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Every Day Ideas: Every Day Sketches

By Will Willingham 22 Comments

Every Day Sketches woman sketching on notebook
I am not an all-day writer. In fact, the greater part of my day is spent in the midst of insurance claims, which can mean, like it did this week, standing on a highway on a foggy morning measuring skid marks leading up to the highway patrol’s pink fluorescent markings on the pavement where a crash took place. Sometimes it means staring at spreadsheets, or poring over medical records, or combing through photos of houses that got very, very hot or very, very wet, or sometimes very, very both.

When I transition from my claims desk to my writing desk (as much a physical as metaphorical shift), sometimes it takes a while for my mind to catch up. Ted Kooser writes in The Poetry Home Repair Manual that he reads poetry every day, and especially before he writes: “I make a practice of reading poetry before I sit down to write. It helps me get my mind tilted in the right direction.”

Lately, in order to make my own mind tilt in that direction, I’ve been using those few minutes of transition to not just read a poem, but also to sketch one. Combining the ideas of #dipintopoetry (a sharing of a favorite line from Every Day Poems on Twitter) and First Line Poem Starters, I use a line from the day’s Every Day Poems selection as a sketch prompt, sometimes posting the sketches on Twitter with the hashtag #everydaysketches.

A few other folks have joined in the #everydaysketches fun, and today we’re featuring some of those sketches below.

Want to join in? When you share your sketches from one of your Every Day Poems lines, we’ll save them for possible inclusion in a special Every Day Ideas e-book in 2016. The e-book will also include other Every Day Ideas, such as Poem Pinups and First Line Poem Starters.

Just like we did with last year’s Casual e-book, our supporters will receive a copy for free when it releases (Want to be one of them? Sign up on our Supporters Page.) and we’ll release it to everyone else during National Poetry Month 2017.

So, if you like…

1. Choose a line from one of the Every Day Poems you received in your inbox (or check the #dipintopoetry stream on Twitter and choose a favorite line from one of our readers)

2. Use the line to inspire a sketch

3. Include a credit for the original poem you borrowed the line from

4. Send us a link to where you post your sketch online (anywhere is fine: Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Pinterest, Google+). Just drop the link in an Every Day Ideas comment box so we can find it.

5. If posting your entry for inclusion in our Every Day Ideas e-book, please do so by April 30, 2016.

And, happy sketching.

"…the emptiness indicated / how once they were filled…"—V. Woolf @EDayPoems #DipIntoPoetry #everydaysketches pic.twitter.com/AU0AeXVlcH

— Matthew Kreider (@matthew_kreider) March 15, 2016

"the genius of music died on you too." Nietzsche via Sara Barkat @EDayPoems #DipIntoPoetry #everydaysketches #music pic.twitter.com/PK9h21yQU5

— Laura Lynn Brown (@lauralynn_brown) March 8, 2016

"Does springtime feel like a kind of death?"@lwlindquist / "Snowy Owl" @EDayPoems #DipIntoPoetry #everydaysketches pic.twitter.com/jZYs6yHeBE

— SandraHeskaKing (@SandraHeskaKing) February 17, 2016

"Now I see the landscape behind me" -Catherine Pierce @EDayPoems @tspoetry #DipintoPoetry #everydaysketches pic.twitter.com/rqy7LyMAUH

— Laura Lynn Brown (@lauralynn_brown) March 15, 2016

As if I must die to reach you • Dream of Water by Sara Eliza Johnson @edaypoems #dipintopoetry #everydaysketches pic.twitter.com/cd5cswlJQP

— LW Lindquist (@lwlindquist) February 5, 2016

"…stare into the white morning."
—Richard Maxson, from 'Winter Cedars'@EDayPoems #DipintoPoetry #everydaysketches pic.twitter.com/0FPaybrA31

— Matthew Kreider (@matthew_kreider) March 10, 2016

Too much dwelling on what has been
Frost, Need of Being Versed in Country Things#dipintopoetry #everydaysketches pic.twitter.com/oqKIF50T90

