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Shortly before Alfred’s death, writer and photographer James Auer famously captured a beautiful moment – shot from behind as Lynn and Alfred walk down the bucolic path to Ten Chimneys. The photograph conveyed the peace and contentment that the Lunts shared toward the end of a life well lived. Lynn once shared, “The best thing, in a way, about our marriage was retirement; after all those years of work, we had a long, marvelously peaceful time in the garden.” In the forefront of this reimagined image, you see Joe Garton, the late founder of Ten Chimneys Foundation, ready to carry the mantle of the Lunts’ legacy.
as in "i told all my friends you exist"
Tangles done in the "Zentangle A Day" Book, created by Carole Ohl, CZT. Colored with Derwent Inktense Pencils, Prismacolor Pencils, and fine line pens. Drawn with Micron .01 and .005 pens.
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A sketchy skull and ribcage drawn out of my four sets of my hands:
1- "goggles position" for eyes
2- "crunchy position" for teeth x2
3- "protector position" for ribcage
In pencil.
My two art nouveau pieces.
And yeah, I found out about the typo too late rofl...
Left: Fabrique d'Etoilles Atelier (Made of Stars Studio)
Right: Ste. Augestine, FL lovin
Weather has been so shockingly wet & awful, have been doing odd drawings around the house and when we are brave enough to venture out to coffee shops
I only drew this because Melissa W asked me to, you understand. It was certainly not *my* choice to draw him for the 40,001st time.
Linedrawing with waterproof and light resistant Indian Ink on acid-free cardboard. Fixated with varnish.
View of cervical cap in body. Cross dissection of front. Biomedical Art Methods II. Instructor: Tom Nowacki. Cleveland Institute of Art.
Made with Processing. These are experiments in simple catmull-rom curves aligned in a grid. They remind me of asemic writing and some of Henri Michaux's drawings and paintings.
I'm working on a watercolour of this that'll probably take me another week or two to complete. But the watercolour inspired me to do this loose sketch based on the composition of my painting. I was kinda pleased with the result.
These designs were based on blind continuous line drawings I did of Oxford's doors and windows on my journey to work on the bus.
I thought the line drawings resembled Bethlehem so converted the line drawings into designs for Christmas Cards.
If you like this image you can purchase it as a card or print on my online shop at patsyjennings.redbubble.com
Having used dark dramatic colours in one interpretation I felt I wanted to try the same picture with more subtle softer colours. I changed the shape of the green background as I felt the previous version didn't work and hung in mid air. I prefer this version. Again I'm not sure if it is cheating as I've used paint to colour in the leaves and haven't used paint for blind continuous line drawing.
If you like this image you can purchase it as a card or print on my online shop at patsyjennings.redbubble.com