Here’s another tip to help you with your Inktober challenge:
Try exploring contrarian thinking.Â
What does it involve? If an object is usually depicted from the same perspective, how would you communicate the complete opposite?
Take this example: passports are government-issued documents that certify a person’s identity and allow them to travel to other countries.Â
But what if you communicated the opposite?Â
Could a passport symbolize a denial of rights or freedoms for someone?
As you see, you can express the negative side of positive things or the positive side of negative ones.Â
Everything can be reversed. And with the results you get, you can always tell a story.
Give these tips a try for your next Inktober2024 drawing!
Thank you,
Dario Paniagua
Visual Thinkers Coach
If you’re following the Inktober challenge, I’m sure these two tips will help you!
Did you know that one of the wonderful things about metaphors is that they don’t follow any rules?
What happens if you take an object and draw a person using it in a completely unconventional and absurd way?
Here’s a secret to help you find different uses: change the perspective! Draw that object from another point of view, and then try to find new, unexpected uses for it.
Don’t stop playing with your next idea for Inktober2024! Any absurdity is a great excuse to create a story.
Thank you,
Dario Paniagua
Visual Thinkers Coach
Here’s another tip for your Inktober challenge:
There are no limits to creating disruptions. Even a simple scene, like watching the horizon and a sunset, can be used to play with and create some kind of disruption.
What’s behind the objects we draw? Can we peek inside them? Can we reveal what’s hidden behind?
Feel free to experiment with anything you draw.Â
Anything can be altered, modified, flipped, or inverted to create a story around it.
Keep applying these tips in your Inktober2024 challenge!
Thank you,
Dario Paniagua
Visual Thinkers Coach
Here’s a new tip that might help you generate ideas for the Inktober challenge.
When we talk about exotic things, you can use two techniques to create metaphors that allow you to explore unusual concepts.Â
Let’s remember that something exotic is extravagant, rare, strange, unusual, or infrequent.
Try one of these two:
1. The first is the "out of context" technique: you place something (an object, person, or animal) in an unusual location where people don’t expect to see it.
2. The second is substitution: you replace an object, person, or animal that you expect to see in a specific situation with something else that takes the place of that predictable element.Â
For example, instead of seeing a dog, you replace it with a pigeon.
This technique creates disruption by breaking the predictable, and it's a great way to capture attention.
Give it a try with your next ideas for inktober2024!
Thank you,Â
Dario PaniaguaÂ
Visual Thinkers Coach
Here’s a new tip for your Inktober ideas.
There’s a technique for creating metaphors that involves humanizing objects.
'Humanizing' doesn’t necessarily mean adding faces, arms, and legs. It can also be just a small detail.
This means you don’t need to humanize the entire object—you can humanize just one part of it.
Now, why should we humanize an object?
There are two main reasons:
When we add a human element to any image, it becomes much more interesting to your audience, because when there’s a person, it means you're telling a story.
The second reason is that by humanizing an object, we can often describe characteristics of a person through that object.
Even if the image seems completely absurd, we can always create a story around that absurdity, which gives meaning to the situation we’re drawing.
I hope these tips are helpful and that you can use them in your upcoming Inktober2024 drawing ideas.
Thank you,
Dario Paniagua
Visual Thinkers Coach
Today, I want to give you the second tip for the Inktober challenge.
The word "discover" means to find something unexpectedly—to see, find, or become aware of something for the first time.Â
Sometimes, these things are right in front of us, but we don’t notice them because we don’t allow ourselves to stop, search, and look closely.Â
We must look unusually and from different perspectives—looking up and looking down. In fact, discovery is tied to curiosity.
Here are some questions to help you explore this concept:
- Can you show a familiar object from a less common perspective?
- Does seeing another angle of an object allow you to discover new shapes?
- Can you use the shapes you’ve 'discovered' to create new elements?
- Can you use negative space to uncover images that relate to the theme you want to represent?
Don’t be afraid to explore, and don’t fear the absurd. You can always give meaning through a mini story.
Look, play, and observe—there are forms waiting to be 'discovered' all the time.
Tha...
Inktober is a month-long art challenge created by artist  Jake Parker
Although I won’t be participating, many of my students ask how to find daily inspiration for this challenge, which demands constant creativity for 30 days.
So, I’ll be sharing random tips to help you see things from a new perspective and realize that mental blocks aren’t real if we know how to create disruptions and tell stories around them.
Here’s the first tip for #inktober2024
The first word in this challenge is "backpack." My advice is: don’t always be literal—think laterally.
You don’t have to draw a backpack as it is.
- Could your thoughts be a backpack?
- Could the backpack take a human shape?
- Could it transform into something else?
- Does it have to be a physical object, or could it be a gas or something organic that takes its shape?
- If you draw a backpack to represent someone traveling, could you also draw one to show what people think about or worry about when they travel?
- Can the concept of a backpack relate t...
Do you know what message I wanted to convey by drawing this scene?
None.
This drawing was not born with any specific message intention, only as an exercise to explore shapes and embrace the absurd.
But here's the interesting part: although there was no intention to create a message, if I ask each of you what it means, you will find a meaning.
By the way, think what keyword or short phrase would you associate with this image.
Remember, shapes are everywhere. Negative space can help us find recognizable shapes and build messages with them.
The metaphor here is in putting an object out of context. If the speech bubble were outside the figure, it probably wouldn't have the same meaning it has now, as, in this scene, it is placed in an unexpected and disruptive location.
Metaphors are lovers of the absurd.
Don't forget that advice because it will help you create much more symbolic images.
If you're interested in learning Visual Thinking through metaphors, leave me your details on my ...
The 'mountain path' is another classic image frequently used in visual thinking.
But what happens when we incorporate multiple clichéd icons into the same scene?
The key to standing out is to blend them into a cohesive story format.
But what do I mean by standing out? Standing out from what? From the risk of your visual image being overlooked, ignored, and left your message unread.
When an image becomes too familiar through repetition, it loses its impact.
Visual storytelling is what gives our images context and makes our visual message captivating to the viewer.
Let's analyze some of the elements we see here, that help create a disruptive scene_
- Playing with sizes (making things appear dramatically large or small).
- Blend or join: merging one element with another, like transforming a speech bubble into a mountain scene.
- Substitution: replacing part of the speech bubble with the mountain peak.
Â
There are numerous techniques available for crafting metaphors that enrich t...
A speech bubble used in a generic manner conveys a generic message.
Humans constantly communicate. But communication isn't always two-way.
We don't always listen, and we don't always want to listen.
How do we convey this in visual thinking?
In the context of a story and to create a story, what better way than to create a setting?
Any setting works for telling stories.
How many elements are speaking here?
The man?
The elderly woman?
The pigeon?
What are they each saying?
Would you like to guess what they are talking about or just suggest a keyword for the whole scene?
If you want to learn to tell stories through visual thinking, I can teach you using visual metaphors. Leave your details on my site, and I'll notify you as soon as enrollment opens.
Thank you,
Dario Paniagua
Visual Thinkers Coach
50% Complete
Access the PIGS Webinar right now to learn all the introductory information about Post It Graphic Recording Scene animated maps.