1/3/12 |
I
have at least a couple more posts planned as follow-up to my Portugal trip
(including a report on how my sketch materials fared and symposium swag), but
before I get to those, I have an announcement to make: According to Blogger,
this is my 2,000th blog post!
A writer
my entire professional life and a journal keeper even longer than that, I have always used the written word to develop
and retain ideas, record experiences, process feelings and thoughts and,
indeed, to think. It’s been said before by other writers, but sometimes I don’t
know what I’m thinking until I write it. It’s a natural part of how I learn to
understand my experiences.
It
was only natural, then, that when I began learning to draw, I wanted to use
writing to document this very new experience – a process that undoubtedly would
be endless if I kept it up. And it struck me that I had a rare opportunity to document
my own creative and learning processes from the beginning. That’s when I
decided that a blog might be an interesting medium for that documentation.
When
I published my first post on March 18, 2012, about six months after I had started
drawing, I didn’t know how long I would keep the blog up or how often I would post.
Even back then, trendsetters had long ago moved on to social media, and blogging
had already been declared dead. Knowing this, I gave myself permission to try blogging
for as long as I felt like it, but if it no longer interested me, I’d stop.
Six-and-a-half
years and 2,000 posts later, I’m still blogging, nearly every day. Although I
also share my sketches on social media, this blog gives me a permanent place
where I can write about the sketch subject, how I made the sketch, the
materials I used, or a story about the circumstances. While others may have let
their blogs go because posting on Facebook or Instagram is so much easier and
faster, I still have a need for more space and time to develop a thought.
Indeed, I want to think a little longer than the 30 seconds it takes to post
and hashtag a sketch.
While I always intended for this blog to be mainly for myself, it’s been a genuine joy to “meet” readers along the way – the ones who occasionally or regularly leave comments; the ones who email me privately about their own sketching experiences; and the ones who find me among hundreds of symposium attendees to tell me they are readers. Many thanks to all of you – even if you’re silent! – for sharing my journey. (I especially appreciate your readership because, despite much troubleshooting and frustration, I have never been able to get the email subscription tool to work on my blog, and yet you keep returning.) And the journey continues. . . for the next however-many-thousands of posts.
I
hit my 1,000th post on March 27, 2015. You can read about that milestone here.
(What
do the sketches shown here today have to do with my 2,000th post? Not
much. I have a folder on my computer containing hundreds of sketches I haven’t
shown on the blog, usually because I had nothing to say about them at the time.
I still don’t, but this post is a rare excuse to show them. I picked one randomly
from each year that I’ve been sketching.)
3/11/16 |
3/30/17 |
2/3/18 |
Such an amazing achievement, Tina. I admire you!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Ching! And thanks so much for being one of my loyal readers!
Delete- Tina
Congrats on post 2,000!!! Like you I like having a blog to keep my posts about my sketches. It is much easier to access them this way rather than search on other social media sites. I enjoy reading other blogs too, especially people like you who post regularly! Way to go, Tina!
ReplyDeleteThank you, Joan, for being one of my most loyal readers!
Delete