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Rachel Harrell (illustrator) - How to Rule at Drawing: 50 Tips and Tricks for Sketching and Doodling

Here you can read online Rachel Harrell (illustrator) - How to Rule at Drawing: 50 Tips and Tricks for Sketching and Doodling full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 2020, publisher: Chronicle Books, genre: Home and family. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

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How to Rule at Drawing: 50 Tips and Tricks for Sketching and Doodling: summary, description and annotation

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How to Rule at Drawing features 50 bite-size tips and tricks to help you improve your art skills. This easy-to-follow, irresistibly illustrated book will get you in the habit of capturing not just what you see, but also what you feel.

Whether youre a beginner just learning the basics or an expert looking to hone your skills, this handbook is the perfect easy-breezy volume for anyone who wants to up their art-making game. The simple and actionable takeaways will help readers take their sketching skills to new heights.

Filled with irresistible illustrations from artist Rachel Harrell
Accessible to beginners but still useful for the advanced artist
Easy-to-follow instructional content

In How to Rule at Drawing , budding artists will discover new ways to warm up, master new tools and techniques, and make good art.

Part of the How to Rule series, a collection of tiny how-to books you can take anywhere to improve your creative skills.

A perfect gift for aspiring and hobbyist artists, art students, burgeoning creatives, sketchers, doodlers, and mark-makers of all sorts
Makes drawing easy, approachable, and super fun
Great for readers and artists who enjoyed How to Draw What You See by Ruby De Reyna, Drawing for the Absolute Beginner: A Clear & Easy Guide to Successful Drawing by Mark Willenbrink, and Draw the Draw 50 Way by Lee J. Ames

Rachel Harrell (illustrator): author's other books


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Copyright 2020 by Chronicle Books LLC All rights reserved No part of this - photo 1Copyright 2020 by Chronicle Books LLC All rights reserved No part of this - photo 2Copyright 2020 by Chronicle Books LLC All rights reserved No part of this - photo 3 Copyright 2020 by Chronicle Books LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission from the publisher. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data available. ISBN: 978-1-4521-7786-1 (epub, mobi) ISBN: 978-1-4521-7758-8 (hardcover) Design and illustration by Rachel Harrell. Chronicle books and gifts are available at special quantity discounts to corporations, professional associations, literacy programs, and other organizations.

For details and discount information, please contact our premiums department at or at 1-800-759-0190. Chronicle Books LLC
680 Second Street
San Francisco, California 94107 www.chroniclebooks.com

Contents
Start a daily practice. Draw one thing a day for a year and you will be amazed at your progress. Change your commute and draw something new that you see DRAW ON A LOOSE - photo 4
Change your commute and draw something new that you see. DRAW ON A LOOSE SHEET OF PAPER WHEN DRAWING IN A SKETCHBOOK IS TOO - photo 5
DRAW ON A LOOSE SHEET OF PAPER WHEN DRAWING IN A SKETCHBOOK IS TOO INTIMIDATING. When you have a drawing block go outside and sketch what you see DRAW - photo 6
When you have a drawing block, go outside and sketch what you see. DRAW STUFF YOU DONT THINK INTERESTS YOU It will challenge you and make you - photo 7
DRAW STUFF YOU DONT THINK INTERESTS YOU: It will challenge you and make you more well rounded.

And you might like it. Dont underestimate your doodles The best ideas often come to you while you are - photo 8

Dont underestimate your doodles. The best ideas often come to you while you are doing something else. If you love color draw everything in color TRY A SKETCHBOOK WITH A DOT - photo 9
If you love color, draw everything in color.TRY A SKETCHBOOK WITH A DOT OR GRID PATTERN INSTEAD OF BLANK PAGES Draw - photo 10
TRY A SKETCHBOOK WITH A DOT OR GRID PATTERN INSTEAD OF BLANK PAGES. Draw the same person five times each in a different style Emulate an - photo 11
Draw the same person five times, each in a different style. Emulate an artist Whether youre copying one of their pieces exactly or drawing - photo 12
Emulate an artist.

Whether youre copying one of their pieces exactly or drawing something the way you imagine they would draw it, youll find that your art takes on a style of its own. Embrace the similaritiesand the differences! Realism is not the objective Try varying the type of marks you make - photo 13

Realism is not the objective. Try varying the type of marks you make Use lines hatches scribbles dots - photo 14
Try varying the type of marks you make. Use lines, hatches, scribbles, dots, etc.If you are not into what you are making start again IF YOU ARE - photo 15
If you are not into what you are making, start again. IF YOU ARE INTIMIDATED BY PUTTING PEN TO PAPER TRY DRAWING WITH A TABLET OR - photo 16
IF YOU ARE INTIMIDATED BY PUTTING PEN TO PAPER, TRY DRAWING WITH A TABLET OR PHONE APP FIRST. Draw with your eyes closed HAVE YOU EVER HAD A BURST OF INSPIRATION JUST - photo 17
Draw with your eyes closed. HAVE YOU EVER HAD A BURST OF INSPIRATION JUST BEFORE DRIFTING OFF TO SLEEP - photo 18
HAVE YOU EVER HAD A BURST OF INSPIRATION JUST BEFORE DRIFTING OFF TO SLEEP, only to forget it by the time you woke up? Ever woken from an extraordinarily vivid dream, only to forget all about it by the time youre out of the shower? Keep a sketchbook next to your bed to record those images from that half-awake state before they disappear. Try drawing without lifting your pen off the paper Reduce things to - photo 19
Try drawing without lifting your pen off the paper.Reduce things to geometric shapes circle rectangle triangle Share the - photo 20
Reduce things to geometric shapes: circle, rectangle, triangle. Share the drawing process as a way to get your creativity flowing and mix up - photo 21
Share the drawing process as a way to get your creativity flowing and mix up your go-to style, subject matter, and technique. Share the drawing process as a way to get your creativity flowing and mix up - photo 21
Share the drawing process as a way to get your creativity flowing and mix up your go-to style, subject matter, and technique.

Get together with a friend or group of friends, set a timer for five minutes (or more depending on how ambitious youre feeling), and draw. When times up, pass your drawing to the right and pick up where the person before you left off. Repeat, repeat, repeat! A fun alternative is to send a small drawing back and forth via snail mail. Play with scale Draw extra-large then scan and shrink it down Conversely - photo 22

Play with scale. Draw extra-large, then scan and shrink it down. Conversely, draw really small, then scan and blow it up. Consider using a vanishing point for drawing in perspective Then try using two - photo 24
Consider using a vanishing point for drawing in perspective. Consider using a vanishing point for drawing in perspective Then try using two - photo 24
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