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February 26, 2026 — First dispatches from the easel.

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Save My Seat at the Easel

First dispatches go out when the studio opens. No noise — only essays, process notes, and curated work worth your 2 a.m.

No spam. No algorithm. Just the studio door opening.


A day in the atelier

What you'll find inside

Morning
Midday
Afternoon
Evening
Sketchbook open on wooden desk with pencil studies and thumbnail compositions in graphite
7:00 AMSketch

The thumbnail is the whole argument

Every composition decision I make in the final piece was already settled in a 3-centimeter box drawn in the margin of a coffee receipt.

Priya Venkataraman
6 min read
Digital artist working on rough sketch layer in Procreate, stylus in hand
8:30 AMProcess

Rough passes: why I spend three hours on something I'll delete

The rough pass isn't a mistake — it's a conversation with the piece about what it wants to become.

Tomás Reyes
9 min read
Detailed graphite illustration of imaginary cityscape with intricate architectural details
9:15 AMGallery

Emerging: Nkechi Obi's graphite worlds

Nkechi draws cities that never existed but feel like they should have. Her latest series, Harmattan, is 40 sheets of architectural memory.

Editorial
4 min read
3D render comparison showing before and after lighting pass in Blender with dramatic improvement
11:00 AMTechnique

Before and after the light pass: a Blender breakdown

The difference between a 3D render that reads as digital and one that reads as real is almost always the quality of the last 20 minutes of lighting work.

Søren Lindqvist
12 min read
Color study swatches showing warm and cool temperature variations across a painted gradient
12:30 PMEssay

On color temperature and emotional temperature

Warm doesn't mean happy. Cool doesn't mean sad. The clichés are the enemy of the painting.

Priya Venkataraman
7 min read
Generative art piece showing parametric botanical forms in algorithmic patterns with organic flow
1:45 PMGallery

Generative works: Arjun Mehta's parametric botanicals

Code as medium, growth as logic. Arjun writes algorithms the way a gardener plants seeds — with discipline and surprise in equal measure.

Editorial
5 min read
Digital oil painting with rich warm tones depicting a figure studying antique maps in afternoon light
3:00 PMFinished Work

Zara Osei: "The Cartographer's Daughter"

A 14-piece digital oil series exploring inheritance, cartography, and the maps we make of people we love.

Zara Osei
8 min read
Close-up detail of digital painting showing intentional variation in edge quality from hard to soft
4:00 PMTechnique

The anatomy of a good edge: hard, soft, lost

Every edge in a painting is a decision about attention. Most painters make that decision by accident.

Tomás Reyes
11 min read
Work in progress illustration at midpoint stage showing developmental layers and rough areas
5:30 PMProcess

How I approach the "ugly middle" of every illustration

There's a stage in every piece where it looks like nothing. That's where most illustrators quit. I've learned to cook through it.

Nkechi Obi
10 min read
Artist at desk in evening light writing in sketchbook journal, phone turned face down nearby
8:00 PMEssay

Why I stopped posting work-in-progress on Instagram

The audience's opinion arrived before the painting was finished thinking. I had to choose between the painting and the feed.

Søren Lindqvist
14 min read
Close-up of artist hands examining finished digital illustration on tablet screen in lamp light
9:30 PMReflection

On finishing: the last 10% takes 50% of the time

Every piece has a moment where it could be done. The question is whether you stop because it's finished or because you're tired.

Priya Venkataraman
8 min read

8:00 PM · Evening Essay

Why I stopped posting work-in-progress on Instagram

SL

Søren Lindqvist

3D Sculptor & Generative Artist · Copenhagen

14 min read

"The audience's opinion arrived before the painting was finished thinking. I had to choose between the painting and the feed."

There's a specific kind of anxiety that comes from posting a half-finished piece. Not the anxiety of judgment — you get used to that. It's the anxiety of interruption. Of having to explain what something is before you know what it is yourself.

I started posting in-progress renders in 2021, mostly because the algorithm rewarded the narrative of creation. The before-and-after. The transformation. Followers arrived. Comments arrived. And then, slowly, so did their expectations.

The problem wasn't the criticism. The problem was the praise. When someone writes "this is already perfect" on a piece that still has three weeks of work left in it, you feel the painting start to close. The possibility space shrinks. You stop making decisions and start defending them.

The rest arrives when the studio opens.

Save My Seat at the Easel