

If you follow this blog, you know I’m into the golden ratio, labyrinths, and the like, so when I saw this Sacred Geometry graphics pack, I got pretty excited. Here are just a few I found that would be fun to experiment with in your bullet journals or cars, jeans, arms, walls, children, receipts, bar napkins, you name it.Īsebalko is one of my favorite Instagram accounts to follow for her massive drawing inspiration.

source Abstract DoodlingĪbstract doodling is my favorite- all the shapes, lines, whatever’s, you can put together in so many ways. Oh, if you don’t yet know Dawn Nicole, you’ll love her site for lots of hand lettering and doodle resources, like these simple frames. You can get lost in designing all your own little cute paisley shapes and putting them together in various ways. Image source – and she offers this as a free download sourceīorders can be used all over your bullet journals and notebooks, and these images are perfect to draw inspiration from. This Instagram account has lots of drawing inspo, and I’m sorry I just wrote inspo. Have you pondered starting a bullet journal? Or maybe you’re way deep into it, but even if you keep the most basic of bullet journals, I’m sure you’ve tried the errant banner or flourish here or there. I would use that in everything I typed.) source Bullet Journal Doodles (It’s probably worth it just for that monster image. This fun little font by PintassilgoPrints includes an actual font, but also all these totally cool graphic elements. This font of pre-Hispanic petroglyphs can get you started with, and maybe you can even make up your own little doodle language.

Start with clean graphics and line drawings you find- if you practice your favorites a few times, you’ll commit them to memory and have them in your doodling arsenal for whenever you want them. If you balk at this approach or are simply looking for doodle ideas to add to your collection, take a scroll through this bottomless pit of doodle inspiration. It’s so much more relaxing and therapeutic for me that way. While it’s fun to see all the cute step-by-step drawing instructions, I like to take a more organic approach to doodling, and fill my pages with whatever comes to mind. I have been an obsessive doodler since childhood, using it to while away boring hours in school or church, and decorating hundreds of pages of notes I’ve taken in meetings or classes over the years. It’s become absolutely cool to doodle all over everything, and doodling has been proven to help you retain information. Doodling has exploded in recent years, thanks to Bullet Journaling, Zentangle, and a renewed interest in sketchbooks and drawing.
