Thursday, October 2, 2025

Inktober | Day 2

๐Ÿ–Š Inktober Artist Tag – Day #2

Welcome to Day 2 of my Inktober challenge! Each day, I’m drawing a different prompt with a simple Catholic twist. Today’s theme is “Weave”, and I chose to reflect on Our Lady, Undoer of Knots.


Today’s Drawing Prompt: “Weave”

Inktober Drawing - Mustache

⏱️ Drawing Timelapse:

๐ŸŽฌ Watch the Timelapse on YouTube


๐Ÿ•Š Who is Our Lady, Undoer of Knots?

The title “Undoer of Knots” comes from a 17th-century German devotion that highlights Mary's role in interceding for us—especially when life feels twisted, tangled, or hopeless. She gently untangles the knots caused by sin, wounds, or confusion.


๐Ÿงถ Reflection

In today’s drawing, I pictured Mary taking tangled, frayed threads and weaving them into something whole and beautiful. The knots represent our burdens—fear, sin, family wounds—and Mary unknots each one, offering us peace and hope. She doesn't cut the thread; she restores it. That speaks to the mercy and patience of a loving Mother.


๐Ÿ—ฃ Artist Tag Questions

  • Have you ever felt like your life was tangled in knots? How did you find peace?
  • What’s one small “knot” you’d like to ask Our Lady to untie today?
  • If your prayer life was a thread, how would you describe it right now—frayed, flowing, or being gently rewoven?

Thanks for following along! I’ll be posting a new Catholic-themed Inktober drawing every day. Check back tomorrow for the next prompt!

Tuesday, September 30, 2025

Inktober Day 1

๐Ÿ–Š Inktober Artist Tag – Day #1

Welcome to my Inktober series! If you're new to it, Inktober is a drawing challenge where artists draw one ink-based drawing every day for the month of October. I remember participating in this challenge in high school art class but have never done it since. I kind of forgot about it until I stumbled upon it searching for drawing tags for my blog.


Today’s Drawing Prompt: “Mustache”

Inktober Drawing - Mustache

⏱️ Drawing Timelapse:

๐ŸŽฌ Watch the Timelapse on YouTube


๐ŸŒฟ Saint Spotlight: St. Philip Neri

St. Philip Neri (1515–1595) was an Italian priest and founder of the Congregation of the Oratory. Known as the "Apostle of Rome," he combined deep spirituality with an infectious sense of humor. He often used joy and gentle humor to disarm pride and draw others to Christ. Philip believed holiness should be filled with joy and simplicity. He once walked through the streets with half his beard shaved to humble himself and keep vanity in check. His playful nature and sincere heart made him a beloved spiritual father to many.

๐ŸŽจ Artist Q&A

  1. What would a modern-day saint with a mustache look like in your art style?
  2. He would probably look like a 21st century man.

  3. Which saint do you think had the most “art-friendly” features to draw?
  4. For some reason the female saints are seem easier to draw...

  5. Do you ever include humor in your religious artwork?
  6. I've never added humor.

  7. Have you ever drawn a saint or religious figure just for fun?
  8. Yes many times. A lot of my blog posts were just for fun.

  9. If you could illustrate a children’s book about one saint, who would it be?
  10. Maybe St Philip Neri. It would show children that saints can be humorous too.


๐Ÿ–‹️ Thanks for following along with today’s Inktober post! If you’re doing the challenge too, or just want to answer the Q&A questions, feel free to tag yourself and join the fun. I’d love to see your artwork and reflections! And if you have additional questions for me to answer during this inktober series please submit them to me in the comments or through the contact form!

And don’t forget to check out my brother’s writing project at The Scripted Scroll—he’s chronicling his own creative challenge this month.

Reference Photo
Reference Photo
Hand Drawn Artwork
Hand-Drawn Artwork

Esteban

Monday, September 29, 2025

Pentecost

 Podcast Portrait



This drawing was done on a canvas — if you can believe it. Yes, a real canvas! I used an inky substance to sketch the outline, then brought it to life with layers of watercolor paint.


This piece definitely took some time to complete. The details alone required a careful hand and lots of patience. For inspiration, I used an old holy card I found

Interestingly, this might be the most well-traveled piece of art I’ve created. I brought it along on a pilgrimage to Green Bay, Wisconsin, during the month of May, where I visited the Shrine of Our Lady of Champion. I worked on it during spare moments throughout the trip, adding little touches here and there whenever I had time.

Creating art in a sacred space — especially during a pilgrimage — gave this portrait an added layer of meaning for me. It holds the memory of that journey, the quiet hours of reflection, and the sense of peace that surrounded the work as it unfolded.

- "I am the Queen of Heaven, who prays for the conversion of sinners, and I wish you to do the same. Gather the children in this wild country and teach them what they need to know for their salvation. Go and fear nothing. I will help you."






Monday, September 22, 2025

Can We Talk AI?

 When AI Doesn't cut it?

I know my readers and my readers know me. And I know how much they like AI...with that said let me show you my newest piece. This was done using three mediums: Charcoal, Oil Pastel, and Watercolor Paint.


You know those moments when someone means really well, but then technology swoops in and quietly misses the mark? That’s kind of how this story went — and yes, it involves artificial art.

My sister-in-law wanted to give a wedding gift that was more than just thoughtful — she wanted it to be sacred, beautiful, and personal. So naturally, she turned to an image of the Blessed Virgin Mary. But not just any image — she found one that looked serene and luminous, full of grace and heavenly peace. It was perfect.

Except… it was AI-generated.

Now, don’t get me wrong — AI can do some interesting things these days. It can “paint” in milliseconds, crank out digital imitations of Renaissance masters, and even get the folds of a veil almost right. But as my sister-in-law quickly realized, something about AI-generated religious art just doesn’t sit right. It’s not bad, exactly — just... off. A little too smooth, a little too hollow. Almost like it skipped prayer and went straight for the pixels.

So she turned to me.

With the original AI image in hand— a concept. An idea. She said, “Could you draw this — by hand?” And I knew exactly what she meant.

Because some images — especially ones of Mary, our divine and earthly Mother — deserve reverence. And reverence doesn’t come from a prompt or a codebase. It comes from quiet hours at a desk, from prayerful intention, from sketching and erasing and sketching again until the expression feels just right. It comes from the heart — not a machine.

So I sat down with my tools and got to work.

What you see here is the result: a hand-drawn image of the Blessed Virgin Mary. I drew it with the kind of love and devotion that can’t be faked — certainly not by an algorithm. Every stroke, every shadow, every detail was intentional. Human. Real.

And when my sister-in-law saw the finished piece, she smiled and said what every artist longs to hear: “This is exactly what I was hoping for.”


Why It Matters

There’s a reason why sacred art has been made by hand for centuries. Religious images aren’t just decoration — they’re invitations to prayer. They reflect divine mysteries, stir up devotion, and help lift our eyes toward heaven. And while AI might be able to mimic beauty, it can’t replicate love.

Art is incarnation. It’s flesh meeting form. And as Catholics, we believe deeply in that — in the union of spirit and matter, in the touch of the Creator through creation.

So no shade to the machines, but when it comes to Our Lady?

Let’s keep it personal.


Want Something Like This?

I create original, hand-drawn Catholic artwork — icons, illustrations, and devotional pieces — all crafted with prayerful intention and traditional technique. If you're looking for a custom piece for your home, a gift, or a wedding present that won’t be mistaken for a soulless robot rendering, [reach out in the comments / or drop a message in the contact form]!

Our Mother deserves more than digital guesses. She deserves art made with love.