How to sign up for a free subscription - never miss a tangle!
What is Zentangle?
Linda Farmer, Certified Zentangle Teacher

COPYRIGHT NOTICE

All contents of this website are Copyright © 2010 - 2023 Linda Farmer, TanglePatterns.com, and artists where named. Copying content in any form other than for your own personal offline reference and inspiration is expressly prohibited. No content may be reproduced, pinned or republished without express written permission. This work is not allowed to be used in training AI systems. Commercial use of any content is prohibited. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

Artists for Respect
Your support helps keep TanglePatterns available!

RANDOM SELECTOR

Use this Random Tangle Selector with your TanglePatterns.com TANGLE GUIDE to help you select tangles. See Pages 7 and 9 of the Guide for instructions. You can also use this to select random Strings: simply pop in any number in the range of 1 to 250.

RECENT COMMENTS

ARCHIVES

How to draw TANSON

Zentangle pattern: Tanson. Image © Linda Farmer and TanglePatterns.com. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. You may use this image for your personal non-commercial reference only. The unauthorized pinning, reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal.Wowzah. That was a Tour de France for the ages.

One of the most entertaining, surprising, unpredictable, exciting Tours we’ve watched in decades. Landslides!? Mother Nature sure participated in an unexpected way.

Can’t wait to see what unveils next year for the strongest, fittest and most courageous athletes in the world and the most beautiful 21-day travelogue you can imagine. Simply amazing.

Next up: Premier League football/soccer, and NCAA college football – can Fall be far away?

Our fun and easy Monday tangle named Tanson is from CZT Jamie Johnson and it’s her first on the site.

From Stratford, Connecticut,

aka the Yankee Tangler, Jamie is a Certified Zentangle Teacher (#22) who offers classes in southwestern Connecticut. She also holds a Ph.D. in art history and spent more than ten years in museum education.”

Jamie shares a bit about her tangle and its inspiration …

“I’m calling it Tanson (a combination of my last name and my wife’s, as well as a reference to ‘tangle’).

It’s a rather baroque, grid-like pattern. I think it has so many possibilities.

Because of the way you create the tangle, there are two different kinds of shapes created — one is essentially rounded, the other “pointy.”

You can alter the connecting shapes from “rice” or ovals, fill the interior with various tangles, add more auras, etc.

While I’ve seen similar patterns in architecture, upholstery, woodwork, ironwork, and the like, the most direct inspiration was a piece of embroidery.”

Zentangle pattern: Tanson. Image © Linda Farmer and TanglePatterns.com. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. You may use this image for your personal non-commercial reference only. The unauthorized pinning, reproduction or distribution of this copyrighted work is illegal.Tanson indeed has many possibilities and in the example on the right I’ve kept it quite simple. The spacing of the rice shapes determines whether you get condensed, rounded shapes or more elongated “pointy” ones of my main example and the one you’ll see in Jamie’s tile.

Jamie illustrates the step-by-step instructions for drawing Tanson here on her blog where she includes the embroidery that inspired her tangle. Lots of potential for exploring this lovely one!

As you enjoy any of the tangles on the site, please leave a comment of thanks and encouragement to show the artists you appreciate them for sharing their creativity to inspire yours. Your comment helps motivate them to continue to share!

Check out the tag jamiej for more of Jamie’s tangles on TanglePatterns.com.

Related Links

  1. Looking for tangles by Artist or Type? For details visit the ABOUT > HOW TO FIND TANGLES BY ARTIST OR TYPE page on the top menu bar of any page on the site.
  2. What is a Zentangle? — if you are new to the Zentangle Method, start here for the fundamentals.
  3. Zentangle terminology — a glossary of terms used in this art form.
  4. How to use the site — an excellent free video tutorial showing how to use the site as well as pointing out lots of useful features you might have missed.
  5. Linda's List of Zentangle-Original Patterns — here is the complete list of original tangles (aka "official tangles") created and introduced by founders Rick Roberts and Maria Thomas, including those not published online. If you are new to the Zentangle Method I highly recommend learning a few of the published Zentangle classics first.
  6. "A Zentangle has no up or down and is not a picture of something, so you have no worries about whether you can draw a hand, or a duck. You always succeed in creating a Zentangle." Thus patterns that are drawings of a recognizable naturalistic or actual object, figure, or scene, are not tangles. A pattern is not always a tangle — here's what makes a tangle. TIP: tangles never start with pencil planning.
  7. How to submit your pattern deconstruction to TanglePatterns
  8. For lots of great FREE tutorials on TanglePatterns, click on the TUTORIALS link in the pink alphabetic menu bar below the tangle images at the top of any page.
  9. Strings! Have we got STRINGS! Click on the STRINGS link in the pink alphabetic menu bar below the tangle images at the top of any page for 250 different (free) Zentangle-starters. More than enough for any lifetime!
  10. Never miss a tangle! FREE eMAIL NEWSLETTER - visit the SUBSCRIBE page on the top menu bar of any page on the site and sign up to get notices delivered free to your inbox.

