If you or your children are tired of supermarket coloring books and their generic designs, or if you yourself like to doodle with color, try something a little more interesting. Illustrator Carlton Hibbert has a collection of artistic patterns that you can download, print, and color. Quite a few artists and illustrators have contributed to the collection, and all patterns are licensed under Creative Commons, which means you can use them freely. Link
If you or your children are tired of supermarket coloring books and their generic designs, or if you yourself like to doodle with color, try something a little more interesting. Illustrator Carlton Hibbert has a collection of artistic patterns that you can download, print, and color. Quite a few artists and illustrators have contributed to the collection, and all patterns are licensed under Creative Commons, which means you can use them freely. Link
Comments (4)
JOY!!! I have missed Doodle Art stuff for SO long! Thank you a zillion times for posting this, Miss C!
W00000T!!1!!!!
Or a Mega-Trangoshan Trans-dimensional, Hyperspatial Planetary Tattoo Gun - widely used in the galactic advertising trade.
On my Mac laptop, its probably some sort of ball marker, but too small to be a golf ball marker.. (use your imagination, fidelity for the win)
My other guess is that it's either used to put a wax seal on wine bottles, or put a cap on a bottle of beer / alcohol
Of course, I could be mixing it up with the golf ball divet maker from way back when.
Dennis
Or a p3n!s monogramming device.
My balls are monogrammed, with my DNA.
Like one seals used on letters in the old days to identify the sender, and verify that the letter has not been opened.
BTW I don't think identifying the Stevenson Staple Sucker is "easy" for the average "staple ignorant" population. Also, Stevenson later went on to change the name of his company to ACME and was very successful, especially due to an excellent product delivery system.