are they just some random scribbles?
Artist trading cards with asemic writing, 7/22. I painted each card with acrylics, let it dry, then painted over it in black, then scraped out the text. Whatever it says!


I made these artist trading cards using India ink and diluted acrylic paints. They depict objects found in my house.
From April 2020.
Sometimes you have a scrap of something you just know will come in handy, or is too good to let go of. It waits around until its turn comes. Here are a couple of examples.
This animal was originally just a random ink blob surrounding an odd-shaped white section (the head part). I immediately saw it as a head, but didn’t get around to doing anything with it until one night, the scrap fell out of my leftover box. I got out my pen and made him a body. Next stop – ATC.
This is a two for one leftover meal – the card was painted for another purpose but not used, and the legs were a try-out sketch for a bigger drawing. Put them together and here you have another ATC.
Here are a couple of artist trading cards featuring line drawings, plus an item done on a library card, from April 2020. Take a look.
This one features a drawing I did on a scrap of paper and later affixed to a card, along with some other papers.
Here is a tiny drawing I did as a try-out for an illustration I did some time ago. It was on another piece of paper that I cut out and glued to the cardboard backing, plus taking the opportunity to add more detail to it.
Here is a lugubrious fellow lurking. That’s pretty much all I know about him. Done in acrylic paints with pen-drawn features.
Here are a some ATC’s I made as part of my teaching duties at my mixed media class from earlier this year. I created them as part of our session on mail art and other social art (art meant to share), so that they could be part of a trading session our class did.
Here are a couple of ATC’s I made as part of my teaching duties at my recent mixed media class. I created them as part of our session on mail art and other social art (art meant to share), so that they could be part of a trading session our class did.
ATC Advice is my own category for this kind of ATC card. Simple to make. Make an ATC. Put a phrase cut from print on it. Pick the phrase at random; do not try to match it to the card.
Read the words, look at the picture, and see what you get from the juxtaposition.
You may be surprised. The ATC Advice method quite often offers something astute or insightful or maybe just head-scratching.
ATC Advice is my own category for this kind of ATC card. Simple to make. Make an ATC. Put a phrase cut from print on it. Pick the phrase at random; do not try to match it to the card.
Read the words, look at the picture, and see what you get from the juxtaposition.
You may be surprised. The ATC Advice method quite often offers something astute or insightful or maybe just head-scratching.
ATC Advice is my own category for this kind of ATC card. Simple to make. Make an ATC. Put a phrase cut from print on it. Pick the phrase at random; do not try to match it to the card.
Read the words, look at the picture, and see what you get from the juxtaposition.
You may be surprised. The ATC Advice method quite often offers something astute or insightful or maybe just head-scratching.
ATC Advice is my own category for this kind of ATC card. Simple to make. Make an ATC. Put a phrase cut from print on it. Pick the phrase at random; do not try to match it to the card.
Read the words, look at the picture, and see what you get from the juxtaposition.
You may be surprised. The ATC Advice method quite often offers something astute or insightful or maybe just head-scratching.
Here are a couple of cards from January 2019.
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