Monotangles are tiles with a single tangle, often writ large.
Tangleations are variations of tangles, often the combination of two-in-one.
I played with a few of these for the first time recently and look forward to trying different ones.
The top tile is a tangleation of Huggins, with four different variants.
The bottom two are monotangles, with Shattuck on the left and a rosette-like tangle on the right.
Showing posts with label tile. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tile. Show all posts
Monday, July 4, 2016
Monday, June 6, 2016
Happy Birthday!
Labels:
bannah,
black and white,
chainging,
crescent moon,
florz,
ING,
mooka,
printemps,
shattuck,
tile,
Zentangle
Monday, May 16, 2016
Tuesday, May 10, 2016
Tile-A-Day: Serendipity
I usually tangle first thing in the morning after the kids leave. It centers me, a little quiet after the hubbub of the morning. Today, the sun is shining and my prism cast this rainbow on my tile.
Labels:
bannah,
black and white,
curly q,
flux,
mooka,
punzel,
tile,
tile-a-day,
zenplosion folds,
Zentangle
Wednesday, May 4, 2016
Tangling My Week
Today's tiles represent the activities of my week: the star for my father-in-law becoming an American citizen; the treble clef for our piano recital; and the chalice for the Unitarian Universalist singing meditation service I attended.
These tiles are specifically Zentangle-Inspired Art, or ZIAs, because they do not technically follow the dots-border-string-tangle method and are, at least partially in this case, representative and recognizable--mainly the star, the treble clef, and the chalice as the basis or border of the tangles.
Once you have a handle on traditional Zentangle art, it's fun and interesting to explore known shapes or objects. I have tangled bunnies and penguins for my children, cats in memory of one of our dearly departed pets, and cupcakes on birthday cards, among other things. Here, I'm using ZIAs as a form of journalling or recording my week. In fact, both the star and treble clef below are duplicates of gifts (when framed) I gave to my father-in-law and piano teacher.
These tiles are specifically Zentangle-Inspired Art, or ZIAs, because they do not technically follow the dots-border-string-tangle method and are, at least partially in this case, representative and recognizable--mainly the star, the treble clef, and the chalice as the basis or border of the tangles.
Once you have a handle on traditional Zentangle art, it's fun and interesting to explore known shapes or objects. I have tangled bunnies and penguins for my children, cats in memory of one of our dearly departed pets, and cupcakes on birthday cards, among other things. Here, I'm using ZIAs as a form of journalling or recording my week. In fact, both the star and treble clef below are duplicates of gifts (when framed) I gave to my father-in-law and piano teacher.
Tuesday, April 19, 2016
Labels:
black and white,
cadent,
crescent moon,
eke,
fescu,
paradox,
printempts,
static,
tile,
tile-a-day,
xander,
Zentangle
Monday, April 18, 2016
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