Making of Humming-Birds Hummingbirds are the closest living descendants of dinosaurs like the *T. rex*, a fact the author discovered while creating a digital edition of John Gould's *A Monograph of the Trochilidæ, or Family of Humming-Birds*. Published between 1849 and 1861, Gould's five-volume work features 360 detailed illustrations and is considered a masterpiece of ornithological illustration, though his wife Elizabeth Coxen and Edward Lear contributed heavily without credit. The author used high-quality scans from the Biodiversity Heritage Library to build the digital edition, designing a homepage with a murmuration of hummingbird illustrations to engage new visitors. Making of Humming-Birds By Nicholas Rougeux, posted on October 1, 2023 in Art /blog?cat=16 , Web /blog?cat=12 Hummingbirds are the closest living descendants of dinosaurs like the T. rex—one of many fascinating facts I learned while working on the digital edition /hummingbirds of A Monograph of the Trochilidæ, or Family of Humming-Birds. Gaining unexpected knowledge has to be one of the best parts about working on a project. As has become common with my digital editions, I stumbled upon the subject matter by accident browsing through rare book catalogs online. It’s become an oddly satisfying pastime of mine to peruse them in the hopes of finding something that catches my eye and triggers a new interest. Source material Hummingbirds are fascinating animals and comprise far more species than I imagined. From their ability to hover in the air to their beautiful plumage, they are a standout in the animal world—so much so that many ornithologists of the past had a hard time agreeing on how they should be classified. Hummingbirds caught the attention of English ornithologist John Gould https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John Gould early in his career and he spent much of the later years of his life up until his death compiling an impressive catalog of them. Gould published several monographs on birds but his greatest interest was focused on hummingbirds. He accumulated a large collection of hundreds of species and traveled around the world to see them while corresponding with other ornithologists about their own collections. Between 1849 and 1861, Gould published one of his most famous works titled A Monograph of the Trochilidæ, or Family of Humming-Birds, comprising 5 volumes issued in parts and 360 strikingly beautiful illustrations of hummingbirds. Accompanying each illustration was a brief description of the bird that included details on its habitat, anatomy, behavior, and more based on his personal experiences with them and others’.The monograph is considered one of the finest examples of ornithological illustration ever produced, as well as a scientific masterpiece. Included in the lengthy introduction was also a complete list of 416 species. A supplementary volume by R. B. Sharpe was published in 5 parts between 1880 and 1887 after Gould’s death with an additional 58 plates and many descriptions written by Gould before his death. Though Gould is often named as the main author and illustrator, his wife Elizabeth Coxen https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elizabeth Gould illustrator and Edward Lear https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward Lear are known to have contributed heavily http://www.booktryst.com/2010/12/strange-case-of-britains-audubon-and.html , with Gould taking credit for their work. Much to my pleasant surprise, the scans of Gould’s monograph available were some of the best scans I’ve come across for any project. They were high resolution, great quality, had great color, and no pages were missing. That alone motivated me to consider making a digital edition. Scans can be found on the Internet Archive, contributed by the Biodiversity Heritage Library, which has more details about each: - Volumes I–V: Biodiversity Heritage Library https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/51056 - Volume I: Internet Archive https://archive.org/details/monographTrochi1Goul / Biodiversity Heritage Library https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/108333 - Volume II: Internet Archive https://archive.org/details/monographTrochi2Goul / Biodiversity Heritage Library https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/108332 - Volume III: Internet Archive https://archive.org/details/monographTrochi3Goul / Biodiversity Heritage Library https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/109468 - Volume IV: Internet Archive https://archive.org/details/monographTrochi4Goul / Biodiversity Heritage Library https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/108334 - Volume V: Internet Archive https://archive.org/details/monographTrochi5Goul / Biodiversity Heritage Library https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/108806 - Supplement: Internet Archive https://archive.org/details/monographTrochiSupplementGoul / Biodiversity Heritage Library https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/bibliography/51215 Introducing a monograph A key goal I had for this project was to find an interesting way to introduce the subject of hummingbirds to new visitors. I wanted to highlight the large variety of hummingbirds in Gould’s monograph on the home page as a way to engage visitors so I planned to create a murmuration https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swarm behaviour that included a hummingbird from each illustration. Ironically, hummingbirds travel alone https://www.birdsandblooms.com/birding/attracting-hummingbirds/five-fascinating-facts-about-fall-hummingbird-migration/ and not in flocks, but displaying them in a murmuration still felt like a fun design exercise. As part of an early rough mockup for the home page, I created a wave-like murmuration of placeholder bird symbols. The idea was that the flowing nature of the birds would encourage visitors to scroll down and be introduced to the areas of the monograph. Even after cobbling together a rough working version, I enjoyed the experience of scrolling down and watching the birds shift back and forth with each new topic. Happy with early results, I restored about 100 illustrations to see how it would look comprising the actual illustrations. One of the challenges I encountered in creating this graphic was positioning each illustration evenly. As far as I knew, there wasn’t an easy way to evenly distribute irregular shapes hummingbirds in another irregular shape murmuration . However, there was a way to distribute a set number of points in an irregular shape randomly, which I could use as guides to start and then arrange the images manually. To make the murmuration, I did the following: - Roughly outline the shape for the murmuration in Figma. - Export the shape as an SVG. - Import the SVG into NodeBox and position points inside the shape using the scatter node. - Take a screenshot of the points generated by NodeBox and import that into Figma. - Manually place an illustration on each dot. - Manually shift illustrations around so they’re evenly spaced. While this involved a lot amount of manual work, it was a lot more efficient than guessing what the spacing should be on the fly. The random distribution of points calculated by NodeBox was enough to ensure that illustrations were spaced out enough at the start so there was minimal guess work in how much they needed to be spaced out for the final image. I used a similar technique to make the collage for British & Exotic Mineralogy /blog/?id=84 where I started with a grid of points and then shifted them around methodically to find their final position. I had to wait until I restored all the illustrations to make the final murmuration that featured a bird from each one. However, I also wanted to sort them by color, which created an additional challenge: how could I distribute 400+ illustrations evenly and arrange them by color efficiently? As I restored each illustration, I sampled the key identifying color from it and kept it in a database while I was building out there rest of the digital edition. Once I had those colors, I sorted them by hue and then placed them in that order during step five above. That way, when I spaced them out in step six, it formed a subtle spectrum starting from reds, purples, and oranges at the top and transitioning to yellows, greens and blues at the bottom. At each curve of the murmuration is a highlight of the digital edition to explore: all the illustrations, Gould’s original introduction, and more information about the project. To ensure these stayed in the correct positions at all screen sizes when the murmuration graphic was was resized, I employed what I thought was a clever idea: I measured the rough vertical size of each curve and made sure each highlight always fit in that gap. The murmuration is always as wide as the browser so that governs the size of the section containing each highlight, which is measured in percentages and absolutely positioned in a container holding them and the murmuration.