Spring Landscape, 1862 - oil on canvas. — Charles-François Daubigny (French, 1817-1878)
Delphin Enjolras (French, 1865-1945)
Le doux bruit de la mer
Ernst Henseler - Blumenpflückende Frau mit Sonnenschirm (1904)
A mossy streamlet, Yellowstone National Park, Wyoming
(c) gif by riverwindphotography, August 2023
Leon Wyczółkowski (Poland, 1852-1936)
Spring - The Interior of the Artist’s Studio
[watercolor, ink, chalk on paper], 1931
One of the best writing advice I have gotten in all the months I have been writing is "if you can't go anywhere from a sentence, the problem isn't in you, it's in the last sentence." and I'm mad because it works so well and barely anyone talks about it. If you're stuck at a line, go back. Backspace those last two lines and write it from another angle or take it to some other route. You're stuck because you thought up to that exact sentence and nothing after that. Well, delete that sentence, make your brain think because the dead end is gone. It has worked wonders for me for so long it's unreal










