Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Scribbler. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Scribbler Quotes And Sayings by 97 Authors including Aporva Kala,Pope Pius Ix,Maurice Sendak,Bruce Black,Romola Garai for you to enjoy and share.
In her spare time she scribbled her thoughts, wishes and dreams, life and times. It kept her sane despite her loneliness.
The chisel is the pen of the sculptor.
I have been doodling with ink and watercolor on paper all my life. It's my way of stirring up my imagination to see what I find hidden in my head. I call the results dream pictures, fantasy sketches, and even brain-sharpenin g exercises.
....and on occasion I like to write in pencil, because I need to know that I can erase the words, even if I never do.
I've always scribbled, and I still do it. I've written numerous scripts for films for which I think I'd be perfect as the complex, intelligent and, yes, modern heroine. Embarrassingly bad, all of them. I've had to come to terms with the fact that I'm not a writer.
I'm the sort of person who doesn't write in ink. I only write in pencil, so it can be rubbed out.
The pen is in your hands, the rest is still unwritten.
Writing is the dancing of the mind on a stage called paper.
I work with pen and paper. That's my favorite way to write. I love the way the ink sinks into the wood, soaks into the wood pulp. There's something about that process that's so organic.
To write: to try meticulously to retain something, to cause something to survive; to wrest a few precise scraps from the void as it grows, to leave somewhere a furrow, a trace, a mark or a few signs.
I love working with my hands. My writing is rough, my paper bruised with ink stains.
A writer's brush is a warrior's bow, the letters it shapes are arrows that must hit the mark on the page. The calligrapher is an archer, or a general on a battlefield. Someone wrote that long ago. She feels that way this morning. She is at war.
The mason stirs.
Words!
Pens are too light.
Take a chisel to write.
Those who largely rely on their hands and the beautiful or shocking traces of the imagination that they leave on the canvas ... CONCRETE ... one builds a picture.
I draft on the computer. I have a really giant screen that attaches to my laptop, and then I have a humongous digital drawing tablet called a Cintiq. It sits at all different angles, and it's so big that it would take two people to move it.
Keep scribbling! Something will happen.
Pencil. Paper. Forget the world.
I like to write my lyrics on clay tablets.
Writing is not a series of strokes, but space, divided into characteristic shapes by strokes.
When you print out your manuscript and read it, marking up with a pen, it sometimes feels like a criminal returning to the scene of a crime.
I like the physical action of writing down by hand, and I don't just use it for writing my fiction.
Writing- the profession in which you stare at a computer screen, stare out the window, type a few words, then curse repeatedly.
I cannot remember the time when I was not writing, or when I did not mean to be a writer...I was an indefatigable scribbler
Calligraphy, a spiritual art that has been forgotten in favor of an emotionless keyboard.
It is all very well, when the pen flows, but then there are the dark days when imagination deserts one, and it is an effort to put anything down on paper. That little you have achieved stares at you at the end of the day, and you know the next morning you will have to scrape it down and start again.
I am a night creature, and I write from midnight till dawn, secluded in my office and surrounded by my collection of dragons (I have 400 of them). I only use Macintosh computers, which I name in dynastic order. Right now I'm using MacDragon 5. Only the devil is able to decipher my handwriting.
One of the things I like to do during an 'overhaul' revision is bust out my highlighters and colored pens. Tools like these make me feel like a real writer.
It's called a pen. It's like a printer, hooked straight to my brain.
The ink line drawing flowed the cursive journey,
created on paper canvas that brought the story to life.
I write on a computer, on a laptop or whatever.
A pen transmits the voice of the soul.
Like a warrior in the battlefield, a writer must endeavour to use his pen to stamp the paper with his identity.
I'm a text artist. It's an unsung art form because it's so ahead of its time.
In my fairly disorganized life, yellow stickies are too easily lost, and as for software, I try to avoid using my computer as much more than a typewriter and a post office. I rely on my lifelong habit of daydreaming to spin my stories.
I write with a fountain pen. And then revise word by word and line by line so that the first draft of a scene is usually the tenth or so draft.
Painting a picture is writing a poem with paint.
I don't like computers. I still like to do my drawings by hand.
Iwas a sculptor.Butthat'sreallydrawinga drawing you fall over in the dark, a three-dimensional drawing.
Engraving then, is, in brief terms, the Art of Scratch.
Writing is thinking on paper
I always write in pencil, so I can erase.
What pen can describe this scene of marvellous horror; what pencil can portray it?
With 'Scratch,' we want to let kids to be the creators. We want them to create interesting, dynamic things on the computer.
My app is the same juicy paint used by Vincent Van Gogh; my screen is the woven canvas of Titian. Painting by hand, I've come to figure, is a certain kind of love.
One day when I was studying with Schoenberg, he pointed out the eraser on his pencil and said, 'This end is more important than the other.' After twenty years I learned to write directly in ink.
The first writing of the human being was drawing, not writing.
Just start scribbling. The first draft is never your last draft. Nothing you write is by accident.
A writer should not so much write as embroider on paper; the work should be painstaking, laborious.
