SUMMARY
This week’s Daily Creates helped me explore creativity in many ways. Each activity pushed me to experiment, think visually, and express ideas in different formats. Sharing the photo of the shell reminded me how powerful simple visuals can be in storytelling. Drawing space animals and completing the unfinished picture encouraged me to let go of perfection and focus on the process, which strongly aligns with the idea of creative risk‑taking in digital spaces.
Even though I don’t usually draw, these prompts helped me practice expressing meaning through images, not just text. That ties directly into the course’s emphasis on multimodal expression and understanding how different media can shape a message. Overall, the Daily Creates helped me become more comfortable experimenting, thinking visually, and using creativity as part of my learning.
#tdc5143 #ds106 Meaningful object
This Daily Create asked us to share a picture or drawing of a meaningful object. I chose this shell. Last week, I wrote about a man I met on the beach in St. Kitts and Nevis, and he’s the one who gave it to me. It became the most beautiful piece I’ve ever owned. Although it doesn’t hold emotional significance in the traditional sense, I was in awe of the pure kindness and selflessness it took to give me something so beautiful as a gift. Unfortunately, I had to leave it behind when I left the island, but I still cherish this picture today.

#tdc5120 #ds106 Space animals
This Daily Create asked us to draw space animals and imagine what they might look like or how they might move. While my art skills aren’t exactly museum‑worthy, my space animals turned out pretty fun. I started by trying to draw a panda, that’s what the first animal in the top left was originally meant to be. For some reason, a panda was the first creature that came to mind. As I kept drawing, I realized not everything had to be logical. I could just let the weirdness happen and enjoy the creativity of it.

#tdc4581 #ds106 Complete the picture
This Daily Create asked us to complete the drawing. At first, when I saw the unfinished picture, I immediately thought of a butterfly. But once my own pen hit the paper, I somehow ended up drawing a fish instead. It’s funny how instinct works. I don’t even draw fish normally, so I’m not sure where that came from. Still, it was fun to see how the drawing took on a life of its own. As you can probably tell from the quality of my drawings, I don’t usually dabble in art. But these prompts were genuinely fun, and they pushed me to try things I normally wouldn’t. I might practice more and try to upgrade my skills.



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