.oOo.

Enhance your Zentangle experience while supporting TanglePatterns:

CURRENT EDITION! TanglePatterns.com TANGLE GUIDE, 2024 Edition

TanglePatterns.com TANGLE GUIDE, 2024 Edition The 13th Edition of the TanglePatterns.com TANGLE GUIDE is an instant-download 109-page interactive digital eBook/PDF containing approximately 2,000 tangles on the site from May 2010 through December 31, 2023. It's a great resource and a must-have digital tool for using the site. Visit the STORE > E-BOOKS page and help keep TanglePatterns.com going by getting your copy now!

"Linda, Thank you! I was relying on too few and getting stuck after 3 years of daily working with Zentangle. This has inspired me to ‘begin again’ with renewed excitement." ~ Barbara R.

See the BOOK REVIEWS page for more details on its features and view a sample page. Note: this is a digital product you download immediately when you place your order, nothing will be physically mailed to you.
GIFT ORDERS FOR ANOTHER PERSON: To give the TANGLE GUIDE as a gift, visit this page to place your gift order.
If you're new to Zentangle® and tangling, my TanglePatterns.com BEGINNER'S GUIDE TO ZENTANGLE is just what you need to get started. Also available en Français and en Español.

Zentangle Primer Volume 1 This is the only Zentangle book you'll ever need: the fabulous Zentangle PRIMER Vol 1. It's your CZT-in-a-book by the founders of Zentangle®. Visit the STORE tab on the top menu bar or click on the image. For more about the content and to read the rave reviews, visit the BOOK REVIEWS tab.
NEW! Now available in KINDLE format for $9.99. Spanish Edition here. Japanese Edition here.
"Absolutely the best Zentangle Book yet! As an accomplished artist I used to think I did not need instruction on this art form. How wrong I was! My tangling improved by leaps and bounds after reading this book. If you think you have Zentangle down then you need this book more than ever!" ~ Kris H

.oOo.

6 comments to How to draw TANSON

  • Rosemary Turpin

    I thank you so much for sharing TANSON, Jamie! I love all the different ways of doing it and decorating the insides too! I’ve already put it into my workbook and will put a copy on my portable ring collection of go-to tangles!

  • Jenny M

    I just wanted to thank you for turning me on to the Tour de France. I started watching in 2012 when you posted a link to the route in your newsletter. A couple of stages were being ridden on roads I had cycled when in France many years ago, so I started watching for the scenery. I got hooked and every year since I dedicate more time to watching. ( it helps that July is miserably hot to be outside in FL!) Also i justify as my time to catch up on needlework and of course to tangle! This year was epic and once again, as i do every year, I thought of you with gratitude. Thank you so much. So many good things come from Zentangle! Who knew?

    • Linda Farmer, CZT

      Thanks Jenny, you’ve made my day! “Epic” is certainly the right word to describe this year’s Tour de France.

      We might just have to sign up for a subscription to watch La Vuelta in Spain starting August 24th! It could be fun to see that travelogue as well as watching to see who prevails in the third Grand Tour.

  • Susan Mann

    I like this one! It looks complicated, but it is simple, given the m-shape guidance! Thank you Jamie!

  • Great tangle. I started to play with it, and only then noticed that it is a tangle-relation of my own tangle, Sati. Its key difference is how you lay out the initial rice shapes. And yet the finished tangle comes out looking so different. I love those gentle connections our tangles share.

  • Thanks Jamie, good to see another tangle from my CZT group #22. So simple, yet looks hard. Will be a fun play in my new Bitty book I just made.

Leave a Reply to Jem Miller Cancel reply

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>

  

  

  

Notify me of followup comments via e-mail. You can also subscribe without commenting.