The Term Paper Artist' represents two models of writing, one of the little boy bouncing his ball, generating stories for the sheer pleasure of it, and the besieged adult, writing to make a living, having to contend with a very competitive, very unreliable world in which public image counts.
Startled, I accidently knock over my inkwell. A black tsunami of ink sprawls out across the page, engulfing the tiny village of my words. They are swept away into the midnight sea. Gone forever. I am bereft.
I use a special tool. I make it myself; very sharp steel point and a handle like a pencil. For me it is a pencil. Maybe I have a special talent, a feeling you might say that lets me control it, to express my ideas as though I were sketching black on white.
I always write my first draft in longhand, in lined notebooks. I move around the house, sitting where I like, and watch the words spool out in front of me, actually taking a lot of pleasure in the way they look in my strange handwriting on the page.
Pen in hand, hand to the page, it's godly.
It is in front of the the paper that the artist creates himself.
She writes things with her movements that I for the life of me could never write with a pen.
When I work I have a sculptor's sense of the shape of the words I'm making. I use a machine with larger than average letters: the bigger the better.
Now, I like a writer party, I like writers, I am the child of writers, I am a writer. I still love scribbling that word - WRITER - anytime
A writer is always working.
I am but a small pencil in the hand of a writing God
first four letters, and used to write them out
I grew up with an Apple 2E - I had a deep, emotional attachment to that machine - and I loved doodling.
A pen went scribbling along. When it tried to write love, it broke.
Faber's drawing-pencils;
With pencil, you can always erase.
My artistic process involves pens, gesso, acrylic paint, and markers, all on vellum. I use a window painter's technique and paint on the backside of my image before I mess with the front.
Writing itself does not know what it looks like while one is doing it, only when it's finished.
Only write to me, write to me, I love to see the hop and skip and sudden starts of your ink.
Pen and paper have been my life, now they may herald my death. But I asked for these, the traditional tools of my trade, and to my surprise my request has been granted.
When you're looking for a sketchbook, you've got to find the right paper for the pens you like to use. I like to draw on both sides of the page.
I prefer drawing the things I've written to handing them off to another artist. Turns out I'm a huge control freak - and because I write in thumbnails, the art is already happening by the time I start writing!
Doodling serves as a means of keeping the hand or fingers limber, so that they are always ready for serious work.
I write with a Uni-Ball Onyx Micropoint on nine-by-seven bound notebooks made by a Canadian company called Blueline. After I do a few drafts, I type up the poem on a Macintosh G3 and then send it out the door.
One of the critical skills in creative work is note-taking. Practically all the great geniuses of our culture, ranging from Leonardo to Edison, from Hemingway to Picasso, have been almost pathological note-takers.
Writing is a craft and, like all craft, proceeds by stages: conception, material selection, rough shaping, detailed shaping, sanding and finishing.
When we draw on the tablet, the drawing shows up on the computer screen. If we have chosen to tell the computer that the stylist is to behave like a piece of chalk, or a pen, or a wet brush, it will.
The poet drafts his work as a writer but edits it as a sculptor, with his pen as a chisel and his mind a hammer.
I work on drawing as a final product.
On pristine parchment I draw with my skis calligraphic lines of joy, writing poems of movement.
I still use quill and parchment. I do e-mails, and I write, but I don't go around surfing too much.
I'm a plotter. A thinker, a note-maker, a mapper and a flow-charter. I'm up for using any device that will teach me more about the people I'm writing about and their story.
Writing ink is the magic that allows nothing to become something. It catches the fleeting idea and seeks out the glances of those who wish to see. Even a random ink splat will mean something to someone.
I write in the studio.
What a crippling art writing is, no body to it, no craft, really. It's all in the mind and you never see it or feel it
only sometimes hear it. It uses only such a small part of man. I wish I were a sculptor.
The writing is done on the computer, and the drawing is done by hand. I write, write, write, then I hit the illustration.
I don't use a pen. I write with a goose quill dipped in venom.
pencils racing across paper, a sound I like." Marisol
I'm a writer who just happens to draw.
Writers are alphabet artists. The blank page becomes their canvas as they paint pictures with words.
I mostly write on my own, walking, outside.
Typographic style is founded not on any one technology of typesetting or printing, but on the primitive yet subtle craft of writing.
I have more than 100 legal pads filled with handwriting. Eight novels, two books for children, countless stories and essays.
The paper is my savior, the pen my blood, to words that shed my world.
The scrawled letters form words, the words form lines, the lines form a poem. Your eyes scanning across the page give the poem life.
Writers are cut open on the page.
I'm a bit like a sponge. When I'm not writing I absorb life like water. When I write I squeeze the sponge a little - and out comes, not water but ink.
My Pen is my thoughts
I was hired as a penciler.
What is writing, after all, except fumbling in darkness endeavoring to light a candle?
Hand any four-year-old a fist full of crayons, and it is a very, very few who don't get busy with them, drawing, coloring, scribbling. I have not stopped scribbling.
Her life in ink.