All Blogs
AHE
Where the creative and every-day life meet. AHE is an actor and theatre-maker who has done a bit of everything, from stage to screen, but is still paying the bills with a day-job and trying to find time for a social life. This blog is an insight into the reality of creating a career in the arts world whilst maintaining a healthy relationship with creativity.
William Ivy
Blog showcasing my work spanning electronics design, real-time animation, lasers, software design, electronic music, sound synthesis, photography, electron microscopy, motion capture, tabletop game design, AI art, and anything else I find interesting.
Lyca
Heya, my name is Lyca . Born in 2003 into a mixed Slavic family. Happily married to a gorgeous woman, currently living in Europe. I'm a self taught artist and right now I am molding my style to be a tattooer in the future. I worship old Gods (mostly Ancient Greek), demons, spirits and do witchcraft. My hobbies include, but not limited to: poetry, both personal and religious, photography, gaming, collecting curiosities. Hope you enjoy my random thought streams!
Travis Jeans
I'm a graphic designer who focuses on digital illustration, vector graphics, and web design. Some projects I have worked on lately include accessible CSS themes for Lemmy and static site generators like Eleventy.
pixelglade
I'm a pixel artist and illustrator in Brisbane, Australia. I make anime art, manga art, and pixel art inspired by old consoles like the PC-98. I'm also a small web hobbyist and blog about my life, web development, design, and review retro video games.
Paul Watson
Since 2008 The Artist’s Notebook has been Paul Watson’s studio journal containing notes on his ongoing artwork and related research, giving an insight into his creative process and artistic practice.
Chris Silverman
Since late 2021, I’ve done daily drawings in my iPhone’s Notes app, sharing them to social media under the hashtag #notesArt. In many ways, my #notesArt work is a project uniquely shaped to the contours of my life: a product of the iPhone Era’s pervasive convenience, extended to drawing. I live in an apartment and work a regular job, so it’s harder for me to make the time and space required by traditional artistic media. Like most people my age, my phone is always with me; over time, it’s worked its way into every corner of my life. I do everything else on my phone, so it was inevitable that at some point, I’d start drawing on it.