— LW Lindquist (@lwlindquist) February 12, 2016

"…she saw him / in the dimly…" —Amanda Williams • creating #everydaysketches from @EDayPoems #DipIntoPoetry pic.twitter.com/rjbzcTIYuQ

— Matthew Kreider (@matthew_kreider) February 22, 2016

"You, poet of crayons and cutouts and glue" Maureen @Doallas in @EDayPoems #DipIntoPoetry #everydaysketches #PostIt pic.twitter.com/79mQu5X1nz

— Laura Lynn Brown (@lauralynn_brown) March 15, 2016

"When you are old and gray… " -Yeats @EDayPoems #DipIntoPoetry #everydaysketches pic.twitter.com/4GbzTifA4c

— SandraHeskaKing (@SandraHeskaKing) February 16, 2016

…your last day. Pockets full
—@TaraSkurtu, from Anyone's Son@EDayPoems @tspoetry #DipIntoPoetry #everydaysketches pic.twitter.com/fYDeESFjUM

— Matthew Kreider (@matthew_kreider) February 19, 2016

"So impotent Our Wisdom"
from "Nature" Is What We See by Emily Dickinson #dipintopoetry #everydaysketches pic.twitter.com/vdB8OPURkd

— LW Lindquist (@lwlindquist) February 6, 2016

Featured photo by Jonathan Petit, Creative Commons license via Flickr. Featured #EveryDaySketches used with permission of the artists.

Want to potentially be in our Every Day Ideas e-book?

Subscribe to Every Day Poems now and become eligible for inclusion in our e-book by either sketching the poems, writing a new poem, or pinning up a poem (and photographing the pinup). We’ll release the e-book free to supporters in late spring 2016 and to the general public during National Poetry Month 2017.

Subscribe to Every Day Poems Now

Last Year’s E-book Project (We Published You!)

Last year we published some of your poems and photographs in an anthology called Casual: A Little Book of Jeans Poems and Photos, that we’ll release soon to the general public.

Here’s what some of our supporters, who received the book last year upon publishing, are saying about Casual:

I’m over the moon about being included. This is beautiful. —Sandra Heska King

Wow! The book is beautiful! —Amy Billone

What a beautiful final product. Grateful to be included. Thank you for investing in us. —Elizabeth Marshall

Casual Cover

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Will Willingham
Will Willingham
Director of Many Things; Senior Editor, Designer and Illustrator at Tweetspeak Poetry
I used to be a claims adjuster, helping people and insurance companies make sense of loss. Now, I train other folks with ladders and tape measures to go and do likewise. Sometimes, when I’m not scaling small buildings or crunching numbers with my bare hands, I read Keats upside down. My first novel is Adjustments.
Will Willingham
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Filed Under: Blog, Every Day Ideas, Every Day Poems

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About Will Willingham

I used to be a claims adjuster, helping people and insurance companies make sense of loss. Now, I train other folks with ladders and tape measures to go and do likewise. Sometimes, when I’m not scaling small buildings or crunching numbers with my bare hands, I read Keats upside down. My first novel is Adjustments.

Comments

  1. Sandra Heska King says

    March 17, 2016 at 10:37 am

    Well, this has inspired me to dig out the sketchbook from under the renovation clutter.

    Reply
    • Will Willingham says

      March 17, 2016 at 3:56 pm

      Let’s hope so. 🙂

      Reply
  2. Maureen says

    March 17, 2016 at 10:40 am

    Great idea and inspiration.

    Happy to see these wonderful, previously hidden talents become visible.

    Thank you, Laura Lynn Brown.

    Reply
    • Laura Brown says

      March 17, 2016 at 11:04 am

      You are most welcome.

      Reply
    • Will Willingham says

      March 17, 2016 at 3:56 pm

      There’s something really cool about seeing someone draw from your poem (literally).

      🙂

      Reply
  3. Matthew Kreider says

    March 17, 2016 at 1:05 pm

    Delighted to see this exercise featured today. 🙂

    I really ought to make a list of all the ways my Every Day Poems subscription has been so life-giving to me. Sticking my feet into the water of a new poem each morning — and fishing for attention, line by line — has made such a difference. Poetry for life, it is.

