View allAll Photos Tagged scribble
These are some of the main and often used scribbles. Bloggers may use these in order to publish interesting worth reading ans attractive texts with a visual touch.
This seemingly abstract image is based on a photograph taken on the trunk of what is commonly known as a "scribbly gum" tree.
Morton National Park, New South Wales, Australia
This Wikipedia entry explains why this name
Australian research into this unusual phenomenon is fascinating: www.csiro.au/Outcomes/Environment/Biodiversity/Scribbly-g...
20141127-PB270208
Graffiti on girders under the Dundas Street Bridge over the Don River and the Lower Don Recreation Trail, Toronto.
I used every colour in my felt pen packet to scribble. On the page on the left I held two pens at a time.
Close-up image of a dandelion flower outside our house in Yubari, Hokkaido, using a new scribble program. The program used to scribble the image is in demo form from an academic institution.
Your team can always count on you, and you can count on this Stanford Cardinal T-Shirt for enduring value.
www.stanfordshirt.com/stanford-womens/athletic-shirts/sta...
Found @ HelloMuller.
Earlier tonight Liz asked me to help her with some preparations for a photo shoot she’s doing tomorrow (shooting some horribly expensive bling bling watches) and she needed me to write product facts in little notebooks and agendas to serve as props. In itself its not that weird, usually when someone I know needs ‘fancy’ (or legible) handwriting they’ll ask me to do it. However Liz asked me to write some notes in cursive (hand)writing… and I struggled like a 7 year old in grade school. I really had to pace myself and consider the movement of my hand and carefully draw the letter shapes. All because I’ve been writing in block capitals for the last 20 odd years or so, just like my dad.
See, my dad (an interior designer) wrote exclusively in capitals. And when I learned how to write, he’d take me to his side and explained that type and letterforms, like everything else, are constructed out of the 3 basic shapes (circle, square, pyramid for those just joining us) and therefore he’d show me how to ‘draw’ letters, instead of simply banging out cursive text so I’d learn to pay attention to the specific shape of each letter. And so I slowly started to mimic his writing and draw little pyramids instead of A’s and after a few years of practice I managed to bastardize his writing into my own. I still take great pleasure in handwriting, even though I don’t write long letters by hand, I will often doodle and practice writing the alphabet, numbers and random words to see if I can further optimize the letterforms.