Mother Root
Something old from the sketchbook, done with Micron pens of various thicknesses (and levels of dryness). She’s a friendly old wood spirit, just made up. I love drawing weathered faces and I love drawing roots.
Something old from the sketchbook, done with Micron pens of various thicknesses (and levels of dryness). She’s a friendly old wood spirit, just made up. I love drawing weathered faces and I love drawing roots.
This week was marked out on the calendar for a workspace re-haul. After two days of scrambling to take down all of the stuff in my studio, only to set it up again, newly reorganized,
Working on my Janus drawing this afternoon. I’m just playing around, trying to get closer to something I like. Today was a lot of setting goals and making plans, which I guess is thematically appropriate!
This is an ancient doodle from and ancient sketchbook that I liked enough to color a little this week. I had to blow off steam when I wasn’t deep in an ongoing project or studying.
I’ve been working on this very un-seasonal drawing today. It shows Janus, the god that the month of January is named after. He has two faces because he looks both forward and behind and is
I’ve been finishing so much digital work lately that I felt like I needed to take a break for a little bit and get back to my roots. This morning, I finished this drawing from
I promised three days of burgers, and I remembered this at about eight pm last night after I had packed up everything that I thought was on my to-do list. That just means that it’s
I’ll be posting a weird cheeseburger drawing a day for the next three days! Why? I accomplished my goal of inking three of them this month, so that’s cause to celebrate. This one features a
I recently jumped on board Doodle Addicts, which is a really nice, low key community for artists. One of the things that they have is a weekly drawing prompt that you can submit to at
I started drawing my own tarot illustrations a while back by picking cards at random and doing a detailed graphite drawing on a block of 4 x 6″ hot press watercolor paper. The result is