With the help of this guide, children and other beginning artists will enjoy learning how to draw 30 different forms of transportation — most of them composed of simple shapes such as circles, triangles, squares, and rectangles. Easy-to-follow, step-by-step illustrations show how to put these shapes together to form everything from a canoe, biplane, and antique locomotive to an ocean liner, seaplane, and passenger car of a modern train. Fun to draw, these pictures will also help youngsters and budding artists understand the basics of shape, form, and dimension. Blank practice pages are included.
This book teaches the reader an intuitive, seven step process for drawing realistic airplanes. Starting with a 3-view drawing, this process can be used to render any airplane from any point of view the artist chooses. With practice, the whole process can be done as a freehand drawing. It is this simple and intuitive process for drawing airplanes that makes this book unique. Employing the instructional design principles of David Merrill, who advocates teaching procedures and concepts in the context of the whole task, each chapter builds the reader's understanding of this process using worked examples of some of the most famous airplanes ever built including the Piper Cub, P-51 Mustang, Supermarine Spitfire, F-86 Sabre, F-4 Phantom II, and the Sukhoi SU-27 Flanker. This book is written for the intermediate artist who has a passion for airplanes. It covers topics important to the creation of three dimensional art including the use of perspective, shading, light, reflection, and composition. It also covers topics that are important to aviation artists like how to draw spinning propellers, metallic surfaces, and glass canopies. This book has 11 chapters and all steps are explained in detail and are extensively illustrated with over 300 images created by the author.
If you can make a mark on a piece of paper you can draw! If you can write your name... you can draw! Millions of people watch Shoo Rayner's Drawing Tutorials on his award-winning YouTube channel - ShooRaynerDrawing. learn to draw with Shoo Rayner too! In this book, Shoo shows you how, with a little practice, you can learn the basic shapes and techniques of drawing and soon be creating your own, fabulous works of art. Everyone can draw. That means you too!
Do you love mighty tugboats or sleek fighter jets? Whatever your favorite ship or airplane, you’ll soon be drawing these vehicles like a pro with the help of this fun book. Just follow the steps and you’ll have a great-looking transporter before you know it. Fact-filled descriptions accompany the drawings, so you can learn all about planes and boats. You’ll also find tips on adding details to your drawing - like a banner for your biplane or a skull and crossbones for your pirate ship. So get out some paper and grab a pencil. Then get ready, get set, and get drawing!
Part of the 'How To Draw' series, this book teaches children to try out tools and techniques and apply these to materials and processes, including drawing. It helps achieve the goals of the Scottish Standard Curriculum 5-14, promoting positive attitudes to learning, knowledge, understanding and appreciation of the world and skills in literacy.
Let one of the world's greatest aircraft artists shows you how to turn your airplane doodles into aviation masterpieces. Whether you’re interested in limning the latest Dreamliner or Airbus A380 or depicting historic aircraft or dreaming up an airplane of your own, longtime aircraft design engineer Andy Whyte has the key to the proper approach, techniques, and tools. With co-authors Charlie and Ann Cooper, Whyte offers expert advice and instruction on perspective, light, and shadow; sketching, drawing, and painting planes, horizons, skies, and backgrounds; detail work on aircraft wings, cockpits, and landing gear; and creating cutaways and scale drawings. For the more technologically inclined artist, he also includes a chapter on computer illustration of aircraft, with tips on the software and accessories you’ll need to get started.
Frank A. A. Wootton offers good advice for artists wanting to try their hand at aircraft. Drawing planes (this book was published during World War II, so illustrations are from that period) is covered along with composition, light and shading, and action sequences. This is a great little book that novice artists will find a very useful resource.