Happy Thanksgiving

Dear Fellow Journalers,

No matter how you celebrate it, have a great Thanksgiving!

~Sallie

 

th-5  happythanksgiving  3f0ccfab4f87c9a888f03ff5d4abeea1

Do not follow

2 Paths

Do not follow where there the

path may lead.

Go instead where there is no

path and leave a trail.

Dear Fellow Journalers,

I absolutely love this quote! Years ago, when a dear friend gave me this quote inscribed on a plaque I was speechless. She told me that she had always been inspired by my willingness to travel a different road. I still have her gift and now I share this quote with you.

~Sallie

Copyright – 2014   by Uniquelyyourscraftjournal

All rights reserved.

Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given

To Sallie and uniquelyyourscraftjournal with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

You may reach Sallie at uniquelyyourscraftjournal@outlook.com

Quote

Creative Process

 

 

CreativeProcess

 

Dear Fellow Journalers,

How many times on YOUR creative journey.  has the above happened? I have to tell you, while creating my Mason Jar Luminaries this past summer I went through the above process  so many times! You see, I was creating something new. I had looked in all the usual places for inspiration and advice and there was none! I had to start from scratch and do it by trial and error. I succeeded (at least, I hope so!) but the process was really tricky. Isn’t that what life is after all?

We start off on a grand adventure (learning to walk/talk/learn) and we fall and get up again. I watch our Granddaughter persist in learning to “do it myself” and I marvel at her determination. I sincerely wish all of us this same determination to continue the journey!

~Sallie

Copyright – 2014   by Uniquelyyourscraftjournal

All rights reserved.

Excerpts and links may be used, provided that full and clear credit is given

To Sallie and uniquelyyourscraftjournal with appropriate and specific direction to the original content.

You may reach Sallie at uniquelyyourscraftjournal@outlook.com

Eraser

Dear Fellow Journalers,

The following is a blog post from Quinn Creative. Enjoy!

~Sallie

New post on QuinnCreative

Favorite Tool: Eraser

by QuinnCreative

Pen and ink is a great medium. I love the precision of fine lines, of cross-hatching for shading. In a journal, pen and ink looks both artistic and scholarly. Pen and ink with watercolor pencil washes make me happy.

When I draw with pen and ink, I start with pencil.  Because I need to erase a lot.

 

My favorite eraser--clean, neat, won't shred your paper.

My favorite eraser–clean, neat, won’t shred your paper.

Most pen and ink classes I’ve taken talk about blending in your mistakes, or keeping the drawing “loose.” With a pencil, you can move from rough sketch to inking by using a pencil and eraser first, learning as you go along.  Try something, erase it, fix it, change it, re-do it. My must-have, go-to tool is an eraser.

When I teach, I see people frown and say, “I made a mistake,” which baffles me. Of course you make mistakes, you are experimenting,  trying ideas until you get to what you want. That’s not a mistake, it’s working toward an goal. It’s creation. And that works if you are writing, dancing, or singing. I might add that there is so far no eraser for dancing or singing.

 

Old school eraser looks like modern delete key. Same function.

Old school eraser looks like modern delete key. Same function.

An eraser is handy when drawing packages with twine, vines, or anything with perspectives or that overlaps. Erasers are a tool that help you get to the final image. Stop thinking in terms of “mistake.”  Erasers help us complete the work we start, to capture the image we want.

Knowing about erasers means choosing the one that works for your art.

I’m a fan of white plastic erasers that don’t chew up the page and erase cleanly.

I love kneaded erasers because they keep my hands busy and pick up large areas of graphite really well. I also hate them because you can’t put them near anything plastic, or the eraser will melt the plastic. No idea why.

I love electric erasers that work on detail and are charming for fast work in

 

A house brush helps clean up without smearing.

A house brush helps clean up without smearing.

reductive drawings.

Eraser get round and you need an edge? Slice the round part off with a craft knife and you have a new edge. They are inexpensive.

Tired of eraser dust? Buy a big paintbrush–house-painting size, and sweep the dust away. Don’t blow on your artwork, particularly not if you have been eating chocolate or drinking coffee. A stray spray of spit can mark the page.

Best of all, you can also carve up an eraser and make your own rubber stamps. So indulge in that extra eraser. You won’t regret it.

—Quinn McDonald loves erasers and the freedom of creative work they encourage.

QuinnCreative | June 1, 2014 at 12:01 am | Tags: drawingerasersmistakes | Categories: Art in ProgressIn My LifeLinks, resources, idea boosts | URL: http://wp.me/p2H1i-3Al

Life

 

 

Life's second chance

Life’s second chance

 

Previous Older Entries Next Newer Entries

Calendar

March 2026
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
3031  

Spam Blocked

Uniquelyyourscollagedlife

Blogging,crafting, journaling and writing

Uniquely Yours Cards and Crafts

Uniquely Yours Cards and Crafts ~ Celebrating all occasions with a handcrafted touch ~

A Part of Me to Share

~ a Writer's blog ~

Life Vest Inside

Listening to my heart, one journal step at a time.

kelleysdiy

Where Creativity and Imagination Creates Wonderful Ideas for Your Home!

Awaken Everyday

The Copper Beech Institute Blog

Meg Dowell Writes

Putting ideas into words.

The Daily Post

The Art and Craft of Blogging

Audrey Pettit Designs

Listening to my heart, one journal step at a time.