Searching for Zentangle patterns? This is a detailed guide of some awesome patterns tangle starter sheets to download and use!
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The challenge this week from Laura at I am the Diva was to do a tangle with "No Strings Attached". We were to create a tile, zendala, or ZIA without using a string. I had a lot of fun with this one and took 3 different approaches. We have recently been catching up with the first four series of "The Big Bang Theory", a program which makes me laugh out loud. So my first Zia was based on the "Big Bang!" The second idea I was inspired by a tile from last week's challenge, Sorry I can not remember who's tile this was. It was to use Hollibaugh and tangle the spaces (I hope that doesn't count as a string) For the third ZIA I decided to take a random approach. Using the Tangle Patterns website I asked one of my family to randomly choose a letter, then depending on how many tangles started with that letter I got them to choose a random number, this gave me my first pattern. I just kept going like this until I had filled up the whole page. This is fun as it takes the control away from you and I used some patterns that before I had skipped past without even considering. You also have to find a way to make these random patterns work together. Tuftid, Moving Day, Basketweave, Me-three, Scrumble, XYP, Emingle, Diagonals, Yang, Pane, Kinetic, Cracked,Cirquital, Cross Stitch
Copada, Hollibauch and Cruffle.
Welcome to our first ever collaboration week with Imagine Crafts/Tsukineko! We've shared all of our toys on both sides, so be prepared...
Here is a list of all official Zentangle® patterns with links to their respective step-by-step and Youtube tutorials. There are also keyword descriptions of each pattern to make it easier to quickly search the list. Tip: Use the Search bar at the top right corner of the list to quickly find specific patterns. For example,...Read More »
The other day I drew a crown of loops as a string – my starting point for a new drawing. It was how I felt: kinda flowy, cosy, and whole. This is the sort of thing I started off with: I then …
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So much fun stuff this past week with the challenges and dares! I love this - even if I did get a bit out of control this time. Let's set the stage for my mental wobbling - I get paid the first of every month. Our printer is out of ink and won't print. It isn't the first. Get the picture? I am out of school for this week so I have NO access to a printer. Friday night I began hoping (okay, praying) for an "easy" template from the Bright Owl. One I could duplicate by drawing. At least to some degree. Hide the wobbly lines with tangles . . . Oh Erin, it was not to be! This template was intense. Beautiful, if I could have printed it. So I began to devise plans. Creative ones. My very best - I would bring it up on my tablet, Ray would hold it up to a mirror while I traced with marker on the mirror. Then I would put tracing paper over it, copy it and transfer it to a "real" piece of paper! Genius! (or nuts). Ray just looked at me - I am sure it was an admiring glance, not matching his words of "have you gone crazy?" Thinking he might not cooperate fully, I thought about putting a piece of paper on the computer screen to trace it. This sent him around the bend with words of admiration. Leading him to suggest we go to the library to print me a copy when it opened on Monday. Okay, that was plan C. I would have thought of it. After all that I got to pull out the pen and grab some zen for myself! I love this template - it is so frilly and delicate (if you are not considering ways to copy it). Judy - over at Creative Doodling (see side bar) - had a really great template this week. It was built on interlocking boxes stacked. Remember the no ink? Still a problem, but she said we could do our own and I can duplicate boxes without damage to any personal property. I had some serious fun with this one! I got all caught up in the scenes and the little stick people. What a blast! After the library visit on Monday, I went off to check out the Diva's challenge. This week we had to use a new tangle called "Zingers". Cute little filler type tangle. I really love the work of fellow tangler, Helen Williams, and had loved what she did with randomizing "bloom" on her video. So this gave me a chance to try out both tangles. If you have not checked out her gorgeous style of tangling head over to A Little Lime. Her work takes my breath away. Seriously. It has been a great vacation so far. Tomorrow, I plan on pulling out the cricut and working on December birthday cards and Christmas cards . . . For now, I need to step outside to my yard and see what that man with the strange white jacket in his hand is saying about "coming with him peacefully". Odd. Happy Thanksgiving and have a great week!!
Mein Blog ist umgezogen. Die Anleitung für Crux befindet sich jetzt auf meiner Website www.nord-tangle.de und zwar genau hier.
