Phil Sutters' photos with the keyword: doodle

05072021 1

05 Jul 2021 1 94
Just an odd collection of shapes superimposed on each other and manipulated in Photoshop Elements.

stained glass effect

31 May 2021 4 3 114
A Photoshop Elements doodle made with filters, colour gradients and layers. These abstracts are not planned, they just evolve.

blues washed up

31 May 2021 3 151
A Photoshop Elements doodle made with filters, colour gradients and layers. These abstracts are not planned, they just evolve.

fractal 1272020j

14 Jul 2020 2 140
Four variations from the same starting point.

fractal 1272020k

14 Jul 2020 2 2 128
Four variations from the same starting point.

fractal 1272020g

14 Jul 2020 1 117
Four variations from the same starting point.

fractal 1272020c

14 Jul 2020 1 1 149
Four variations from the same starting point.

adobe pencil sheer invert

01 Jun 2020 164
I have been scanning endless family photos from an album from 1893 to about 1920, to share with my sisters and cousins, but I needed a break. These two doodles started with nothing more than the pencil tool from Adobe Photoshop Elements.

adobe pencil

01 Jun 2020 156
I have been scanning endless family photos from an album from 1893 to about 1920, to share with my sisters and cousins, but I needed a break. These two doodles started with nothing more than the pencil tool from Adobe Photoshop Elements. An experiment in the sense that I rarely draw my own lines. I usually grab a shape and twist it about.

multi doughnut HB

a quilter's nightmare

Marbles should be round

dirigible doodle 1

15 Aug 2015 2 267
Perhaps this should be the other way up, as the key ingredient was the 'invert' Photoshop filter which turns black into white and colours into their complementary versions.

monochrome doodle - 31.3.2014

31 Mar 2014 4 6 348
This reminds me a little of those string and pin sculptures that were the rage in the 1960s, I think. I call it a doodle because I start with a blank sheet, add something like a gradient or a Photoshop fractal brush, use an effect - paint daubs or poster-edges - and play around from there. It's just like sitting in a meeting or lecture and starting off with a square and building it into a fantasy castle or a complex pattern or whatever..... Whether one can do that on your tablet these days, rather than pen and paper, I don't know, but I suppose there are probably several thousand doodling 'apps' out there!