Variant Title has been added to your shopping cart.    View Cart   or   Checkout Now
ICSO

ICSO

Rick writes...

Maria and I always focused on the simplicity of the Zentangle Method. We often say that if you can write your name, you’ve already “drawn” all of the shapes or strokes you need to create Zentangle art.

The basic strokes that we use to make all our tangles are:

  • Dot
  • Straight(ish) line
  • Curved line
  • S-shaped line
  • Orb


We now refer to those basic strokes as elemental strokes.

This year is the 20th anniversary of the Zentangle Method, so it is a good time to tell the story of how the term icso came about.

I remember exactly where in our house I was standing when the idea came to me that tangles are like molecules and the strokes used to make them are like atoms. Unique atoms are identified as the various elements in the Periodic Table of Elements. So, why not refer to the various types of strokes we use as “elemental strokes”?

Some time later, I was musing about our claim that if you could write your name, you had shown you could tangle. I wondered if there was a simple word that would encompass all those elemental strokes. (By the way, we usually refer to circles as orbs. We feel that the idea of a circle implies too high a level of precision. “Orb” strikes us as a bit more forgiving.)

And in that musing, came the idea to make up a word with those strokes. It was obvious that an “S” would represent the S-shape, a “C” the curve, and an “O” the orb. But what about the dot? Well, you “dot” a lower-case “i” and with “i” you also have your line!

Then it was just a matter of playing anagrams with those four letters and that is how “icso” came to be.

So, if you can write the word “icso” you know that you can draw all the strokes we use to create Zentangle art!

Maria adds...

The story of icso (AR) (According to Rick) is all pretty accurate . . . but I believe there is more we can have fun with here.

Have you ever heard of “mnemonics?” Well, they are little nonsensical tricks of the mind that help us remember groups of random letters.

Some of you may remember “Every good boy deserves favor.” In beginner music lessons, it helps us remember the lines on a musical staff: E, G, B, D, and F. The nuns who taught me music used that phrase. Perhaps you learned it as “Every good boy deserves fudge.” But, I never liked either of them because I was a good girl and never got those favors, or even fudge, for that matter (not that I’d take or want fudge, as it was too sweet for my taste).

But I digress.

Dear tanglers, we have a delightful opportunity to have some fun here, and maybe win a prize or at least a chuckle. Rick and I are challenging you to create a mnemonic to remember icso. Most mnemonics are nonsensical, but we’d like you to create a mnemonic that has something to do with Zentangle.

My first attempt was “I create stunning objects.” I really want to say “objets d’art”, but that didn’t fit the letters.

We will choose one commenter at random and one that Bijou thinks captures what Zentangle means to all of us. Bijou also wants to include the winning mnemonic in our next book.

Let the games begin!

--- + ---

Zentangle's 20th Anniversary Journal Project.

Write ICSO in large letters on your page. Use the letters as a string/guide for your tangles. As you tangle, pay attention to each line and which elemental stroke it uses.

Maybe, use tangles that utilize only 1 elemental stroke at a time, like indyrella, keeko, knightsbridge, etc.

#ZentangleTurns20 #ICSO #ICSOJournal

Learn more about the journal project here.

Rick Roberts

129 comments

  • I create simple outcomes

    Linda Thompson on

  • Inspire creativity see opportunities
    Inspire confidence see opportunities

    Allison Mah on

  • Imagine creating soothing originals

    Barb Martin on

  • Interested-in Creating Something Organic or Original

    Nova Scheidt on

  • Inspiration Can See Opportunity

    pam renck on

  • ink channels sublime outcomes

    inspiration comes surprisingly often

    Jem Miller on

  • If Calm Satisfaction, Obey. I can see originality.

    Annika Wiener on

  • Ink Creates Something Original
    And
    It Could Spark Obsession

    Jody Genovese on

  • “in creativeness states opportunity”

    Sue Douglas on

  • In Satisfaction Calmly obey!

    Annika Wiener on

  • Imagine! Curvy Straight Outlines 😁

    Darlene Hlozan on

  • Indelible
    Character
    Shared
    Orbitally

    Lori Nowell on

  • In Creativity See Others

    Deb DeCicco on

  • In Centering Soar Outward

    Deb DeCicco on

  • Imagining Creates Surprising Outcomes

    Brenda Salot, CZT37 on

  • I can see opportunity

    Roslyn Badcock on

  • i can show off

    Janice Stefane on

  • Inner spirit cuddles orbs

    Jan Albright on

  • ICSO – Invite Creative Senses Often.

    Nancy Needler on

  • I Can Sense Oppulence!

    Mary Ellen Ziegler CZT33 on

  • “inked Calming Strokes Only”

    Johnifer Baker CZT41 on

  • Forgive me, one more comment! I vote for Lori Riden’s mnemonic:

    “In Constant Search Of…”
    It epitomizes growth, discovery, creativity, and life-long learning! What a wonderful mantra for life, (and Zentangle!)

    Jessica L Dykes on

  • Here is my best “icso” effort:

    “If Creativity Strikes, Optimize! "
    But IMO it pales against all the wonderful offerings that came before! Great post, great exercise to get our creative juices flowing! Great responses! I can’t stop obsessing…

    Jessica L Dykes on

  • Imitation Crab Sates Octopodes

    Toby S on

  • I can savor “o”thenticity!

    Christy Clapper on

Leave a comment