Zentangle Untangled (20 page)

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Authors: Kass Hall

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TANGLED HOUSTON
Sakura Pigma Micron pen, graphite pencil
by Beckah Krahula, CZT
Zentangle and Photography

My passion for photography goes back as far as I remember. My first camera, in primary school, took 120mm film and was bright yellow. Since then I’ve graduated through several point-and-shoot cameras to digital SLR, as well as the fun of Lomography and Polaroid. I adore how capturing a single moment in time can instantly evoke memories and feelings.

Photography is a great tool for snapping patterns and textures as you’re out and about, which inspires Zentangle® in its origins and continuing journey. Zentangle also makes a wonderful companion to photographs in art journals and scrapbooks. I often include photography in my art journals because it provides unlimited inspiration to me. Using Zentangle with photography makes my pages uniquely mine and different from much of what we see in magazines and online.

The three journal pages shown reflect some of my life’s passions—my nephew (and godson) Lukas, my pug, Sunny, and an elephant (I sponsor an orphan elephant in Kenya). Many people journal about a range of topics—some whimsical and about nothing in particular. My pages often reflect my life in some way—family and friends, the things that I love. I also love Zentangle, so it’s an easy choice to include it with my photographs and journals.

ELEPHANT LOVE
watercolor, Sakura Pigma Micron pen, ink, Derwent Inktense pencil, photograph
SUNNY
watercolor, rubber stamp, Sakura Pigma Micron pen, Tim Holtz Distress Ink pad, foam stamps
SPOOKY
watercolor, Sakura Pigma Micron pen, Broken China Distress Stickles, glitter pen
Zentangle Goes Digital

One of the special things about Zentangle® is that it is hand-drawn. No matter what level of artistic talent you possess, you can succeed in this art form. One of the other appealing aspects (for this artist anyway) is that Zentangle can be done anywhere, especially away from the computer screen! I spend way too much time on my Mac, but it’s an occupational hazard of being a writer and artist, and working from home!

When I was at University, I studied several graphic design units. I love good graphic design, but I’ll confess—it’s just not my area of talent. As a student, I bought Adobe® Creative Suite® 3 (thank goodness for student rates) and managed to pass my graphic design units, but I have found that I’ve actually learned the most by simply playing with the programs. By chance, my local bookstore recommended an all-in-one book they had. It was fantastic advice, and the book is really easy to navigate and understand, making it easier for me to retain what I learn. It has hundreds of sticky flags, highlighter marks and pencil notes in it!

So why not go digital with Zentangle?

I would strongly emphasize that the fun and relaxation goes out of Zentangle if you take the pen and tile out of it. As we’ve seen, there are so many ways to add color, texture and dimension to our Zentangle-inspired art. What I demonstrate here is just another option.

All the tangles you see here are hand-drawn. In fact, I deliberately used scans of tangles featured earlier in this book to demonstrate this technique because I want to encourage you to keep that pen-and-tile element as central to what you do; using line tools and shapes, etc., in Adobe® Photoshop® will be a total killjoy!

One of the other fun things about this approach is that if you are creating colorful backgrounds in your art journals, before adding elements like words, photography and accents, you can scan your background and use it in your digital works. That’s what I do. I grab loose paper or a journal and create colored backgrounds, slapping paint or ink randomly, using a brayer to spread color, absolutely anything goes. I especially love using canvas paper (available at your local art supplier), which often gives a new and excellent texture—and it comes up a treat when scanned. This, if nowhere else, is where you have full and complete license to experiment, play and get messy.

Tip
When you scan your Zentangle® tiles and backgrounds, scan them at a minimum of 300 dpi. This is especially important if you plan to print your work later.
Digital Mysteria
FIND THE ORIGINAL BLACK-AND-WHITE IN
THE HISTORY OF ZENTANGLE

Digital Mysteria
incorporates the tangle
Mysteria
, drawn on a regular Zentangle tile and scanned, with painted paper that I scanned. I then combine the two to create a whole new piece of work.

Materials
Original Zentangle
Adobe® Photoshop®
Tip
I recommend having a separate folder for your digital files, with sub-folders for your scanned tangles, scanned backgrounds and final works. It will help you keep your brain straight!
Step 1: Open Adobe® Photoshop®.
Step 2: Select the background file you wish to use.
File
>
Open
> select file.

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