View allAll Photos Tagged doodle...
Having fun, doodling!!
I would like this to be the basis for an embroidery, because the doodle shapes are easily translated to embroidery stitches.
I've been doodling a lot of little "icons" like the above lately. I think the Nintendo DS (bottom center) is my favorite, though I like the strawberry-topped slice of cake, too :)
BTW, can you tell I like games like Bubble Bobble, Rainbow Islands, etc.?
pointilist doodle, I verctorized, munged a bit, then "engraved" on the laser cutter with the power cranked up enough to burn though the paper. Kind of cool effect.
Doodled flowers and Darkroom Door stamps on this card. stampingmathilda.blogspot.be/2017/07/sunday-scraps-386.html
I love random doodling. Here is a doodle I did the other day while sitting at our flatstock booth. In between talking shop, selling posters and making friends I have some pretty fun and random drawings in the old sketchbook from this past week or so.
I'd already sketched this face on a background I'd made using up spare paint. Doodled shading ont he face using words and gave her some crazy hair
Superphotosearch :- The doodle on March 27 is the 27th Google doodle in the month of March. This marks the 126th birth anniversary of the German-born American architect Ludwig Mies van der Rohe.
Popularly known as Ludwig Mies, he was born Maria Ludwig Michael Mies on March 27, 1886 in Aachen, Germany. After Ludwig Mies had established himself as an architect and his marriage failed he added his maternal surname van der Rohe to his name.
The building in the Google doodle in honour of Ludwig Mies is the Crown Hall at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago that houses its College of Architecture.
Google doodles Ludwig Mies van der Rohe's 126th birthday
The Crown Hall, constructed between 1950-56, is considered to be one of Mies' masterpieces. The building made of glass, expressed steel frames is said to be a significant example of the 20th Century Modernist movement.
Regarded as one of the pioneers of modern architechture Mies never received any formal architectural training. He apprenticed with several architects and soon developed a style of his own.
A few years after Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany and the Nazis closed down the school he was heading, a disillussioned Mies emigrated to the United States. In the US he headed department of architecture at the Armour Institute of Technology that later came to be known as the Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago. The popular idom, God is in the details, is often attributed to Ludwig Mies.
In addition to the Crown Hall, other prominent buildings designed by Mies include Farnsworth House (Plano, Illinois), 860-880 Lake Shore Drive Apartments (Chicago), Seagram Building (New York City), Museum of Fine Arts (Houston) and Neue Nationalgalerie (Berlin). Ludwig Mies died on August 17, 1969 in Chicago. He was 83.
Ludwig Mies van der Rohe's 126th birthday Google doodle is the the 1341st Google doodle since the first ever on for the Burning Man Festival back on August 30, 1998.
Here's a Munny i doodled a few months back :) it was a commissioned suprise birthday gift so i had to be hush hush!
it's my second custom ever, so im still learning! i got recommended some gloss type stuff from japan, so i used that, works a treat!
The heart on his tummy is GID, and it glows so bright O_O!
hope you guys like :D
The last time I visited the structure that I refer to as the Doodle Bridge, it was the beginning of autumn, 2013. My wife and I spent the following winter and spring in Ocean City, Maryland.
Today, I went back to the bridge that I've been documenting over time. The attraction for me is the graffiti. Marker, pen, pencil, expressing thoughts in quotations, song lyrics, and original ideas. My assumption is that the doodlers are college-age men and women.
As a pastor, I must also reflect that many of the sentiments expressed on Doodle Bridge are more meaningful than those found on church street signs.
The next seventeen photos are from today's visit. I look forward to my next trip.
This is a quick little digital doodle I accomplished in PhotoShop so I could show folks how to create my Fuzzy String tangled doodle design, Swirly Leaf doodle, J-Burst doodle, and my Spiral String doodle design as well.
You can see the video and grab the design worksheet at the RainbowElephant blog.
School of Doodle came to life at the Lowline Lab with a Be Loud Workshop on April 24th, 2016!
The event included talks, workshops and performances by rad artists, experts and girls! AND, everyone who participated had the chance to be the face of Doodle’s ad campaign in the September issue of Dazed magazine!
SCHEDULE:
2PM: Brianaajayy "DJ Set:
2:30PM: Marawa "Hooping with Marawa the Amazing"
3PM: Laura Holson "How to Interview Taylor Swift"
3:30PM Kate Nash in Conversation with Mikki Halpin
4PM: Jules Spector, Thelma Golden, Vanessa Nadal and Lizz Winstead "She Said with Jules Spector"
4:45PM Kate Nash "Performance"
5PM: Workshop Interlude
Emilie Baltz "Redesigning the Banana"
Lexy Ho-Tai " Fun with Feminist Flash Cards"
Christian Joy "Recycle, Reclaim, Rejoice!"
Art Baby Gallery "Performing Feminist Art"
Robyn Shapiro "Bug Sundaes Sunday"
Molly Soda "Chirp Chirp: Karaoke Therapy"
5:30PM Chrysi Philalithes, Sarah Sophie Flicker and Tennessee Thomas "Creativity for Change"
6PM Nazlie Najafi "Swing Wilder"
6:30PM Isabel Venero, Yulan Grant, Marie Karlberg, Ryan McNamara, Akeem Smith and Venus X "Dissent, Disrupt, Detach: Creative Practices in the Service of Social/Political Change"
7:40PM Rhi Blossom, Mina Mahmood and Dounia Tazi "Body Positivity and Social Media: When Instagram is Your Best Weapon"
All Day Film Screenings:
Chantal Akerman "Saute Ma Ville"
Dara Birnbaum "Technology/Transformation: Wonder Woman"
Martha Rosler "Semiotics of the Kitchen"
Martine Syms "Notes on Gesture"
Zentangle is meditative doodling. I'd seen it in the past, and finally decided to try it. I've been watching videos and looking at patterns online. My first effort isn't much, I don't like how the center turned out, and my pen isn't fine enough. But I think I could get addicted. It is kind of relaxing. The plan is to practice, then incorporate it into my cards.
There are some pretty amazing things you can do. It looks complicated, but it's just repetitive strokes, a section at a time.
This doodle happened while I was chopping radishes for a salad. More info about my Found Object doodles: DebbieOhi.com/LookAgain
For this swap we were to draw a doodle line then see if we "saw an animal" in the squiggle. I did a big loopy doodle and the poodle just jumped out at me (I've tried a couple times since with far less interesting results). The lines are done in Micron pen, then colored with watercolor pencil, distress inks, and glimmer mist. November 2011