
Art making ideasi
Ideas. Inspiration. A little creative mischief.
If you’re drawn to abstract and semi-abstract art, sketchbooks, colour and a little creative mischief, this is your corner of the internet.
In my blog you’ll find stories, videos, inspiration, and gentle nudges to help you create art that feels like you.
A love letter to sketchbooks
A love letter to sketchbooks…
There’s no one right way to do anything, and that includes keeping a sketchbook.
My sketchbooks feel like a motley gang of unruly but beloved friends, each one different, with its own quirks and oddities. And that’s exactly why I love them, not in spite of their weirdness, but because of it.
You know that saying about friends: “They come into your life for a season, a reason, or a lifetime”?
I think it applies to art-making and sketchbooks too. I look back at certain sketchbooks and remember those seasons of life so vividly, times when a sketchbook was an escape from life’s upheaval, a place of quiet creativity or times when it was simply a place of carefree art adventure.
Sketchbooks: A powerful creative tool
A sketchbook can be one of the most powerful creative tools an artist possesses.
For me, they’ve been life-changing. They’ve helped me move from hesitation to confidence, from creative uncertainty to finding my artistic voice. My sketchbooks have been a springboard into a more colorful and creative life. If you’ve ever considered keeping a sketchbook, here are a few reasons why you may like to start or re-start.
Making art for yourself
There is something deeply nourishing about making art just for yourself. Experimenting in a sketchbook can lift the spirits and bring immense joy. The simple act of transforming a blank page into something alive with meaning, color, and line is rewarding in itself. A sketchbook is a private place where we can have a creative conversation with ourselves. For me, it has been where I have learnt to be less critical and judgemental of myself and my art.
So many pages, so many opportunities, so much possibility has helped me loosen my attachment to how any one thing turns out…it just doesn’t matter.
A place to begin
Sketchbooks are where we find out about our own art sensibilities, not where we show up fully formed. They are part of the journey, not the final destination.
When we start working in a sketchbook, it helps to embrace a beginner’s mindset—to stay open, curious, and willing to explore. It’s okay to make mistakes, things that haven’t worked teach us something. We don’t need to expect too much from ourselves. I love this idea from Vincent Van Gogh:
“I am always doing what I can’t do yet, in order to learn how to do it.”
A place to learn and grow
In a world obsessed with outcomes, a sketchbook offers a space for discovery. It allows us to explore our interests, experiment with techniques, develop and flex the ways in which we make art. A sketchbook is where we learn what excites us creatively, where we test ideas, push our boundaries, refine our process, and reflect on our evolving art practice.
A place to practice
It is called an art practice for a reason, a sketchbook is a great place to practice and track the progression of an idea, skill or approach.
A filing cabinet of ideas
A sketchbook is more than just a collection of drawings—it’s a filing cabinet for your creativity. It gathers fragments of inspiration, allowing us to flip through pages and spot recurring patterns, themes, and ideas. Over time, our sketchbooks reveal what captivates us, helping us refine our artistic identity.
Begin where you are
A sketchbook is a companion, a teacher, a playground.
It doesn’t demand perfection. It invites exploration. It reminds us that creativity is not about flawless execution but about showing up, trying and growing.
So, if you’ve ever hesitated to start a sketchbook, let this be your sign: Begin.
Fill the pages with your ideas, your experiments, your mistakes, and your joy. Let it be a space where your creativity can run wild, unfurl and be unjudged.
You never know where it might take you.
Types of sketchbook
Here are some of the sketchbooks I like, but sketchbooks are a personal preference and come in so many different shapes, sizes and varieties, the sketchbook that is right for me, may not be right for you.
The best sketchbook to use is always the one you already own.
The Venezia Book from Fabriano
Stillman & Birn, Zeta Range
Talens Art Creation Sketchbooks
(Some of these links are affiliate links, if you buy something through them, I might earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you. I only ever share the products that I actually use. )
Balancing chaos and focus in art making
Here I share some thoughts on how creativity works…
Creativity often swings between inspiration gathering and disciplined execution. At the start of any creative endeavor, we might need a little chaos—openness, curiosity, and exploration. But to bring an idea to life, we need the opposite: clarity, focus, and determination.
Sometimes, we need the scattergun. Sometimes, we need the laser.
As I write this, I’m in the thick of filming my next online course. The process of creating this course has made me reflect on how creativity often demands two distinct modes: exploration and execution.
