
Janet Hamlin’s poster of Sasquatch promotes North Fork Survivors a popular tourist destination in Washington State, which displays “footprints” and a variety of Bigfoot lore. (more)
Janet Hamlin shares a quartet of posters she has produced in the course of her career, honoring Martin Luther King Jr. (more)
Janet Hamlin picks up her amazing reportage assignment at Camp Justice, Guantanamo, after more than a year’s absence. “Nashiri, accused USS Cole bombing suspect, had an arraignment today and it is a death penalty case,” she explains. (more)
Here is a recent illustration by Janet Hamlin for Newsday, to accompany an Opinion article focusing on possible reasons for the lack of response from peaceable countries, including America, to violence in Syria. (more)
Janet Hamlin was recently asked to illustrate an Op-Ed piece on programs for autism and how budget cuts could affect them. The focus was on children, and how programs specifically for them can help bring a quality of life, expression and awareness. (more)
Janet Hamlin created a cover and four inside spots for the latest Pace University Annual Report. (more)
Janet Hamlin created this poster image for OneAmerica, a minority-owned multicultural company. Janet broke down MLK’s “I Have a Dream” speech into a word cloud to make a graphic background that has meaning as well. (more)
Janet Hamlin’s reportage drawings have been the consistent eyes of Guantanamo’s courtrooms since the offshore 911 terrorism trials began in 2006. This month finds Janet back in Cuba, dividing her attention between two cases: al Qosi and Omar Khadr. (more)
Janet Hamlin recently completed two pieces for Newsday's Opinion editorials. The hand with the stopwatch is about Long Island having hospitals that can deal in a timely and effective manner with stroke victims- time always being of essence in an injury, but with a stroke what you do-and when, can make a huge difference in the outcome. (more)
Court artist Janet Hamlin sketched suspected terrorist Colleen LaRose for the Associated Press yesterday in Philadelphia. LaRose, who dubbed herself "Jihad Jane" online, appeared before U.S. Magistrate Lynne A. Sitarski at the U.S. Courthouse there. LaRose pleaded not guilty to a four-count indictment charging her in an overseas terrorist plot. (more)