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I recently re-read Ursula Le Guin's Earthsea books. They really are very good. I enjoyed them much more than when i tried to read them as a kid: they scared/unnerved me enough back then that i never actually finished them.

 

This is a dragon in case you were wondering.

Zaos saves the day dealing a volley of blows to the Dreadnought - a huge pile of bones that rises up and crashes back down. They guarded the shores of the Isle of the Abbey, a secret cult of Vecna, enslaving creatures to find the lost bits of Vecna. The party was getting whomped and Zaos had a series of great hits that turned the tide of the battle.

more sketches in books sent out with #20202020. Featuring Sinclair from pop gun war, ROBit TOD, Almendra heads from IT WILL ALL HURT, Smith from Adventures in the Supermundane, and an alien astronaut Rugsby. in THE OFTEN WRONG. #lineartwork #drawings #pendrawings #linedrawings #originalcharacterdrawing

mixedmedia with graphite, coloured pencil, various stamps and tape on paper

my brother Abdelrahman .... pencil drawing

This drawing was also done for a portfolio to get into a 3D animation program. The requirement was to draw a hand about to preform any action you wanted. In this case i tried to make it look like it was going to pucs a button, or poke something. It was required to be a line drawing. It is done in pencil. Constructive criticsm welcome.

Pen & ink, ink wash

When I did the drawing in this I was thinking textile design as I had just been to see a final year show in that subject.Seeds and details of plants are so interesting and this had beautiful colour too,I have added the colour in photoshop today.

cMaille's alter-ego: Cloudery

 

All Cloudery drawings support the charity First Book.

 

somethingcloudery.com

 

pen & ink on Moleskine watercolor paper

5" x 7.5"

© 2008

Line drawing tracing of Great Blue Heron using pencil tool in iPad art app Graphite. Based on this excellent photograph of a heron coming in for a landing: www.flickr.com/photos/hairyduck/5606412837/

Posted via email from louise simmons' posterous

Most of the dogs had really swanky collars - striped, polka dots, studded, even Cath Kidston scarves!

I did a series of outline illustrations and I wanted to do a few celebrities, but I ended up only doing one. I did Zach Galifianakis.

Visit this QOOP listing >

 

By: Charles D. MaGinnis

 

This is Charles MaGinnis at his best; it's a classic edition of his famous work on pen drawing so if you're interested in learning about art and drawing this is a great book to review.

Part of the series People & Places

  

Trying out new things.

Chelsey got some pictures developed and they came back in this beautiful envelope. The top is the front and the bottom is the back.

another drawing for a screen printing.

ball point pen, the reflection of a reflection of Randy

Randy' s picture, quite small for me! is here www.flickr.com/photos/24409983@N07/4895217880/

 

for Julia Kay's party www.flickr.com/groups/portraitparty/

 

Randy's art www.flickr.com/photos/24409983@N07/

There are probably hundreds of miles of row houses in South London almost identical to these, just behind the ice rink. They are, on first glance, absolutely typical Streatham houses built by the acre in the late 19th Century. These, however, have an unusual and charming window arrangement on the upper floor, with the narrow side windows echoing the oriel windows on the ground floor.

In the summer of 1954, Alfred and Lynn made a suggestion to Howard Lindsay and Russel Crouse that they write a comedy about two mind readers. The Lunts loved the idea of doing a play by their pals Howard and Russel (who co-wrote "Arsenic and Old Lace," "Anything Goes," and "The Sound of Music"). But even more than that, Lynn and Alfred were drawn to the challenge of learning how to do a mind-reading act, and to the excitement of having to pull it off every night for a live Broadway audience. During every performance of The Great Sebastians, after mastering a secret code with 150 distinct cues, Lynn and Alfred convincingly “read the minds” of the spellbound, enchanted audience members.

Front cover for issue 25 of Alan Burridge's "Motorheadbangers" magazine - all these illustrations were done with indian ink and Rotring pens of various nib sizes.

 

The photos around the logo are of other contributors to the magazine - reading clockwise from the right: the late Paul Hadwen, Helen Taylor, Paul Harvey, Me, Joe Petagno and Alan Burridge.

Vector art - Jay-Z

 

Web: www.graffink.co.uk

 

Email: info@graffink.co.uk

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