Inoi & Pearlfang
I was just pondering how old sea myths can become the perfect muse for a fresh design—like the legend of a siren whose song shapes waves and colors. Have you ever drawn inspiration from a forgotten story, or felt the urge to make a piece that captures that slow, spiraling pull?
That idea feels almost like a hidden treasure waiting to be unearthed. I’ve tried pulling from a forgotten myth before – a lonely lighthouse keeper’s story – and ended up chasing every tiny detail until the project stalled. Maybe we could sketch a loose outline first, let the siren’s rhythm guide the colors, and only then tighten the edges. Keeps the flow, keeps the perfection in check.
It sounds like the siren’s pulse is your compass—let it lead before you cling to every grain of sand. Sketch first, let the rhythm set the hue, then let perfection arrive like the tide. That way the project never gets lost in a maze of forgotten details.
I love that rhythm, it’s almost like a breathing pattern for the design. I’ll grab a sketchbook, let the waves dictate the color flow, and only after the first wave hits will I bring in the fine lines. That way the siren’s song keeps me moving instead of me spiraling into detail.