Sunday, November 2, 2025

Using Homemade Ink

Several years ago, I made ink from the hulls of black walnuts I gathered locally.  You can read about that process here:
I've been playing with homemade ink, using a dip calligraphy pen, and I'm getting the hang of using this old-fashioned, low-tech writing and drawing method.

Like gathering wild herbs for tea, slowing down to write & occasionally dipping the nib pen into a bottle of ink brings me delight. I feel a thrill of inspiration as I scratch away with my pen.  
Maybe the next step will be trimming a goose feather to make a quill!

What type of art material brings you joy? It doesn't matter what anyone else thinks of your favorite art supply, only what you think.  Test out supplies in your collection that maybe you've overlooked. Find the ones that create a little spark of excitement or a sense of newness.  Let your intuition guide you into using your newfound art supplies.

If you'd like to make your own Black Walnut ink, this is a good time of year for roving in parks and woods. Seek out Black Walnut trees and you're likely to find the nuts around the base of the tree.  When they first fall, they are lime green and smell almost citrus-y.  As they age, the outer hull softens, flakes off and turns dark brown to black.  You may find piles of the hull pieces left by squirrels who feast on the nut inside.  I recommend using gloves to collect the black hulls as they stain whatever they touch.

You can read more about the process I used to make the ink here:

https://betsyblissart.blogspot.com/2023/12/making-black-walnut-ink.html

Happy Creating!

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