Tuesday, March 9, 2010

The Use of Squiggles

Using squiggles eith an etch-a-sketch can be a handy tool. Squiggles can create shade or texture when used together to creating apattern. As you can see in my Indian drawing I used perdominantly squiggles to create the outlines, creating the illusion of shade.
The real reason behind the squiggles is I needed to tetrace some of the lines multiple times to get the pointer from one point to another on the screen. When this is done enough to all the lines in even turn, it creates a broad sketch-like outline.
Use squiggles to create your own artwork with or without etch-a-sketch.

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Love the Process

Etch-a-sketch is a fleeting thing. One second you have a drawing, the next you have a white screen... The drawings are erased with a fraction of the difficulty spend actually drawing.
With so much at stake, some might wonder "why even bother? It's just going to get erased." The answer is the process. Starting from nothing, gaining inspiration, spending time and dedication, then erasing... It's a wonderful thing to be able to physically destroy it as soon as you are done. This amount of devotion (the creation as well as the destruction) is seldom found anywhere else in our world; a similar process might be considered snowmen, as they are sure to melt eventually. However, snowmen are made to be admired by passersby, etch-a-sketch is kept in a room and viewed by the artist and maybe his roommates.
To take pride in your work is an under appreciated accomplishment. Progressing beyond that work is even more under appreciated and even more unpracticed. The skills and practice gained in events such as etch-a-sketch may not be specifically applicable with anything else in the world, but the values and character built in such exercises is truly priceless. Go out and enjoy the process of something new and possibly tedious.