For the past two months, I’ve been in the scattergun phase—of coming up with ideas, hunting, gathering, experimenting, and throwing ideas at the wall to see what sticks. I’ve been absorbing books, discovering new artists, writing notes, journalling, sketching, expanding different techniques, and letting curiosity lead the way. This stage thrives on novelty, variety, and stimulation. It’s a time for playful chaos—inviting in fresh ideas, mixing influences, and allowing creative sparks to ignite.
But now, I’m in the laser phase—actually turning the ideas into a reality. Taking all the threads and creating the thing. This requires a completely different mindset: deep focus, structure, and an ‘all-in’ mentality. The distractions that once sparked ideas now threaten progress. Instead of jumping between concepts and tasks, I must commit, push through challenges, and sustain intense concentration.
This dance between divergence and convergence happens in most creative endeavors. It happens when making art—we start with an open field of possibilities, then gradually we define a path, make firm decisions, and commit.
Navigating the two modes in art making:
Embrace the scattergun phase fully
At the start of a project or new body of work, embrace the ambiguity and uncertainty. There is often a lot of ‘not knowing’.
Experiment with different materials, colours, techniques, styles and subjects—invite in the ‘new’ or novel without pressure or expectation.
Seek inspiration from unexpected sources: museums, obscure books, nature, seek outside of your usual circles of reference...
Fill sketchbooks with unfiltered ideas—sketchbooks are often divergent thinking in action…lots of experimentation, gathering, connecting dots…
Follow your intuition. Let curiosity guide you. Resist the urge to make sense of everything immediately—connections and breakthroughs often emerge over time.
Give yourself the opportunity to rest and the space to think if you can; creative ideas often surface when the mind is relaxed. “I’ll sleep on it”…is a truism for a reason. Allowing a little spaciousness into our lives, is fertile, it can allow ideas to take shape and grow.
Gather inspiration like you’re building a virtual pinboard—often, magic happens in the weird combinations and unexpected connections.
Commit to the laser phase when it’s time
Finishing an artwork or any creative project often requires a real focus and concentration. Align deep work with your natural energy cycles—concentration flows best when you work with your own rhythms.
Set aside dedicated ‘studio’ time to refine, develop, and focus on your work. Set a timer for an set period of intense concentration and deep focus
Trust the instincts you developed in the exploration phase—this stage is about shaping, not second-guessing.
Reduce distractions (social media, external input) and fully immerse yourself in the process.
“Efforts to deepen your focus will struggle if you don’t simultaneously wean your mind from a dependence on distraction.”
― Cal Newport, Deep Work
Know when to switch gears
If your work feels chaotic and unfocused, it might be time to narrow in and commit to a single direction.
If you feel stuck or uninspired, loosen up—step away, explore new references, invite in something new or experiment freely again.
Creativity in art and life isn’t about choosing one approach over the other—it’s about learning to move between wild experimentation and disciplined refinement. The scattergun fills the well; the laser brings the vision to life. It seems to me that both are essential.
Creativity can be a balm for the soul
Creativity is a balm for the soul…
“A lot of people don’t feel creative because they’re physically and emotionally exhausted. The recipe for your life should be this: rest until you feel like playing, then play until you feel like resting, and then repeat.”
2025 has unfolded slowly for me. I’ve been poorly with something resembling flu and have spent much of this new year in my pyjamas coughing …
Pencil sketchbook pages from last year
I have done little in life or art, but now I am feeling a bit stronger I have spent some low-key, quiet time meandering in my sketchbook.
Playing with some simple drawing materials… Expecting very little of myself, creating as a lovely distraction. Manufacturing small moments of joy, just as a nice thing to do. Creating for the sake of creating, not for any outcome, just for the experience of doing it.
A sketchbook from a few years ago…
It has made me think about the healing nature of creativity and how beneficial my sketchbook practice has been to me through difficult passages of life.
The last five years have presented a small rollercoaster of personal challenges, as I’m sure they have for many. I’ve had some on-going chronic health issues, my mother died after being ill for many years and we had a house flood which meant we had to re-build the bottom floors of our home whilst living in a hotel for many months… and through it all my sketchbook practice has felt like an anchor, it has been a wonderful balm for my soul and a comforting creative place to go.
Creating in my sketchbook has felt restorative, enriching and up-lifting, sometimes fun, sometimes a necessary source of calm and distraction. A small place to go and be creative. A place where I can just do a little, or sometimes a lot. Sometimes a place to rest and refuel, sometimes a place to wonder and be wild.
Previous sketchbooks
When life seems to derail our creativity, and when things happen that dampen our natural desire to create … it is perhaps in exactly these moments of life that creativity can be important.
