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Lee J. Ames - 12 Feb

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Draw 50 Boats, Ships, Trucks, and Trains teaches aspiring artists how to draw with ease by following simple, step-by-step instructions. Celebrated author Lee J. Ames shows readers how to draw dozens of modes of transportation from throughout history, such as a Viking ship and the Santa Maria, as well as a nuclear submarine, a Jeep, and a tractor-trailer. Amess illustration style and renowned drawing method has made him a leader in the step-by-step drawing manual, and the 31 books in his Draw 50 series have sold more than three million copies. Amess instruction allows seasoned artists to refine their technique and guides amateurs to develop their own artistic abilities. Even the youngest artists can make any type of vehicle look great. Its easy to build all kinds of vehicles when its done the Draw 50 way.

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BOOKS IN THIS SERIES Draw 50 Airplanes Aircraft and Spacecraft Draw 50 - photo 1
BOOKS IN THIS SERIES

Draw 50 Airplanes, Aircraft, and Spacecraft

Draw 50 Aliens

Draw 50 Animal Toons

Draw 50 Animals

Draw 50 Athletes

Draw 50 Baby Animals

Draw 50 Beasties

Draw 50 Birds

Draw 50 Boats, Ships, Trucks, and Trains

Draw 50 Buildings and Other Structures

Draw 50 Cars, Trucks, and Motorcycles

Draw 50 Cats

Draw 50 Creepy Crawlies

Draw 50 Dinosaurs and Other Prehistoric Animals

Draw 50 Dogs

Draw 50 Endangered Animals

Draw 50 Famous Cartoons

Draw 50 Flowers, Trees, and Other Plants

Draw 50 Horses

Draw 50 Magical Creatures

Draw 50 Monsters

Draw 50 People

Draw 50 Princesses

Draw 50 Sharks, Whales, and Other Sea Creatures

Draw 50 Vehicles

Draw the Draw 50 Way

Copyright 1976 by Jocelyn S Ames All rights reserved Published in the United - photo 2

Copyright 1976 by Jocelyn S. Ames

All rights reserved.

Published in the United States by Watson-Guptill Publications, an imprint of the Crown Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, in 2013.

www.crownpublishing.com
www.watsonguptill.com

WATSON-GUPTILL and the WG and Horse designs are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.

Originally published in hardcover in the United States by Doubleday, a division of Random House Inc., New York, in 1976.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Ames, Lee J.
Draw 50 boats, ships, trucks & trains

Summary: Step-by-step instructions for drawing a variety of boats, ships, trucks, and trains.
1. Ships in artJuvenile literature. 2. Boats in artJuvenile literature. 3. Trucks in artJuvenile literature. 4. Railroads in artJuvenile literature. 5. DrawingTechniqueJuvenile literature.
[1. DrawingTechnique] I. Title
NC825.S5A43 1987 74389629046

eISBN: 978-0-8230-8603-0

v3.1

To Mom and Toby and most especially to the memory of
Pop

Contents
To the Reader

This book will show you a way to draw boats, ships, trucks and trains. You need not start with the first illustration. Choose whichever you wish. When you have decided, follow the step-by-step method shown. Very lightly and carefully, sketch out step number one. However, this step, which is the easiest, should be done most carefully. Step number two is added right to step number one, also lightly and also very carefully. Step number three is sketched right on top of numbers one and two. Continue this way to the last step.

It may seem strange to ask you to be extra careful when you are drawing what seem to be the easiest first steps, but this is most important because a careless mistake at the beginning may spoil the whole picture at the end. As you sketch out each step, watch the spaces between the lines, as well as the lines, and see that they are the same. After each step, you may want to lighten your work by pressing it with a kneaded eraser (available at art supply stores).

When you have finished, you may want to redo the final step in India ink with a fine brush or pen. When the ink is dry, use the kneaded eraser to clean off the pencil lines. The eraser will not affect the India ink.

Here are some suggestions: In the first few steps, even when all seems quite correct, you might do well to hold your work up to a mirror. Sometimes the mirror shows that youve twisted the drawing off to one side without being aware of it. At first you may find it difficult to draw the boxes, triangles or circles, or to just make the pencil go where you wish. Dont be discouraged. The more you practice, the more you will develop control. Use a compass or a ruler if you wish; professional artists do! The only equipment youll need will be a medium or soft pencil, paper, the kneaded eraser and, if you wish, a compass, ruler, pen or brush.

The first steps in this book are shown darker than necessary so that they can be clearly seen. (Keep your work very light.)

Remember, there are many other ways and methods to make drawings. This book shows just one method. Why dont you seek out other ways and methods to make drawingsfrom teachers, from libraries and, most importantly from inside yourself?

LEE J. AMES

To the Parent or Teacher

David can draw a speedboat better than anybody else! Such peer acclaim and encouragement generate incentive. Contemporary methods of art instruction (freedom of expression, experimentation, self-evaluation of competence and growth) provide a vigorous, fresh-air approach for which we must all be grateful.

New ideas need not, however, totally exclude the old. One such is the follow me, step-by-step approach. In my young learning days this method was so common, and frequently so exclusive, that the student became nothing more than a pantographic extension of the teacher. In those days it was excessively overworked.

This does not mean that the young hand is never to be guided. Rather, specific guiding is fundamental. Step-by-step guiding that produces satisfactory results is valuable even when the means of accomplishment are not fully understood by the student.

The novice with a musical instrument is frequently taught to play simple melodies as quickly as possible, well before he learns the most elemental scratchings at the surface of music theory. The resultant self-satisfaction, pride in accomplishment, can be a significant means of providing motivation. And all from mimicking an instructors Do-as-I-do

Mimicry is prerequisite for developing creativity. We learn the use of our tools by mimicry. Then we can use those tools for creativity. To this end I would offer the budding artist the opportunity to memorize or mimic (rotelike, if you wish) the making of pictures. Pictures he has been anxious to be able to draw.

The use of this book should be available to anyone who wants to try another way of flapping his wings. Perhaps he will then get off the ground when his friend says, David can draw a speedboat better than anybody else!

L EE J. A MES

Cabin Cruiser - photo 3
Cabin Cruiser
Draw 50 Boats Ships Trucks and Trains The Step-by-Step Way to Draw Submarines Sailboats Dump Trucks Locomotives and Much More - photo 4
Draw 50 Boats Ships Trucks and Trains The Step-by-Step Way to Draw Submarines Sailboats Dump Trucks Locomotives and Much More - photo 5
Draw 50 Boats Ships Trucks and Trains The Step-by-Step Way to Draw Submarines Sailboats Dump Trucks Locomotives and Much More - photo 6
Draw 50 Boats Ships Trucks and Trains The Step-by-Step Way to Draw Submarines Sailboats Dump Trucks Locomotives and Much More - photo 7
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