Most of my WordToons are doodled using block letters. Here I decided to combine with line letters. This allows me to express the word emphasizing the two es to become the major characters, There are endless possibilities for making words into visual statements.
Category: Expressive
This can cover anything you can’t fit into another category. It is just an “expressive” WordToon.
Calm
Here is my illustration of how a particular word can become a WordToon telling you about itself. Even these simple line letters can express the meaning in many ways. This is the essence of WordToons. Take a short word such as FUN and see how many ways you can express it just in line letters. This is the fun of it.
Doodling: Mack Rowe’s Lesson on WordToons #1
As I was doodling one day, I had an idea. Why not turn words into pictures? I imagined that a word could express itself without being in a sentence. Sounded like fun, so I tried it—and WordToons was born. I found it to be a lot of fun and doodled one or two a day for entertainment. Then it occurred to me that anyone can do this. Everybody doodles! It’s a simple idea to get a word to tell about itself—to show what it means. Or it can be funny. No special training necessary. And, since I like to teach, I imagined that I could teach anyone to do it for self entertainment. I did— to high schoolers, retirees, and jail inmates! None were artists, they certainly could doodle! And they did it in a couple of sessions. They understood that doodling is not done for a grade or for evaluation. They are done for personal
And you can too.
Here’s how it works: Begin with a white sheet of paper and a pencil
1 Start by lettering the word, run, on the paper. All caps will get you into expressing it better
2 Now Doodle it in outline large. Don’t worry about accuracy. Just doodle. Do it more than once. It’ll change as you go. That’s OK. Begin to see some action? We’ll keep going. 3 Now add action lines. Enlarge the letters again. You’ll see why.
4 Next let’s doodle the letters even larger and animate them with exaggeration. Add faces and hands and shoes! How fast are we going now?
5 If We want to go further, let’s add some sweat drops, hair feet.
6 And now, time to erase pencil lines and then ink in with black ballpoint. You’re ready to color for the finale. You can use colored pencils, watercolor markers—double ended for choice of coloring tip sizes. Keep your color on the light side. Dark color tends to darken the details.
For hands just doodle three fingers and a thumb for simplicity. look at your own hands. the feet are simple quick outlines.
And all kinds of face expressions can give added meaning to your doodled wordtoons. And also try looking in a mirror.
Mental Floss
A WordToon I doodled to remind of the valuable way laughter influences your life.
Laughing Relieves Stress
This is an active doodle to state an obvious truth. In doodling it, I had the idea to shape the etters into a smile (Laughing) and a frown (Stress). The figures emphasize the message. Find laughs each day whenever and wherever. This besses your soul each day.
Fear Shrinks Spirit
I wanted to doodle this saying after to the horrific killing in the middle east. The realization of the suffering and shock affected my emotional spirit deeply. Shaping the letters of each word, along with the colors shows what happened to me. Then I knew I had to reach out to the positive. This is what I always recommend.
Dreaming
Here’s a call to think about taking time in today’s hectic pace to pause. Time out for yourself to relax your mind each day, find yourself, and make a decision that this can produce some insights for yourself. There’s much to discover about YOU.
Snuggle
Cold weather ahead. Be prepared.
Dive
This is a fun experiment I took up. It’s about bending a letter. Could I curve the D to reveal its back side. I saw it in my mind and, after some doodling (trying various versions), I saw it happen. Yes, it was fun!
Ho Ho
Here’s my greeting to you for Christmas. May you have a positive celebration!