In times of difficulty, small creative moments are perhaps more crucial, they can provide hope, light and encouragement. When we create art we are reminded of valuable lessons which are also needed for life. Our whole life is a creative act, which requires courage, problem solving, tenacity, a sense of adventure and optimism. And when we make art we remind ourselves of our ability take a blank page and make it into something meaningful.
A creative practice can be life-enriching and supportive, whatever is happening…
My sketchbook has been both a refuge and an escape. Using a sketchbook has provided a nourishing playground, a sanctuary and a safe harbour when waters have been choppy. It has been a place to ground both myself and my art.
Small handmade art journals
My sketchbook practice has been so valuable to me only because my expectations are so low.
The stakes are low. It is a place for me to create for the joy of creating, a place to create art for the sake of creating art. A place to make anything I want to make. A place where the activity is perhaps important than the outcome. Scribbling and mark making is sometimes enough.
A sketchbook is personal. Your sketchbook, your rules. It’s a place to primarily make art for yourself, to let your interests and style iterate and unfold, it’s not about displaying art, getting approval or finished and finessed works, it’s a place to work things through, figure things out and have a creative conversation with yourself. Or just to play about with materials, to colour-in, because that is what you need in that moment.
Pencil and felt tip pen sketchbook page
Whatever is happening in our lives, creativity can support us in small and large ways.
Creativity is an important way to express ourselves, connect with ourselves, understand ourselves, a way to cope, a way to find hope, a way to meditate, think, feel, process and reflect.
Ultimately making art is a way to come home to ourselves…
A pencil drawing in my sketchbook
A pencil Still Life drawing
Drawing and exploring in a sketchbook
Escaping into colour
A love letter to colour…
Music credit: La Fille Sans Larmes By Lo Mimieux via Epidemic Sound
"Color is a power which directly influences the soul."
Wassily Kandinsky
The comfort of colour
When the world feels dark, the days short and the sky is continuously grey and wintery, I crave colour.
I cocoon myself with colour. Colour can be comforting and consoling. Creating small colorful corners to retreat to, whether that be within the pages of my sketchbook, the pages of an art book, on my desk or within my paintings.
In this video I share some new colourful paintings with you, I review my year in sketchbook pages and show you a beautiful art book published in 2021 by Taschen which celebrates the art of Brazilian artist Beatriz Milhazes.
New paintings
I have just completed four small paintings on wood panels.
They are bright, bold and hopeful. I find hope in colour-soaked moments...and wanted to inbue these paintings with that sense. Inspired by a series of pages and fragments of ideas which have developed over time in the pages of my sketchbook.
I often find my art making feels like a giant and long lasting game of stepping stones. I need to try things out, test ideas, let ideas develop and percolate before they are ready to show up in paintings….
Beatriz Milhazes
If you are interested in the art of Beatriz Milhazes you may like to:
Watch this youtube video from several years ago where she talks about her process
Visit this page from the Whitecube Gallery which includes artworks, and a recent video about the work she has completed for the 60th Venice Biennale in 2024
Finding art inspiration in nature
In this video I take you inside my nature inspired sketchbook, share a few nature inspired artists and chat a little about my new art class...
“Study nature. Love nature. Stay close to nature. It will never fail you.”
Frank Lloyd Wright
The colours, patterns and shapes of nature have been an enduring creative curiosity for me.
Looking at nature invites awe and wonder into my life and is the inspiration for much of my art. When I slow down and take the time to really study nature, it moves me, motivates me and inspires me.
A walk in nature soothes my soul, enlivens my spirit and informs my creativity.
In this video I share some of my recent sketchbook pages which have all been inspired by time in nature and a couple of art books and artists who have created stunning nature-inspired art…
The photographs of Karl Blossfeldt
I also chat a little about my new online art class Nature and Nurture which uses nature as a catalyst for creating art… So if you’d like to use the shapes and motifs of nature to nurture your creativity and inspire beautiful and unique abstract and semi abstract art you may like to check it out.
A mixed media sketchbook tour
Searching for joy and delight, a mixed media sketchbook tour and thoughts on fitting in a sketchbook practice...
In this video I take you on a tour of a full and completed sketchbook and chat about searching for joy and delight in my art making..
This sketchbook took about six months to fill up. I know from the outside that it probably appears that my whole life is just full of care-free days spent colouring-in in my sketchbook… but the reality is that I have to actively find time for my sketchbook practice.
So here I wanted to talk about fitting a sketchbook practice into your day-to-day-life and how I do it.
