Showing posts with label doodle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label doodle. Show all posts

Thursday, March 26, 2015

A Drawing and Doodling Journal


This past Christmas, my daughter and I received blank journals. We decided together that we would draw something every day in 2015 and share what we were doing.

My first drawing
Well, that idea sort of went the way of many new year's resolutions.



We were diligent in January, a little slack in February, and completely off track for March.



I had to remind myself that my word for the year is PAUSE and that it is totally okay to draw when I want to draw and when I have time to draw.



It is much more relaxing and fun that way. I started adding color to some of them. Sometimes markers and sometimes watercolors.



When I do take the time to draw, it is very therapeutic.



Also, the more I draw, the more I want to draw more complicated things, which generally means more than one sitting for a picture anyway.


I'm hoping that somehow, all of this will translate into improved free motion quilting.


I do like how easy it is to always have a journal and some pens everywhere I go.


I have always been a doodler. My notes at work and school always have something scribbled in the margins.


This next one even looks a bit like a quilt. I was seeing how many different ways I could draw the simple design in the upper left corner.


My daughter and I each drew the face and hair below. It was interesting to compare our styles. She is very bold and puts pen to paper readily.


I have to at least get the outline drawn in pencil first, then fill in the details with my pen. My drawings are lighter and a little more delicate.


We will see how much drawing occurs for the rest of the year. Right now, quilting seems to have caught my attention. No matter what, my energy will always pour into some creative endeavor or another.

Wednesday, October 1, 2014

Doodling to Improve Free Motion Quilting


I have a little bit of a doodling habit. I also have a habit of not being able to sit still. Doodling is a way to fidget constructively...at least that is my story and I am sticking with it.



What I have learned is that all that doodling really helps build muscle memory for my free motion quilting. At work, all of my notes go into a bound book so it was easy to look back over the year to see how my doodling has evolved. 

Doodling helps me listen better, too. My mind becomes very focused when I draw. Doodles often start safely in the side margins of my paper.



One thing I have noticed this year is that my doodles became much more quilty after I took Angela Walters class on Craftsy, How to Quilt Negative Space. 

Sometimes doodles wander into the top margin of the page.



And every now and then, doodles take over EVERYWHERE!


They even inspire patterns and design. The sun that shows each ray as a different design might just become part of a bigger quilt design in the near future.


And Maureen Cracknell over at Maureen Cracknell Handmade certainly has put feathers on the brain. I love all of her drawing and quilting and can't wait to get my hands on her first fabric line later this fall.


I never have a plan for what is going to show up on paper. The wavy lines with the solid point on the bottom near the middle of the page was very random and then I decided it looked like a wild and wacky witch leg. You can see what happened after that idea popped into my head.

One day, I'm going to sit down with a blank canvas of a quilt and see what evolves. 

Doodling doesn't come naturally to everyone. I highly recommend it and here are some tips if you'd like to give it a try:
  • Let go of perfectionism.
    It isn't a tattoo. It isn't intended to be a masterpiece. It is just for fun.
  • Let it be fun.
    It is okay if it is ugly, or goofy, or unidentifiable. This reminds me of children's art work where I was advised not to say, "What is it?" but to say, "Tell me about it." Really, it doesn't have to be anything at all.
  • Let it be random.
    There is never a plan when I doodle. Sometimes I will just draw a wavy line on my page. Then I will draw dots on either side of the line. Then little triangles. Then I will look at it and might see a face or a feather or a cloud. It is totally cool to turn it into an ink blot test or cloud watching exercise.
  • Let it inspire you.
    You never know where a random doodle will lead you. It could be a quilt design, a machine quilting filler, a story you want to write, or it could simply be a mind settling exercise to ease you through some part of your day.
  • Don't be hindered by supplies.
    Something to write on. Something to write with. That is all. Pen on paper. Chalk on sidewalk. Stick in the dirt. All perfect mediums for your perfect doodles.

Do you doodle? I would love to hear your tips and see your designs. If you don't, give it a try and share those doodles. They may inspire someone else as much as they inspire you.
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