Mein Blog ist umgezogen. Die Anleitung für Crux befindet sich jetzt auf meiner Website www.nord-tangle.de und zwar genau hier.
For the first three billion years of life on Earth, the biosphere consisted of only single-celled organisms such as amoebas, paramecia, yeast, algae and bacteria. Six hundred million years ago indi…
Searching for Zentangle patterns? This is a detailed guide of some awesome patterns tangle starter sheets to download and use!
Settle in. This is one of those long posts! Cadent is of one of Zentangle's 'official' tangles. It's simple, elegant and easy when you...
Blog von Martina Loos Atelier Aquarellzauber Farbenfrohe fröhliche märchenhafte Aquarell Illustrationen und mehr
This doodle art proves it's a serious creative form.
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Last November we moved; it was an excellent idea. We'll probably be moving again in the next few months. I don't recall at what point I had time to sit and tangle for a while, but I did, and came up with this tangle. I haven't used it much since... a year ago. I rediscovered it recently and decided to do it for today's tangle for Art Every Day Month. See the tile I did using Moving Day following the drawing instructions. Don't overthink the stripes. You don't need the same number of stripes in each square. The interesting thing happens when they mismatch at the corners. Here's today's tile. I also tried Moving Day with stippling instead of black. Be forewarned: it takes longer, and I think I prefer it with black anyway. Gewgle is in Sandy Bartholomew's book Yoga for Your Brain. Tangles: Gewgle, Keenees, Moving Day, Opus (with Aura)
I call this new pattern Ticking because when shaded, it looks a bit like stitched fabric (to me anyway). It is really quite simple. Steps 2 and 3 can be combined but I do them separately so that I can make the space divisions as even as possible. It helps if I have a starting point. I tend to get carried away with lines if I don't start from a divided location. It's a little like Bales at the start and you can start with a grid or just make your ovals at even distances and go from there. I hope you like this one. I haven't seen a pattern like this out there in the Zentangle universe but if you have please let me know. Also: I had one heck of a time coming up with a name for this one. If there is another pattern named Ticking let me know and I'll rename it. I googled and didn't find one, but you know how inexact Google searches can be.
In May 2010 I spent a delightful few days in Whitinsville, MA at the CZT training seminar. One of the things we did was wander around the Oakhurst Retreat and Conference Center looking for patterns to deconstruct and turn into tangles. I had noticed the dining room ceiling during our first meal, and decided to see what I could do with that. The tangle is based on the OAKhurst ceiLING so I call it OAKLING. It takes a fair amount of concentration! I think the main thing about this tangle is to keep those initial squares and circles well-spaced. Also, make sure they're in a reasonably even grid. Here's a tile using Oakling: Tangles: Oakling, Bevia, Florez, black Pearlz, Umble, W2, Yincut Sue Clark (CZT) also designed a tangle based on this ceiling pattern. She calls it CHEERS, and you can see it here.
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In der dieswöchigen Wochenaufgabe der Diva bezog sich Laura Harms auf einen Newsletter der offiziellen Zentangle-Seite (Hier), in dem kleine Bausteine für auf Gitter basierende Muster in einer Tabe…
Libro de horas de Leonor de la Vega S.XV. 1498 Libro de horas de Leonor de la Vega S.XV. 1498 Luttrell Psalter, Diocese of Lincoln, c.1325-1335, London British Library, Add MS 42130, fol 38r. Luttrell Psalter, Diocese of Lincoln, c.1325-1335, London British Library, Add MS 42130, fol 81r.…
A Purr-fect Creative Journey Begins Here… Welcome to the world’s most irresistible collection for cat-inspired creativity! Step into a playful collection that compiles everything you need to easily craft delightful drawings of adorable cats. It’s not just simple; it’s super fun, with no fuss or hassle. Now that’s a journey worth embarking on! Globally Adored ...
This week I'm sharing the new tangles I came up with while trying to use Cadent for the Diva's challenge. These new tangles all use the smal...
My final postcard for the February 2010 zentangle trade. A bit "Alice In Wonderland" directed by Tim Burton inspired. www.TangleTangleTangle.com
These images are from several journals in which I just doodle.
Zentangle drawing
Neurocoloring From Lines to Desires Realized: Unlocking Your Dreams with Neurography's Unique Language : Silver, Helen: Amazon.de: Bücher