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Deskpack Illustrator -
I carry my studio on my back— a zippered spine of graphite ghosts and half-dried gels. The laptop is a cold hearth. The Wacom, a patch of synthetic earth where I plant no seeds, only vectors.
My tools know me better than lovers do. The brush tool remembers the tremor in my wrist the night I learned grief has no CMYK equivalent. The pen tool, that cruel Cartesian, demands anchors where I want to bleed. I close paths because closure is the only export setting that doesn’t crash the soul. deskpack illustrator
I am a deskpack illustrator: a nomad of the pixel grid, a monk of the undo button. Every morning, I unfold my ribs— a folding table, a coffee ring like a stigmata. The world outside negotiates rents, wars, weather. Inside my backpack: layers. Always more layers. An .ai file named final_v14_final.ai . I carry my studio on my back— a
At night, I pack up: tablet into sleeve, stylus into its velvet sarcophagus. The backpack sighs—a lung full of unused gradients, of sketches for a comic about a girl who turns into fog. I zip it shut. But the work leaks. It always leaks. A single pixel under my fingernail. A layer named sadness set to Multiply. An artboard that stretches from my sternum to the edge of what I’ll never be paid to say. My tools know me better than lovers do
They say, "Draw what you see." So I draw the absence in hotel windows, the way a deadline breathes down the neck of twilight, the geometry of a loneliness that scales without losing resolution. I trace the curve of a client’s silence— that bezier path between “make it pop” and “we went in another direction.”