Things are a buzz here at Zentangle HQ. This summer, we have some exciting new things to share with you and we can’t wait!
As we look forward with excitement, we decided to also take a walk down memory lane to appreciate how far Zentangle has come and how it has grown over the years. For the next few weeks, we are going to be going Back to Basics as we pay homage to our Zentangle RootZ.
What better place to start than with the Zentangle Blog.
In 2017, we launched a new Zentangle.com and we moved our blog to our website. But, for 10 years before that, we ran a Zentangle Blog on blogspot. We have always kept that blog up because there is a treasure trove of Zentangle treats, tiles, discussions, and more!
Whether you are new to the Zentangle Method or have been with us since the beginning, we invite you to explore the vintage Zentangle Blog. The fun tidbits of information are not just in the post but in the comments as well!
You can learn why the Zentangle Tiles have a deckled edge in the comments of this post. Or, the inspiration behind the tangle floorz here.
See Maria’s morning tangles here and a story about teaching their grandsons 2nd grade class (that same grandson graduates high school this week!).
One post that caught my attention was this one about the Zentangle DVD. Many moons ago we used a mini DVD, which at the time was fun, new technology. As technology changed, we then switched to a full size DVD (read more here).
Today, DVDs are pretty much obsolete. When we retired the current version of the Original Zentangle Kit earlier this year, we retired the DVD along with it, but, the lessons are available on our YouTube channel for all to enjoy.
It is nice to see that as time has passed, technology has changed and we have evolved, but the 8 Steps of the Zentangle Method have remained the same. We invite you all to go back to basics and enjoy the lessons from our Original Zentangle Kit.
Share your completed tile on the Zentangle Mosaic App with the hashtag #BackToBasics2021 and tell us in the comments below how and when you found the Zentangle Method and we will back a commenter at random to send a Zentangle surprise to!
And, what is next for the Zentangle Kit?
Stay Tuned!
Kim Springer on
cheryle parrish on
Elizabeth Wheeler on
I want to say that I discovered Zentangle in 2006, but wonder if that’s too early an estimate? I was injured in an accident on the playground of the school where I was teaching, and was forced to stop working that year. Stuck at home recovering from a dislocated hip for quite a while, I may have lost track of the time… So, I’m not sure exactly when, but I ordered the Design Originals booklets (“Zentangle Basics” and the numbered ones) by Suzanne McNeill during that recovery time, and spent a happy period tangling with the early Kit, early versions of the tiles and Sandy Steen Bartholomew’s materials (which followed on from her participation in, I think, CZT#2). That I can’t remember the exact circumstances of my first meeting with Zentangle frustrates me, but I do know that the physical frustrations of rebuilding myself after the accident would have been far worse without my alternate focus on The Method. I still have that first teal box – it closed with a teal-tagged string that wrapped around a wood button – which contained the little DVD and a brief “How-To” booklet from HQ. It feels like a relic of the True Cross (which is both blasphemous and completely accurate!); I treasure it as a reminder of the roots of the Zentangle faith!
Rebecca Lawrence on
Nancy Lapp on
What’s interesting to me is to see how much (though subtly) Zentangling has changed in almost 16 years, As I watch Maria work, I can see the doodling origin of it all much more clearly than I can in recent videos. Here she’s sketching many lines quickly without any great precision. She’s scribbling her fill-ins. It’s more playful and spontaneous, less meditative. I wonder if these tiles had three or four drafts before the final version, as we sometimes get to see in videos from the last few years. I’m not suggesting that one approach is better than the other. I believe that both have their place in my day and the Zentangle world.
Nancy Lapp on
Vickie L Stamper on
Barbara Langston on
Fran Sparks on
Lynnda Tenpenny on
Zentangle first crossed my path around 2008(?) when my calligraphy teacher told me about Maria and this neat drawing approach that was non representational. I looked into it, waited for my next birthday gift money, and ordered the beautiful teal kit with its tiny DVD. When it arrived I admired and handled each part with awe. Because I’ve always had a tendency to ‘save the good stuff’ for ‘really special’ work, I didn’t use the materials in the lovely box, but just worked on scrap paper a bit until I got ‘better’ at doing it. Life took some difficult turns soon after that, and the lovely box was misplaced in a move. Years later it showed up. I started tangling and collecting books, materials, and then Project Packs after hours of admiring the little pieces of magic on the Mosaic and watching all of the Zentangle videos over and over. Zentangle was my main lifeline in the craziness of 2020 lockdown times. I’m especially grateful for the generosity of Maria and Rick in making the videos available to all without cost or membership. What a life blessing in so many ways! ❤️
Paula Rupp Baen on
This youtube for treat to eyes and ears..
