View allAll Photos Tagged scribble

The outer rectangle is approx 110 by 140 cm, the inner rectangle is approx 15 by 21 cm.

 

Happy Sunday everyone. One of the things I love about Jervis Bay is the way the bush meets the ocean. In this case near Greenfields Beach. I have this on my desktop as a wallpaper - feel free to try it yourself :)

 

Like it? Put it on your wall - shop.andyhutchinson.com.au/p682521297

 

Find all previous Photos of the Day in the archive - shop.andyhutchinson.com.au/f892423141

 

Just want to buy me a coffee? ko-fi.com/A622C34

Pondering how makerspaces connect with healthcare

Most of the doodles and scribbles in this set are from the quick-fire drawings that I make as part of my new Bedtime Drawing Regime, where I try and knock out as many sketches as I can in as short an amount of time as possible - just before I head off to sleep. I normally make between 5 and 10 drawings then turn in for the night. I find that the most interesting results come from just putting pen to paper and going for it without really thinking about what I'm about to draw. Some of them turn out quite well - others not so...

 

To find out what I'm currently up (art-wise) or to find out more about my work please feel free to check out my blog - waynechisnall.blogspot.com/

 

Cheers…

 

Scribble Skull

 

watercolor, ink, pencil, on paper

9in.x6in.

2015

for a friend. xo.

Sol Lewitt (1928 USA - 2007 USA)

 

Wall Drawing # 1174

B: Dark to Light (Scribbles)

2005

[#Beginning of Shooting Data Section]

Nikon D100

 

Focal Length: 60mm

 

Optimize Image:

 

Color Mode: Mode II (Adobe RGB)

 

Long Exposure NR: Off

 

2007/08/24 12:13:30

 

Exposure Mode: Manual

 

White Balance: Flash

 

Tone Comp.: Normal

 

RAW (12-bit)

 

Metering Mode: Multi-Pattern

 

AF Mode: Manual

 

Hue Adjustment: 0ᄚ

 

Image Size: Large (3008 x 2000)

 

1/100 sec - F/18

 

Flash Sync Mode: Not Attached

 

Saturation:

 

Exposure Comp.: 0 EV

 

Sharpening: None

 

Lens: 60mm F/2.8 D

 

Sensitivity: ISO 200

 

Image Comment:

 

[#End of Shooting Data Section]

I drew a scribble and then filled it in with Zentangle patterns. This is a new activity for me, and I'm enjoying it. There are hundreds of patterns to learn, and most are extremely easy to draw.

while we were waiting for paul weller

I did it when I was an apprentice, I did it as an intern (as this picture proofs) ah well I guess I'm still doing it today. Whenever I get stuck with something... hell no whenever I get a pencil/pen/bloody finger I just go ahead and scribblebleble...

I made this Sewing Workshop coat with a scribble embedded wool fabric

Event 1 during recent Århus trippage

smc Pentax K 50mm F/1.2 @ F1.2

Scribbly gum (Eucalyptus haemastoma) in bud. Royal National Park, NSW Australia, May 2009.

Sol Lewitt (1928 USA - 2007 USA)

 

Wall Drawing # 1174

A: Light to Dark (Scribbles)

2005

A Scribbly gum (Eucalyptus haemastoma) sheds its bark to reveal this years fresh set of scribbles. Dharawal Nature Reserve, NSW Australia, December 2008.

The marks seen on tree bark from a crawling insect

Kohl's store managers and associates presented Renown Children's Hospital with a check for more than $67,000 to go towards furthering it's Kohl's Save Your Skull program.

 

Pictured from left to right are:

Alannah Manfredi, Kohl's Save Your Skull Coordinator, Renown Children's Hospital; Joel Muller, VP Fund Development, Renown Health; Candi Lorenzo, Kohl's Reno West store; Kim Hinojosa, Kohl's Carson City store; Patrick Hogan, Kohl's Sparks store and Ryan Bauman, Senior, Galena High School and Kohl's Save Your Skull volunteer.

Scribbly Gum, Eucalyptus haemastoma, habit. Royal National Park, NSW Australia, November 2012.

a piece of cardboard, a sharpie and a posca!

Inspired by this video: miraculousmosquito.blogspot.com/2011/09/new-video-hidden....

 

I had never heard of ScribblerToo ...Fun to play with!

I didn't modify at all like the video though

except to add "Believe" using MFH Polly-Wolly Doodle Font.

Playing with one of my Alaska pics in Sketchbook Pro.

The name "Scribbly Gum" applies to any of several species of Australian Eucalyptus trees that serves as hosts to the larvae of scribbly gum moths, which leave distinctive scribbly patterns as they burrow through the bark of the tree. Photographed along a trail at Govetts Leap, Blue Mountains National Park, in Blackheath, New South Wales, Australia.

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