Source: knightandknights
Source: sixpenceee
Fushimi Inari Shrine, pt. 3
Source: mouseshouses
Artists Paul Roden and Valerie Lueth of the Tugboat Printshop spent 2 years meticulously carving this woodcut forest landscape.
(via allisonillustration)
Source: cubebreaker
LEWIS CARROLL’S THREE TIPS FOR OVERCOMING CREATIVE BLOCK:
“When you have made a thorough and reasonably long effort, to understand a thing, and still feel puzzled by it, stop, you will only hurt yourself by going on. Put it aside till the next morning; and if then you can’t make it out, and have no one to explain it to you, put it aside entirely, and go back to that part of the subject which you do understand. When I was reading Mathematics for University honors, I would sometimes, after working a week or two at some new book, and mastering ten or twenty pages, get into a hopeless muddle, and find it just as bad the next morning. My rule was to begin the book again. And perhaps in another fortnight I had come to the old difficulty with impetus enough to get over it. Or perhaps not. I have several books that I have begun over and over again.
My second hint shall be — Never leave an unsolved difficulty behind. I mean, don’t go any further in that book till the difficulty is conquered. In this point, Mathematics differs entirely from most other subjects. Suppose you are reading an Italian book, and come to a hopelessly obscure sentence — don’t waste too much time on it, skip it, and go on; you will do very well without it. But if you skip a mathematical difficulty, it is sure to crop up again: you will find some other proof depending on it, and you will only get deeper and deeper into the mud.
My third hint is, only go on working so long as the brain is quite clear. The moment you feel the ideas getting confused leave off and rest, or your penalty will be that you will never learn Mathematics at all!
Lewis Carroll, Author (Alice In Wonderland, Through The Looking Glass)
via :
(via cartoonbrew)
(via modmad)
Source: cartoonbrew
わおきつねざる
わおきつねざる
Forget inspiration. Habit is more dependable. Habit will sustain you whether you’re inspired or not. Habit will help you finish and polish your stories. Inspiration won’t. Habit in persistence in practice.
(via unbadgr)
Source: inspired-to-write









