Immerse yourself in the vivid colours and ingenious versatility of iPad drawing with "Unlocking Using the iPad as a Drawing Tool" - a special report by Ruth Scott, a seasoned digital artist and an advocate for modern technology as an artistic medium. This insightful report is your golden ticket to the adventure of crafting digital art with ease, no matter your level of experience. From a beginner to an advanced artist , this report acts as a user-friendly guide to the iPad's expansive suite of features. It is comprehensively split into ten The report is replete with expert-guided analysis, practical tips, and insightful revelations, serving as a master key that unlocks that dormant art studio in your iPad. So why wait? Whether you're an artist looking to diversify your portfolio or a novice eager to venture into digital drawing, this meticulously crafted report presents a unique opportunity to transform your passion into a skill set. Buy this special report today and let’s channel that spark of imagination together, creating art beyond boundaries!
Ruth Scott was an energetic clergywoman, author and broadcaster, characterised by swashbuckling courage, a mane of strawberry-blond hair and an honesty that was invariably disarming.
“Goodness would definitely not be in a description of me . . . Selfless wouldn’t figure either,” she once mused gently on Radio 2. It was Scott’s conviction that she, and most people, are too complex to be slotted into neat categories of sinner or saint. “Baying for the blood of others who have screwed up big-time is infinitely easier than addressing our own messiness,” she wrote in The Power of Imperfection (2014).
Originally from Essex, her working life began as a student nurse in St Thomas’ Hospital, London where she met her husband Chris. She went on to train as a midwife, and later became a Sister Counsellor.
She married Chris, a vicar, in 1982.
After leaving nursing in 1985, she began freelancing as a journalist, writing for national nursing journals, and local broadcaster. During this time she suffered two miscarriages and began to think about ordination.
Her daughter Freya was born in 1988, a year before she started training as a priest. She became one of the first women to be ordained in the Church of England in 1994.
From there, she became involved with interfaith dialogue and broadcasting for the BBC.
To supplement her income she performed as a clown magician at children’s parties and learning fire eating to boost her routine. Her son, Tian, was born in 1996 after three further miscarriages.
She regularly presented Pause for Thought and Good Morning Sunday on Radio 2, Prayer for the Day and The Moral Maze on Radio 4 as well as programmes on the World Service.