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Hello, I’m Michael Sliwinski, founder of Nozbe - to-do app for business owners and their teams. I write essays, books, work on projects and I podcast for you using #iPadOnly in #NoOffice as I believe that work is not a place you go to, it’s a thing you do.

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Leonardo Da Vinci - Drawings Of

Allowed for the "sfumato" (smoky) blending of shadows and the creation of realistic skin textures.

Used for his most delicate, precise early drawings on prepared paper.

For Leonardo, drawing was a tool for thinking. He utilized a unique "mirror writing" technique—writing from right to left—to accompany his sketches, creating a dense dialogue between word and image. His drawings served several distinct purposes: Drawings of Leonardo da Vinci

Most of Leonardo’s drawings were never intended for the public eye. They remained tucked away in personal codices, such as the Codex Atlanticus and the Codex Leicester . Today, these papers are considered more valuable than his finished paintings because they capture the raw, unfiltered process of a man who sought to understand the "universal law" governing all of creation. Through his drawings, we see Leonardo not just as a painter, but as the world’s first true polymath.

Leonardo da Vinci’s drawings were not merely sketches but a private laboratory where he deconstructed the mechanics of the world. While his paintings brought him fame, his thousands of notebook pages reveal the true engine of his genius: an obsessive, relentless curiosity that bridged the gap between art and science. The Mirror of the Mind Allowed for the "sfumato" (smoky) blending of shadows

The definitive marriage of geometry and human biology, mapping the proportions of the body onto the circle and the square.

Several drawings stand out as milestones in human history, representing the peak of Renaissance thought: Today, these papers are considered more valuable than

Detailed sketches for masterpieces like The Last Supper and the Mona Lisa .