Physical uncolouring book


This has been a pretty busy week for me and in situations like this I end up getting an "idea diarrhoea": I start 5 different projects and end up finishing none.

This has its upsides, I'm not complaining: I have unexpected 2 article drafts, plus one small project to share next week (working title: dog mode or goblin mode–to be decided).

So, in the spirit of:

a) being useful,
b) working with the garage door up,
c) keeping myself organised and accountable,

I thought it would be fun to share a few words about an idea I've been entertaining for the past few weeks: the physical, printed Uncolouring Book! I want this post to illustrate my thinking process about early stage ideas.

If you haven't played with it, do this now (Uncolouring Book). Just make sure you reach the end and don't share it with kids, please.

We'll start with an imaginary, idealised version of a printed Uncolouring Book, follow up with the reasons why one should or should not make it, and finish with a quick sanity check.

How would it look?

My outlaw (ex-father-in-law) is a prolific playwright. Since the 90s his screenwriting process has been roughly like this:

  1. come up with a preliminary idea of the play
  2. write a fake, extremely positive newspaper review of said play
  3. let it sit in the drawer for a month or two
  4. dig it out and write the script over the course of 2-3 days, keep writing non-stop
  5. start the rehearsals and make adjustments as you go

How agile. I'm happy to live in a world where a tiny private theatre, located in a forest, smack in the middle of the mountains on the Polish-German border, a place owned by literal clowns had better product people than Amazon, decades later. Always bet on clowns.

Let's write our own review then!

Disclaimer: I'm not a native English speaker, and I REFUSE to put it in ChatGPT with a style prompt, so things will get cheesy, but more like a smoked Polish mountain cheese. Just go with it.

The Porto Review

I've never seen anything quite like the 7th edition of the already successful Uncolouring Book. It's weird, funny, bittersweet and sometimes surprisingly dark, but far from being cynical or nihilistic. It's an invitation for you to remind yourself what it means to be a child. Yet, it's by no means infantilising. If anything it expects you to play along, albeit in a slightly deceptive way.

The book/toy is only 23 pages long, yet it manages to trick you into from following a story to inadvertently becoming an author. Without spoiling much, it achieves that through a change in tone. The author's voice slowly blends with yours. It's not interactive fiction or a game, although it shares some tools borrowed from these media.

It's just you, a confusingly fragrant pencil and a few sheets of paper, covered with watercolour splatter, closer to a Rorschach test or a Cure album cover than I'd like to admit. It feels so fucking good when nothing else competes for your attention, no social media, no ads, your phone is dead. God, this pencil smells good. Did I say fucking? Shit! The idea that this is a physical object that can't be edited, nothing can be retouched, makes it surprisingly hard to draw the first lines (you don't want to mess it up). But then, towards the end, you become more comfortable with your mistakes. It's a freeing experience. You gravitate towards them, like a moth, enticed and captured by the light of a burning pencil, I mean a candle.

$29.99 at Narnes and Boble. Buy here.

Let's summarise the review. Remember this is the ideal. Don't worry about feasibility now.

Things not mentioned in the review:

Alternative approaches:

Why?

Why do I want to make a physical version of a bittersweet, slightly deranged toy website for adult children/immature adults (pick one)?

  1. People seemed to really, really like it. OK, app went mildly popular for a moment, but most importantly I received a tonne of positive and inspiring feedback, met a bunch of beautifully weird and creative people calling me via Say Hi. People seem to genuinely enjoy it. I want more of that.
  2. I like it. I think that's even more important.
  3. I miss playing with physical objects. I think you might too.
  4. I make toys in my spare time. I want the book to be a toy.
    1. My house was build on top of a carpentry workshop, and sometimes we'd make our own toys (like a bow and arrows, unfortunately the latter made from an insanely old and expensive bog wood, I still remember the haunted expression on my dad's face when he noticed that we tried to turn his samples into arrows)
  5. I have print experience, but I've never designed a book from scratch. I also worked in publishing but as a vendor or artist, never as an author. This seems like a neatly-shaped gap to fill.
  6. I think you'll like it. At least I think you won't hate it.

Why not?

At this stage it's better to focus on what's possible, prioritise creativity over feasibility. It's better to have a good pool of ideas to choose from than limit yourself early. Separate divergent and convergent thinking modes. I will inject enough criticism into the idea. Trust me, I'm an engineer.

But let's give it a shot:

  1. I might lose money and I'm not working full-time anymore
  2. I learned from HackerNews that someone made an anti-colouring book.

I'll probably lose money in the short-term. The Anti-colouring book is lovely, but also completely different in its scope, style, and approach. I'm happy I didn't see it before making the Uncolouring Book.

Why I should and can do this

What would I need to learn

How I feel writing this?

Curious, filled with joy, scared.


OK, that's all for today. I hope you've learned something.

Would you be interested in playing with a physical, printed Uncolouring Book? If so, how would you like it to look? Let me know.

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a giant foot-shaped snail with a house on its back. the house is still in construction, with a big crane towering above it The image is a stylized black-and-white illustration. In the lower left corner, there is a small, cozy-looking house with smoke rising from its chimney. The smoke, however, does not dissipate into the air but instead forms a dark, looming cloud. Within the cloud, the silhouette of a large, menacing face is visible, with its eyes and nose peeking through the darkness. The creature, perhaps a cat, appears to be watching over the house ominously, creating a sense of foreboding or unease.