world, to make a commitment to reducing their environmental footprint. So the poster frames environmental facts and tips inside the seasons, the key types of wildlife habitat, and quotations from the bible about the relationship between humanity, God, and the natural world.

Painted tiles

I painted these tiles for my kitchen with a "rabbit and dandelion" design and a central panel showing my house, an 1890s Edinburgh baronial tenement with "The Lord reigneth, let the earth rejoice" in a panel on the outside. Thanks to Doodles Ceramics for the tiles, the paints, the kiln, and the cups of tea!

tiles featuring rabbits, dandelions, and my house
Blue and white plate featuring a Cumbrian cottage

Painted plate

Another house, this time a cottage in the Lake District.

Edinburgh textiles

A screen-printed jumble of Old Town buildings stitched together with some Edinburgh quotations, Edinburgh characters past and present, and splashes of colour.

Screen print based on the Edinburgh Old Town
Screen printed rabbits

Rabbit textiles

These little rabbits were enjoying the evening sun in Coniston village when I sketched them. They were charming in real life and they are still charming in print!

Bookmarks

Bookmarks designed for the Church of Scotland General Assembly, depicting "no-one pours new wine into old wineskins" and "the mustard seed is the smallest of all seeds, yet when it grows it becomes a tree"

two bookmarks
Love Bade me Welcome card

Love bade me welcome

Card for a wedding, featuring a poem by George Herbert.