@AustinShurtliff Hello there! My two submissions, Overgrown and Ring. Thank you! -Tom Shannon
Prompt: Overgrown
Prompt: Ring
@CLCanadyArts I'm so happy you submitted the one with cat fishing in the trash pile! Probably one of my favorite inktober drawings i'v seen this year!
So many good entries! Good luck everyone!
@AustinShurtliff Hello there! My two submissions, Overgrown and Ring. Thank you! -Tom Shannon
@Meta these are good!
@burvantill Thank you!
@K-Flagg Aw! Thank you. I've really loved seeing yours. Hard to choose favs, I love the T-rex, the Nessy type skeleton, and, the enchanted skeleton.
@jdubz I love #1!
@burvantill love these!
Thank you to everyone that has submitted something so far! It is a lot of fun seeing how each of you approached Inktober this year.
Since I was in the middle of drawing my 100 bears when Inktober hit, I decided to simply continue and include them in every Inktober prompt (a challenge within a challenge - cue evil laugh!). These are the two that best tell stories - PATTERN and DARK. Learned a lot between the 2 - learned crosshatching and inkwash this year!
No concept or story, but decided on a whim to go back to scribbling, something that spontaneously occurred during inktober 2017 and was surprisingly freeing. I forgot about it until I discovered scribble-hatching is actually a “technique” by participating in the inking class with @Braden-Hallett & friends. My challenge was to work digitally in procreate (technical pen), complete each scribble as quickly as possible and (gulp) go public on instagram.
After posting my late-to-the-party #inktober5k scribble on instagram, @clcanadyarts referred me to a very interesting Ted talk by artist Phil Hansen who was advised by a neurologist to “embrace the shakes” after suffering permanent nerve damage (from single-minded pursuit of pointillism). https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=anujFqvCJsk. For those of us stuck on preoccupation with outcomes/products, the concept of destruction is thought-provoking as well.
@BichonBistro Beautiful.
@xin-li Things don't need to be perfect to be wonderful.