Monday, 14 July 2025

Layer and Let Go - Filling the Creative Well - Blog Series

 


Layering can be a freeing technique in mixed media, and every layer tells part of the story, and sometimes, we must let go to make space for something new.

When I am creating, I find sometimes walking away and coming back with fresh eyes helps inform the direction a piece might take.  When I come back the whole piece might change and that’s alright.  You come with new information and experience that will add an interesting perspective to the piece.

 

What you can try

Start with an existing art piece or a journal page.  You might even want to try an abandoned artwork. Add something to it: paint, collage, marks, fabric. Then add more. And then cover part of it up or walk away and work on something else.

It may feel risky to paint over something you like or are not sure of. But in doing so, you practice trust. You can always take a photo of the work before you cover it up. You learn that your creativity isn’t limited. There’s always more to uncover.


Building the layers

Layering builds depth and often what was once buried peeks through unexpectedly and you begin to see the layers. Each addition becomes part of the whole, even if it disappears from view.

Don’t be afraid to cover, to sand back, to glue down. Let this page be about transformation.

Takeaway Nuggets:

  1. Creative layering is an invitation to trust the process.
  2. Letting go of parts you love can lead to unexpected beauty.


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Check out some of the free and paid resources below to enhance your creative journey 


Course Platform - there are a variety of FREE courses and resources for you to use in your creative practice.

FREE Tier - Patreon - I have a Free Tier on Patreon that has a selection of early release posts and monthly Digital Download Papers for you to use in your creative projects - Learn More Here

YouTube - Weekly Videos to encourage your creative practice, Slow stitching, art journaling and Artists chats - Learn More Here

Check out Filling the Creative Well which helps you establish your creative practice. In the course Filling the Creative Well, your journal is also a place to answer questions, encourage and motivate you, some days you need a reminder and so filling it with encouraging words so that you can come back to it, especially in those days where you are in a valley is really important. .



Friday, 11 July 2025

Keep Going - Filling the Creative Well - Blog Series



There are days when creativity feels easy, and days when it doesn’t. On those in-between days, the best thing you can do is simply keep going, maybe even shifting your focus.  It is better to do something than nothing at all. That’s today’s encouragement, show up, even if it’s just for five minutes.



Art is not always about inspiration. Often, it’s about persistence, showing up because your creative self deserves it. Consistency is where the magic lives in quiet, steady effort. 

What you can Try 

  • You might not feel like making anything today. That’s okay. Keep your practice light and low-pressure. Pick up your journal and scribble a thought. Smear a color across the page. Rip paper and glue it down. Take one small creative action. 
  • When you keep going, you send a message to your inner artist: “I’m here for you.” That kind of trust and nurturing is how practices grow.
  • Keep a journal for those small actions, a “just-for-today” notebook. These practices honor the peaks and the valleys of creative life.
  • Your creativity doesn’t need to be perfect or productive, it just needs you to be present.

Takeaway Nuggets:

  1. Creative practice is built on showing up, not perfection.
  2. Five minutes of art counts remember you are filling the creative well.


👇👇👇👇👇👇

Check out some of the free and paid resources below to enhance your creative journey 


Course Platform - there are a variety of FREE courses and resources for you to use in your creative practice.

FREE Tier - Patreon - I have a Free Tier on Patreon that has a selection of early release posts and monthly Digital Download Papers for you to use in your creative projects - Learn More Here

YouTube - Weekly Videos to encourage your creative practice, Slow stitching, art journaling and Artists chats - Learn More Here

Check out Filling the Creative Well which helps you establish your creative practice. In the course Filling the Creative Well, your journal is also a place to answer questions, encourage and motivate you, some days you need a reminder and so filling it with encouraging words so that you can come back to it, especially in those days where you are in a valley is really important. .



Just One Tool - Filling the Creative Well - Blog Series

 


Limiting your tools or supplies can be one of the most liberating creative decisions. Today’s challenge is to use just one tool, medium, or material and explore everything it can do. I find it is a great way to really understand all the uses of that tool or supply, and it gives you more flexibility and variation in your work.

