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Drawing color blind
I’ve been experimenting with color drawings in the studio using fancy crayons on top of block printing ink.
Here are items #1 and #2 from Friday’s letter, “Somebody needs to know the time”:
1. I did a lot of design work on the next book this week, a lot of it constrained by what you can do in black and white on a 6″x6″ page. To take a break from greyscale, I’ve been doing a bunch of color drawings in the studio on old pages of sheet music. I’m using a set of Caran d’Ache Classic Neocolor II Water-Soluble Pastels I picked up after learning about them from Tom Sachs. (I may splurge on the big set when these are used up!)
2. Walt Disney said he thought Mary Blair must be colorblind because she came up with such amazing color combinations. I’m red-green colorblind, and most of my life I’ve been scared or confused by color. (My collage work and my block printshave helped me loosen up a bit.) I’m in awe of people who can really do color, and part of my urge to use color this week came from reading cartoonist Tara Booth’s Processing: 100 Comics That Got Me Through It. Booth’s formally trained (and her grandparents are watercolor artists!) but her use of color is just so free and unexpected, it makes you want to join along in the fun. Check her out on Instagram: @tarabooth.
And from Tuesday’s letter, “Your hobby looks exhausting!”
Here are some drawings that showed up in the studio this weekend — they came because I wondered, What if I drew over roller-ed block ink instead of printing over it?
This happens a lot: If I mess around long enough on a creative hobby or side project, pretty soon a body of work starts to show up. I wonder what the heck I’m going to do with it. But the best way to keep it going, for me, is to not jump at answering that question right away, to keep it looking silly and pointless — even to myself! — for as long as I can, so the pieces keep stacking up.
Filed under: color
Return to the island (a mixtape)

Here’s another new monthly mixtape made from a sealed, pre-recorded cassette I got for 99 cents at End of an Ear. I tape over the cassette’s protection tabs and then I tape over the music and then I tape over the artwork.
This one is a sequel to my Oahu mixtape from last summer. (Like many sequels, it’s probably not as good as the original.)
You can listen on Spotify, Apple Music, or YouTube.
Back from vacation
Upon returning from vacation, I solicited travel tips from my readers and shared a bunch of the stuff I saw/read/listened to on our trip to the Pacific.
I’m still recovering from a family trip to Hawaii. I survived a surf lesson and a tsunami! Watched a dozen sunsets. Built sand castles. Swam with sea turtles. Befriended lizards. Dodged roosters. Drank mai tais. Despite (or maybe because of) all that, I don’t think I had a single creative thought while I was out there, and my brains only came back to me once I returned the mainland. (I couldn’t help this trip but to think of Socrates, who was quoted by Seneca: “How can you wonder your travels do you no good, when you carry yourself with you? You are saddled with the very thing that drove you away.”)
Above: some photos of paradise.
You got up from your desk
Elmore Leonard said, “Writer’s block just means you got up from your desk.”
My 2025 (so far)
A few weeks ago I shared 10 things that’ve made my 2025 (so far):
8. How AI slop is making us think about what it means to be human and make art. The more I read about AI, the more it solidifies my feeling that image-making and writing are at their most meaningful — to the artist and to the audience — when they involve the head, the heart, and the hand. As I said in an interview back in April, “I try to bring the hand into almost everything I do, because the hand knows as much as the head does.”
I also shared my 10 favorite reads 2025 (so far):
The year, by the way, is 60% over.
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