Connection and kindness
When life is busy with client work, running a business, deadlines etc, playing in my sketchbook can feel like a luxury or a bit self-indulgent. But actually I know it is neither a luxury nor an indulgence.
My sketchbook practice is a tool for connecting with my creative self.
For me, creating in my sketchbook is a nurturing act, an act of kindness to myself, a form of self care and self expression. It is actually probably more important to me than lots of the other things in my life which, on the surface, would appear to be far more important.
Prioritising creativity
When I go for a week or more without using my sketchbook I feel a little disconnected from my self, a little bit adrift and a little unanchored from the creative side of me.
I find that creating art is like a homecoming, a grounding, it feels like I’m reconnecting and checking in with my self. It is a way to better understand myself, my world and what I’m interested in. So sometimes I have to actively make time for my sketchbook, to recognise that it is a priority to me and organise my life accordingly.
It is a habit which enriches my life, fills my creative-well and a practice which keeps me inspired and fluent in my art making, my sketchbook is the engine of my art making, so I find time for it, even when I don’t seem to have too much time to spare.
Frequently, I have to literally carve out time for my sketchbook, steal time from somewhere else or utilise the time I have better to ensure I get some time with my sketchbook. For example, this Summer I paused making YouTube videos and these newsletters to give myself more time to make art… This meant I had more time to paint generally and more time to use paint in my sketchbook, use messy materials and take time to play about. Life is always a balancing act and I often have to recalibrate and check-in with myself to ensure the pendulum hasn’t swung too far away from art making.
Small windows of time
When I’m busy I often end up fitting my sketchbook practice in whilst I’m waiting for something to cook, or in bed, or on the phone or whilst watching television with my husband at the end of the day… sometimes these scenarios are not optimal and demand a simplicity of materials, one pen or one pencil, but I find that a small stolen window of time is better than none at all.
I never ever manage to work in my sketchbook every single day.
This sketchbook is an Artist Sketchbook from Daler Rowney which has 54 double page spreads, it took six months to fill up... which means I fill a double page spread about once every four days on average…
I find that little and often keeps the creative conversation alive. I love it when I have a whole afternoon to potter and play in my sketchbook, but sometimes life just doesn’t allow that, so I find what time I can.
Reducing friction
I make using a sketchbook super easy….I carry a small sketchbook and pen in my bag, this massive sketchbook is stored under an armchair in my living room with a box of different art materials and a few brushes which hold water in the handle. All I need to just start, is right there, there is no friction, no need to get materials sorted, no decisions to make at all… it is all just there waiting for me and encouraging me to create…
Making it easy
Is there a way you could make your sketchbook more accessible and easier to use? I think it’s a good question to ask… ‘how do we make creating easier?’, sometimes the answer is about lowering our expectations and sometimes the answer is just about putting your sketchbook where you are most likely to use it….
Searching for joy and delight
A tour through my mixed media sketchbook and a speedy art demo using Indian ink
Music Credit: Supine by Peter Sandberg via Epidemic Sound.
In this video I take you inside my mixed media sketchbook and share a speedy art demonstration experimenting with ink…
I often write notes to myself about my art, things I want to explore, things to remember, ideas to expand upon, fragments and whispers I want to capture.
Sometimes I list the things I want to do more of or the things I want do less of…
I’ve always found writing to be a useful way to think…by pouring words onto a page, I organise and clarify my thoughts and bring light to what I believe.
Joyful abandon
Recently a phrase has repeated itself in my notes and thoughts in terms of how I want my art to feel. “Joyful abandon.” has appeared twice in my notes… I only noticed it when I read back through them. And then I noticed I’d written it not once, but twice, on different days…in the same week. A subconscious thought made visible.
And what did I mean? I think I meant I want joy and delight to be the things I seek in my art making, my north star…
In this season of my life I want to lean-in to what I find and feel to be joyful…and perhaps abandon the things that don’t support this. There is something unapologetic, exuberant and enthusiastic about the concept of ‘joyful abandon’ that resonates with me. A lack of inhibition and constraint that feels expansive.
When there is so much darkness and difficulty in the world, it may perhaps sound naive of me to be seeking joy. The last few years have been a little challenging for me, I have struggled with some ongoing health issues and various other challenges, and it is exactly this difficulty that has made me more attuned to joy, more keen to seek it out, to celebrate it and appreciate it….
Seek what you value in your art
Creating art isn’t always easy, there will often be problems to solve, fallow seasons, perhaps times when it feels more challenging than others, sometimes art making will feel vulnerable and exposing, we will often get in our own way, but making a decision to seek out what you value the most and do less of the things that don’t serve this seems like a good ambition to me…