In this class, we are going to play and experiment with color by allowing it to organically flow in water to create our final pieces. I love the serendipitous nature of creating in this way. Allowing the paint to ebb and flow in ways you couldn't replicate with a paintbrush and trusting that whatever you end up with you will love. I think that is why I love cutting up my art so much... it takes the pressure off when creating... and this organic flow process is that too - it takes the pressure off. You might even say it is a bit therapeutic... because there is something so relaxing and satisfying about watching paint spread out in the water.
Creative Flow: Doodle Hunting
English | 16m | Video: 720p
Is getting started the most difficult part of a creative project? Would you like some help getting into the creative flow? I've developed a method I call Doodle Hunting to help jump start your creative process. This exercise is visual but could be used to kickoff any creative project. Please join me to learn this fun and easy technique.
Supercharge Your Salesforce Experience: Mastering Flow Automation for Enhanced Efficiency
epub | 6.98 MB | English | Isbn: B00CGI3DWQ | Author: Tom Kelley | Year: 2013
Genre: eLearning | Language: English
Lauren Lemon is the online persona for Lauren Randolph, a photographer based in Los Angeles. She built her photography career in part through a series of personal projects, including taking one self-portrait a day for an entire year in 2009. She's also one of the most popular photographers on Instagram, with more than 200,000 followers.
English | May 1st, 2018 | ISBN: 1621536661 | 256 Pages | EPUB | 2.91 MB
Demystifying the creative process.
The Creative Path is an inquiry into the creative process from philosophical, psychological, spiritual, and practical points of view. In this welcoming work on the creative process, Carolyn Schlam encourages the reader to embark upon his or her own journey of discovery, identity, and wonder through art. The author started her career in art under the tutelage of master teacher Norman Raeben in the Carnegie Hall Studios in New York. Raeben's students included Bob Dylan, who said of him: "He put my mind and my hand and my eye together, in a way that allowed me to do consciously what I unconsciously felt." Schlam's warm and inviting tone speaks directly to her readers, encouraging them to energize their practice and offering the tools to do so.