Inktober (2017)

Inktober (2017)

What is Inktober?
Started in 2009 by Jake Parker as a challenge to improve his inking skills and develop positive drawing habits, the basic rules have been to create a piece of art in ink, every day, and share it with people – online or offline. In 2016, Parker begun sharing official prompt lists for people to work with.

Prompt list for Inktober, 2017

Challenge Accepted
When the frustration at not using my ipad as much I thought I should aligned with an increasingly bleak looking work situation, and off the back of a team-initated drawing challenge, Inktober 2017 became the perfect escape. And the perfect excuse.

Instead of going back to my traditional art roots, I wanted to use the challenge to develop something else. A problem that had been sitting gathering dust: the ipad pro and apple pencil. The 31-day challenge would be a great opportunity to push ahead one day at a time with getting more comfortable sitting down with the ipad and smashing something out.

But of course, worth doing, worth overdoing.

Go on, I dare you

I never wrote it down but I remember setting myself a few ground rules for this Inktober challenge.

  • 1. Everything had to be done on the ipad with the apple pencil
  • 2. You have from 00:00 to 23:59 every day to work on a piece. No more, no less.
  • 3. Regardless of how finished or not it is, you have to post your final piece.
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01 – Swift

02 – Divided

03 – Poison

04 – Underwater

05 – Long

06 – Sword

07 – Shy

08 – Crooked

09 – Screech

10 – Gigantic

11 – Run

12 – Shattered

13 – Teeming

14 – Fierce

15 – Mysterious

16 – Fat

17 – Graceful

18 – Filthy

19 – Cloud

20 – Deep

21 – Furious

22 – Trail

23 – Juicy

24 – Blind

25 – Ship

26 – Squeak

27 – Climb

28 – Fall

29 – United

30 – Found

31 – Mask

All 31 pieces were made with iOS Sketchbook Pro, and there’s a whole range of styles and pieces that came from the challenge. It’s fun to look back at these retrospectively;

  • Pieces such as #5 and #13 being inspired by Stardew Valley (#5 in anticpation before the Switch version had been released, ironically incredibly prophetic given the number of time I spent hunting down hardwood in-game once it came out. And I had managed to play enough of the game that by [Inktober] Day 13, I had an idea of what Amaranth as a grain crop was like.)
  • #15’s creature in the dark looking over its shoulder serves as a permanent reminder that The Rasmus’ album Dark Matters was on high rotation during this challenge (“Something in the Dark”, Track 2)
  • The teeny tiny Foreign Shrapnel Dragon as he appears in #7 after being spotted by the human owner of his spare coin hoard (mortified, truely), and #21 defending his stash of coinage.
  • Several pieces that serve as a reminder of circumstances and current events at the time too (#12, #27 and #29).

Some of these were revisited later, and some were polished into finished pieces:

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06 Swords (2017)

Fight Like A Girl (WIP 1, 2018)

Fight Like A Girl (WIP 2, 2019)

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Fall (2017)

Falling Leaves (2018)

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Deep (2017)

You Only Die Once (2018)

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Found (2017)

Hidden Treasures (2018)

In Conclusion:

All in all I achieved what I set out to do with this challenge – 31 days in a row, sit down with the ipad and the apple pencil and make something. Some days were easier than others, it got easier the more I did it, some prompts were easier than others. I might have a great idea one day, and barely execute the prompt the next. And that’s okay! If nothing else, it gave me the starting blocks for several illustrations that I could come back to – and in several cases, did.