My journey started I would as unplanned n accidental way back in 2016, my best friends sister directed me to this art. Started as a hobby then and made me so crazy to travel all the way to usa from india to be CZT (34) and making this as profession to mentor people. I always play the 4 min video Rick n maria video to my beginners students.. n sometime I get to play short reel of Rick flute video with Marias beautiful calligraphy..
Rick voice echoes in my mind when I decide to do classic tile.. “it is simple decision of black n white” and going with the flow of the art enjoying it…
Thanks to the whole family for this beautiful zentangle art form …🖤⚪
Maya Avanith on
I found Zentangle by chance on the internet while I was still teaching art, about 2012. I became a CZT #11 the next year. My art students loved the Zentangle lessons! If the classroom teacher returned early to the room, they were always amazed how focused and quiet the students were while tangling! It was a joy to teach tangling to the students and the meditative process has been a continued joy to my life! Thank you for all the fun and artistic creativity you’ve given to the world!
Linda JF on
I discovered Zentangle Sept 29,2020. I was looking for a Beginners Caligraphy book at the library and a book about Zentangle appeared in my search. I thought it had great quilt patterns in it. So I borrowed it, then found out it was about drawing went on Amazon and bought the Primer and I tried the first lesson. I’ve tangled every night since and recently became a CZT.
Nita
Nita CZT37 on
What a fun and fantastic thing to watch this video!!!!! It is so interesting to see how Maria drew these various tangles in 2005 and ponder on how some of them have morphed over the years. I do so love this art form – not only to practice it on my own, but also to teach others this marvelous means of expression and mindfulness. Thank you so very much for this grand gift in my life!!
Pam Stevenson, CZT 20, 31 on
I found Zentangle in a very roundabout. I’m a beader and I was reading a beading blog. The author of the blog mentioned a quilter’s blog she followed, so I went to check it out. The quilter mentioned another blog that SHE followed, about something called Zentangle. So of course, I had to check that out too. That’s when I found “I AM THE DIVA” and had a real “AHA moment.” I found a few local classes and treated myself to CZT Training to become a CZT in the Spring of 2015. (#18?) Now, there is some element of Zentangle in almost everything I do. Thank you for helping me find my inner artist. ❤️
Janet Concatelli on
I discovered this method in a calligraphy course, I guess it was 2010 or 2011?! The teacher used tangles in a creative assignment, of course that had nothing to do with Zentangle, but she did mention it.
So my curiosity was triggered.
After a search on the Internet I started filling ‘tiles’ on my own.
In 2018 I had a health setback and started searching for extra ‘help’, since there are waiting lists for everything these days.
I stumbled across the Zentangle method again, after an extra search and buying some books I found, it helped me gaining my health again. So I treated myself to the Czt seminar. I’m a CZTeu3 now. So thankful and starting to spread this method myself.
This community is so warm, helpful and supportive… Thank you all!! 😊
Tina on
In the summer of 2012, my friend Lise took a calligraphy class during which the instructor mentioned she had just run across Zentangle. She shared the little she knew with great enthusiasm. Lise then shared it with me shortly thereafter. I took a class from a local CZT to learn more and was instantly hooked! Lise and I attended Seminar 12 in October 2013 and I have been teaching in my community since the beginning of 2014! As of this date, I have taught the basics of Zentangle to 174 people! I have developed and taught 17 different classes and a core group of 20 or so continue to take every class I offer. Sometimes I wonder … what did I DO before Zentangle?! :) Thank you all at ZTHQ for offering us the Zentangle Method AND for continuing to keep it fresh and fun. I’ll ALWAYS be grateful!
Jan Brandt, CZT 12 on
Linda D on
Tracie Schatz CZT 32 on
Susie Powell on
Ayumi Fujimura on
Rimona Gale on
Wee on
In the Spring of 2010, while participating in a northeast USA vendor gathering for scrapbooking/papercrafting/ rubberstamping in or near Massachusetts, I attended a workshop where Maria and Rick introduced us to their Zentangle method and materials. In the midst of so many fast-paced and product-heavy vendor workshops, Maria and Rick led a considerably slower-paced and very calming, relaxing, easy going but powerful workshop then provided us with a couple of key materials that fit inside of a teal-toned jewelry box secured with a thick gray rubberband. Once back at home, I signed up for their 4th Zentangle CZT training seminar to be held within walking distance of their home in October, 2010. I immediately began sharing Zentangle with customers of my local scrapbook store until sadly they closed in 2014. I still practice Zentangle using that teal-toned box from Spring of 2010 with fond memories and I thoroughly enjoy the special treats found in the Project Packs. ~ Rose
Rosemarie Crawford on