Zentangles 535 and 536 (I thought I’d caught up on logging all my past tiles, but surprise! These ones from last October turned up in a hidden folder.)
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from New Zealand

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Netherlands
seen from China

seen from Saudi Arabia
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from T1
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Japan
Zentangles 535 and 536 (I thought I’d caught up on logging all my past tiles, but surprise! These ones from last October turned up in a hidden folder.)
sorry for being gay but i think li ling and tang xuan should kiss
Tangling the web: an upcoming post series (?)
Hey all! Amari here. I'll be starting a post series about web design traits and trends that have become inescapable across the internet, and whether we can internet without them—as users, developers, and designers.
Petri Dish - a weird web experience thing I made.
So, I'm a web developer who's had brief stints in graphic design, and my current PhD research orbits around the theme of virtual spaces and places. I've made websites, I've taught people how to make websites, and I'm something of an avid user of websites myself.
And…well…I'm bored! I'm bored of SEO-driven design. I'm bored of single-flow webpages that start with a giant hero image and end in a shiny call to action button—all designed to channel you as quickly as possible to the part where you subscribe or enter your card details.
(Even this post is formatted like one of them! It wasn't even intentional! It's become ingrained in the way I structure and present my ideas, and that's just a little disturbing.)
These templates are sweeping the landscape like invasive trees. And at the heart of this scourge is the vaunted axiom of "Predictability," which gets peddled in every UI/UX class that is "future-oriented" enough to use that acronym. Predictability lets users learn a new site quickly so they spend money sooner, fosters comfort and familiarity with the idea of spending money, and allows for the development of usage patterns where money is spent.
I get the merits of that axiom; I get that it has a time and place. But when game and webcomic sites look and feel and interact like that, I think we have to ask: Can we imagine something different? Can we slow the takeover of the smooth corpo aesthetic? Can we avert a future where the effective geography of the web, with all its varied terrain and endemic textures, is bulldozed into featureless oblivion?
I think it would be presumptuous to suggest that they're some mythic species of the past that slowly died out, too. A lot of the web experiences we loved well as kids are still right there, or have successors that are! They've just gotten so crowded out, by the combination of corporate sites and corporate-driven search algorithms, that one wonders if they will someday become impossible to stumble upon.
Anyway, the intended post series is born out of these provocations. I'd like to tackle elements of the current schema of "good web design" and contemplate a web without them (hopefully with examples if I can find them):
Predictable layouts, the "F" scan pattern, and calls to action
Discoverability / SEO
Well-formed HTML and well-maintained linkage
Responsive web design
Identity and device tracking
Socially engineering higher engagement through design
Statefulness and timelines
Visually communicating functionality
And I know, all of these things sound like good traits for a site to have. And yes, in most contexts, they are! But I think imagining the web without them is a highly worthwhile exercise anyway.
Anyway, stay tuned if that interests you—I will be posting them to this blog and tagging them with #tangling the web. Alas, my Call to Action reflex could not be denied, and I had to give you an easily actionable instruction at the end of the post.
tang style hanfu by 嵠上
3/28(火)21:00 〜 ▶️野村千秋CZT @chia_tangle 、 喜多岡季子CZT @toshiko3_zentangle によるインスタライブ💕 ・ ・ブラックタイルにゴールドと白でキラキラ✨ゴージャスなご提案✨☺️ ・ちょっとエスニックな仕上がりも魅力的。バームクーヘンGEMもそれっぽい感じ💓😍💕 ・難しそうだけど意外と直ぐに描けました💕何枚も描きたくなります✨🥰✨ ・ ・楽しかった〜💕ありがとうございました💕 ・ ・ ・オンラインやビデオで簡単にレッスンが受け易くなった一方で、ナマの作品に触れる機会が減ってきました。 ・先生方の作品30点以上を直接 観覧できるこのチャンスをお見逃しなく!!! ・ ・期間中、インスタライブ配信もいっぱいあります💕 💕見逃したかたはアーカイブへGO👇💕 -------------------- ◆Instagram LIVE 🗓3/18(土) ▷14:30 ▶️ @toshiko3_zentangle 🗓3/20(月) ▷13:30 ▶️ @suzume_zentangle ▷15:00 @mikkochan39 ▶️ @shin5mama 🗓3/21(火祝) ▷9:00 ▶️ @aya36_czt36 @soieje ▷14:00 ▶️ @hiroko_muzentangle @art.yokomaekawa1227 🗓3/24(金) ▷15:00 ▶️ @kaori.zentiles 🗓3/26(日) ▷13:00 @ransuemiki0113 ▶️ @eri_eartcrafts 🗓3/27(月) ▷21:00 @mieko_zentangle_czt ▶️ @eri_eartcrafts 🗓3/28(火) ▷21:00 ▶️ @chia_tangle @mieko_zentangle_czt @aya36_czt36 🗓3/29(水) ▷11:00 ▶️ @art.yokomaekawa1227 ▷13:00 ▶️ @mikkochan39 ▷15:00 ▶️ @tomomy_tangle0 🗓3/30(木) ▷21:00 ▶️ @chia_tangle @toshiko3_zentangle 🗓4/1(土) ▷14:30 @emi_zentangle @kaori.zentiles @pico_takatan @fumiko_zen -------------------------- ◆展示会場 大阪市中央区民ギャラリー ◆展示期間 3/20(月)〜3/31(金) ※3/21(火祝)、25(土) 休み ※3/26(日)観覧可能 -------------------------- #czt36japanweek #czt36japan #CZT36PlusJapanWeek2023 #CZT36PJW2023 #36期展 #zentangle #zentangles #doodle #zendoodle #tangling #drawing #zenart #lineart #arttherapy #pendrawing #ゼンタングル #ペン画 #パターンアート #マインドフルネス #リラックス #瞑想 #禅 #ZIA #ぜんたんぐる #love_arts_help #featuregalaxy https://www.instagram.com/p/CqdkLzuPUXi/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
Ugh stupid lights
corneel cannaerts