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Image Dane Mullen Plus Member
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Lindsey's prompt: Tiger lily

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Image Dean C. Graf Plus Member
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My painting professor drew this diagram on the board and suggested that it is a diagram for a painting. "Begin with large areas, covering the canvas with general colors and shapes. Refine the shapes and begin adding details. Refine the details and work with smaller brushes. When you are adding marks that your viewers would not notice, be done." There is more, but that is enough to ponder for now.

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Image Kurtis D Edwards Plus Member
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Look at this cutey—a shoebill stork done in watercolors. I wanted to do something different from botanicals but still practice simple watercolors.

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Image David Young
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Image Bleu Hope Plus Member
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80s radio kept me working away today!

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Image Dane Mullen Plus Member
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Image Kevin VanEmburgh Plus Member
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Just sitting, listening to podcasts and doodling.

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Image DeeDee Joseph
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They prefer chilling at home over going out. Dalena's still new to drink and hasn't left the floor since

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Image Azula
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This took quite awhile for me to finish I hope you like it

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Image Sabina Hahn
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Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–1980) By the 1950s, too much work on too little sleep—with too much wine and cigarettes—had left Sartre exhausted and on the verge of collapse. Rather than slow down, however, he turned to Corydrane, a mix of amphetamine and aspirin then fashionable among Parisian students, intellectuals, and artists (and legal in France until 1971, when it was declared toxic and taken off the market). The prescribed dose was one or two tablets in the morning and at noon. Sartre took twenty a day, beginning with his morning coffee and slowly chewing one pill after another as he worked. For each tablet, he could produce a page or two of his second major philosophical work, The Critique of Dialectical Reason. The biographer Annie Cohen-Solal reports, “His diet over a period of twenty-four hours included two packs of cigarettes and several pipes stuffed with black tobacco, more than a quart of alcohol—wine, beer, vodka, whisky, and so on—two hundred milligrams of amphetamines, fifteen grams of aspirin, several grams of barbiturates, plus coffee, tea, rich meals.” - From Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey #dailyrituals #inktober #jeanPaulSartre @masoncurrey

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Image Rui Mota Plus Member
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Image Bleu Hope Plus Member
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Darkness resumed!

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Image Maia Doodle
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Delicious festive sodas and fun beverages! Just a quick sketch with markers—keeping it cheerful!

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Image Sarah Alborsh
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Image TimShch
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Spread #4, charcoal. This is Maytree, a South Korean a cappella group.

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Image Dane Mullen Plus Member
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Lindsey's prompt: Fern

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Image Dane Mullen Plus Member
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Image myra naito
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Ballpoint pen and Copic markers

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Image Marqueta Wells
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Image eko desrianto
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I use soft oil pastel to paint, can i call it doodle?

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Image Azula
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Anyone is welcome to post their own version of this expressing their unique identity, in fact i highly encourage it I saw a lot of people posting this on other platforms and wanted to post my own version This "trend" I guess you could call it, came from the movie "I saw the TV glow". Which is a movie that's a metaphor for trans identities and other queer identities.

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Image Bleu Hope Plus Member
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Sega flavoured fan art time! Of course I had to go with my favourite character from the Sonic games, heheheh :-)

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Image inNewWinDow
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Image Kurtis D Edwards Plus Member
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I'm pleased with how this turned out. I cannot wait till February when mine blooms.

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Image David Meehan
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My SketchBook drawings = 15€ :) 36 x 27.5cm - shape seems to change coz photos have been cropped https://facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.1222732179673725&type=3 https://artdavidmeehan.blogspot.com/p/c.html +351 969 534 520 artdavidmeehan@gmail.com

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Image Daniel Gräfen
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Doodling of the Day

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Image E K Lindgren
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Three fairies explore a wizard's book as the wizard discovers them. Ink on 8.5 x 11 inch sketch paper.

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Image Bleu Hope Plus Member
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Flying dream inspired…

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Image Sabina Hahn
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Dmitry Shostakovich (1906–1975) Shostakovich’s contemporaries do not recall seeing him working, at least not in the traditional sense. The Russian composer was able to conceptualize a new work entirely in his head, and then write it down with extreme rapidity—if uninterrupted, he could average twenty or thirty pages of score a day, making virtually no corrections as he went. But this feat was apparently preceded by hours or days of mental composition—during which he “appeared to be a man of great inner tensions,” the musicologist Alexei Ikonnikov observed, “with his continually moving, ‘speaking’ hands, which were never at rest.” Shostakovich himself was afraid that perhaps he worked too fast. “I worry about the lightning speed with which I compose,” he confessed in a letter to a friend. Undoubtedly this is bad. One shouldn’t compose as quickly as I do. Composition is a serious process, and in the words of a ballerina friend of mine, “You can’t keep going at a gallop.” I compose with diabolical speed and can’t stop myself.… It is exhausting, rather unpleasant, and at the end of the day you lack any confidence in the result. But I can’t rid myself of the bad habit. - From Daily Rituals: How Artists Work by Mason Currey #dailyrituals #inktober #shostakovich @masoncurrey

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Image Schuyler
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This is made by a 11 year old girl trying to make her way into the world!

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