Check out the Video - if you find limiting yourself to just one to begin with difficult, just reduce the amount you would normally use.  In this video I use some paints and stencils to work on the page.


What you can try

  • Pick one: a watercolor palette, a black marker, a needle and thread, a gel pen, a single color of paint. What happens when you stretch its use across the whole page or several? 
  • With fewer choices, you are able to explore further. Try making different types of marks. Experiment with layering. Use the tool in unexpected ways maybe your pen mimics another supply, or your watercolor develops unusual texture when layered thickly. 
  • This kind of exploration sharpens your understanding of your materials and deepens your relationship to them. You become more resourceful and imaginative. 
  • You might also notice that limiting your choices frees your brain. Instead of worrying about all the variations of color in your acrylic set which can sometimes be 50+, you get to focus on how many different shades and variations you can get from one color.

Bonus idea: use the same tool each day for a week. Observe how your comfort grows. This practice helps you slow down and appreciate simplicity.

Takeaway Nuggets: 

  1. Limiting tools can unlock deeper creativity.
  2. Mastery comes from exploration


👇👇👇👇👇👇

Check out some of the free and paid resources below to enhance your creative journey 


Course Platform - there are a variety of FREE courses and resources for you to use in your creative practice.

FREE Tier - Patreon - I have a Free Tier on Patreon that has a selection of early release posts and monthly Digital Download Papers for you to use in your creative projects - Learn More Here

YouTube - Weekly Videos to encourage your creative practice, Slow stitching, art journaling and Artists chats - Learn More Here

Check out Filling the Creative Well which helps you establish your creative practice. In the course Filling the Creative Well, your journal is also a place to answer questions, encourage and motivate you, some days you need a reminder and so filling it with encouraging words so that you can come back to it, especially in those days where you are in a valley is really important. .



Wednesday, 9 July 2025

Mark Making - Filling the Creative Well Blog Series

 


Today we are going to look at ‘mark making’ – It is slightly similar to doodling but you are using additional tools, lids, bottle tops or any other recycled or natural materials. It is a good idea to experiment with some of your tools to see what kind of marks you can get. There’s a special kind of freedom in intuitive mark making, you don’t have the pressure of making “art.” It is creative play and expression.


Check out my journal above to see how I create in my journal.


You can also check out this 'Mark making Tools video HERE where I share some of the tools that I use.

What You can Try

We are not thinking about drawing something specific, but we are going to make marks.  Choose a tool: a lid, a stick dipped in ink, a brush, a crayon, a piece of string – whatever you have and start to make marks on the paper. Try other things like using your non-dominant hand or put on music and respond to it with marks on the surface.

These marks don’t need to “be” anything. They can be scribbles, slashes, scratches, dots, or loops. Fill a page - or several.

 

Intuitive mark making is like your voice before you have the words. It side steps the need to be perfect and you just have fun.  You learn to value the moment and express what you have no words for.  You can do it anytime and with any supply.

Once you have a moment you can add to your marks, color them in, cut them up and use in collage, or build a library of patterns and textures that you can return to.

Takeaway Nuggets:

  • Intuitive marks are expressions of energy, not outcome.

  • The body often knows what the mind hasn’t said yet, let it speak.


👇👇👇👇👇👇

Check out some of the free and paid resources below to enhance your creative journey 


Course Platform - there are a variety of FREE courses and resources for you to use in your creative practice.

FREE Tier - Patreon - I have a Free Tier on Patreon that has a selection of early release posts and monthly Digital Download Papers for you to use in your creative projects - Learn More Here



YouTube - Weekly Videos to encourage your creative practice, Slow stitching, art journaling and Artists chats - Learn More Here

Check out Filling the Creative Well which helps you establish your creative practice. In the course Filling the Creative Well, your journal is also a place to answer questions, encourage and motivate you, some days you need a reminder and so filling it with encouraging words so that you can come back to it, especially in those days where you are in a valley is really important.


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