    Quite amazing how committing to that small DipIntoPoetry discipline each day packs a big punch. Hope others try it.

    And thanks so much for featuring some of my sketches here today. 🙂

    Reply
    • Will Willingham says

      March 17, 2016 at 3:59 pm

      Matthew, adding your sketches to what was for me just a personal exercise really helped this thing take off into a true community experience, I think. And I agree, there are so many different ways that daily poetry practice can benefit a person.

      Poetry for life, indeed. 🙂

      Reply
      • Matthew Kreider says

        March 17, 2016 at 9:13 pm

        That community experience makes a big difference, I think. I’m captivated with seeing how folks choose to express the same lines I’m reading.

        The sketches make the poems richer for everyone. 🙂

        Reply
  4. L. L. Barkat says

    March 17, 2016 at 4:39 pm

    Quite simply…

    I love these. 🙂

    (And I feel a sense of gratitude to all those who have been doing this and sharing.)

    Reply
    • Matthew Kreider says

      March 17, 2016 at 9:26 pm

      Quite simply…

      I think it’s pretty exciting stuff. 🙂

      (And I feel a sense of gratitude for the many ways poetry can take shape. Every day.)

      Reply
  5. Laura Brown says

    March 17, 2016 at 7:21 pm

    Thanks so much for encouraging and sharing these.

    It’s like working out a little puzzle every day. It takes about the same amount of time as solving a sudoku, but it’s more satisfying.

    Reply
    • Matthew Kreider says

      March 17, 2016 at 9:22 pm

      Like working out a puzzle? That’s exactly it. And I agree: so much more satisfying. 🙂

      Great description, Laura.

      And I love how the challenge invites me deeper into the poems, deeper into a creative space — even for just a few minutes. 🙂

      Reply
  6. Rick Maxson says

    March 18, 2016 at 1:26 pm

    These are all so remarkable for their perception and inspiration. Makes me wish I could draw. It is impossible to even say which are my favorites. They all are.

    Reply
    • Will Willingham says

      March 18, 2016 at 4:32 pm

      You know, Rick, many days I don’t find that the sketches are something I want to post. And even when I do, I let the camera angle hide the drawing’s quality (erm, I mean, lack thereof). But I find the simple practice itself is so useful to me – for shifting mental gears, and for embodying the image of the poem in a certain way.

      Reply
  7. Christina Hubbard says

    March 19, 2016 at 10:35 am

    This sounds like a wonderful project! Is there a deadline for the everyday poem eBook submissions?

    Reply
    • L. L. Barkat says

      March 19, 2016 at 10:36 am

      Oh, great question. Yes. April 30. (We’ll add to the post)

      Reply
      • Christina Hubbard says

        March 20, 2016 at 10:45 am

        Thank you!

        Reply
  8. Lynne Cole says

    March 19, 2016 at 3:42 pm

    This looks great. What a fantastic idea. So many different ideas and inspirations.

    Reply
    • Will Willingham says

      March 21, 2016 at 3:10 pm

      Thank you for your comment, Lynne. We hope you’ll join us. 🙂

      Reply

Trackbacks

  1. Your Free Jeans Poems & Photos E-book and an Invitation! - says:
    March 24, 2016 at 9:02 am

    […] you want to be eligible for this year’s project, stop in to Every Day Ideas: Every Day Sketches, and scroll down for details. All poems, art, and photography will be accepted for consideration […]

    Reply
  2. Celebrating National Poetry Month: The Joy of Poetry - says:
    April 1, 2016 at 9:48 am

    […] Every Day Sketches (a chance to get your poems or pictures […]

    Reply
  3. The Best in Poetry: Top Ten Poetic Picks - says:
    April 14, 2016 at 8:07 am

    […] poems written as First Line Poem Starters, photos captured in the Poem Pinups prompt or even your #everydaysketches. You have until the end of National Poetry Month (that’s April 30, 2016) to show us your […]

    Reply

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