Saturday, February 14, 2026

Day 4022: A Scrap Postcard & Ugandan Hero.


"The Scrap Group": acrylic, junk collage, marker.



                                                                       
  

Want music?



    Click


2GN2S

I have a little 7 x 4" basket that sits on my workspace,
I use it to collect just the smallest scraps.


Just little bits, collages leftovers. The kind you might toss?


I should have taken a pic when I started, but I was just 
scribbling, not planning on this being a step-by-step. 
The more I looked at it, I thought it could be interesting 
scrap collage postcard? 



Not having the patience to collage the background, 
I took the easy way out and used Montana markers for 
the background orange and blue. The ballpoint ink smeared, 
so next time I would do the background first, then draw.



Using just scraps from the basket, I collaged the figures.
It's amazing how often a scrap would fit perfectly. 
Serendipity?


Last step was outlining with a black Bravo marker.


I usually do a small collage on the address side, with scraps.
Not great art, but maybe a fun quick alternative?
Worth a try? It's not rocket surgery. ;o)



  


 



  
 
A 6 minute video, Hey Deer, here.
 
 
Just because ...

Carolina Wren



 Saturday's Smiles ... 

    




























Hoping you feel all the good things in your day.


  


 

 

Friday, February 13, 2026

Day 4921: Home-Dad Photographer & The Pangolin.

"Ishigo's, Honomu, HI": my photo, digital collage.


                                                                       
  

Want music?



    Click: Maze, Happy Feelings




2GN2S

A graphic artist living in Germany works from home. His wife leaves their baby girl with him each day as she goes off to work. A few months ago, he got tired of her constantly texting him to check on how he was doing with the baby. So, he started photoshoping responses to text back to her, and they have become a worldwide Instagram sensation. 
Here are a few of them:
  



 
 
 

 

 

 

 

   

 

 

 

 


 Another clever Dad.






The most trafficked mammal on Earth.
And most people have never heard of it.
This is the pangolin, a creature covered in keratin scales, the same material as your fingernails, arranged in overlapping armor that no predator can bite through.
When threatened, it curls into a perfect ball. Lions have been filmed pawing at pangolins for hours, unable to find a single gap. The scales are so tightly locked that even hyena jaws cannot crack them open.


But this defense only works against animals. Pangolins cannot run. They cannot fight.They cannot uncurl fast enough to escape humans. And so they are hunted. Millions of them. Their scales are ground into powder and sold for traditional medicine across Asia, despite having no proven medicinal value. Their meat is considered a luxury.
All eight species are now threatened with extinction.
The pangolin evolved for 80 million years. It survived dinosaurs, ice ages, and countless predators. Its armor is one of nature's most perfect designs. But it never evolved a defense against demand.
Some creatures disappear because their habitat shrinks.
This one is disappearing because people believe crushing its body will cure things it cannot cure.
The most trafficked.
The most armored.
The most helpless.
 



  
 
A 5 minute video, Shellproof,  here. 

 
Just because ...

The Toohe


 Friday's Smiles ... 

    




    








   






Hoping you feel all the good things in your day.