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Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Here's some springtime stitching for you: a rabbit-ish treat bag pattern. Tips, tricks and the pattern, after the jump.
Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Blog: Theodesign.com (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Downloads, Add a tag
Here's an early valentine for all of you: some desktop wallpaper. Just grab the size you need from the links below and then you're off to the races. Enjoy!
Blog: So many books, so little time (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: downloads, illegal, pirates, Add a tag
If you’re a (book) pirate, don’t cross swords with mega-author Terry Goodkind. As the London Observer reports:
Goodkind was outraged, and decided to name one of the pirates on his Facebook page, posting the perpetrator's details – including a photo – and prompting an onslaught of online fury against him.
Read the whole story here.
Blog: DRAWN! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: downloads, pdf, Design, Illustration, holidays, Christmas, Add a tag
I love Simon Cook’s “Christmas Cheat Sheets” (snapshot above; full sheet below). You can download high-res PDF or JPG versions (one for boys, one for girls!) for your very own holiday shopping needs. Lots more fun stuff on his site here.
Posted by Luc Latulippe on Drawn! The Illustration and Cartooning Blog |
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Tags: Christmas, Design, downloads, holidays, Illustration, pdf
Blog: DRAWN! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: tips, Interviews, Illustration, Drawing, disney, How-To, Art History, downloads, Add a tag
Focal Press have given us permission to reprint a few lessons from their great new book, Drawn to Life: 20 Golden Years of Disney Master Classes, Volume 1: The Walt Stanchfield Lectures. So here’s the first one on Perspective Drawing. More to come…
(Download the full PDF for the Perspective Drawing chapter here.)
Walt Stanchfield:
You may recall me mentioning a tendency to straighten everything up in a drawing. You know, the crooked-picture-on-the-wall phobia. This tendency goes beyond straightening things up horizontally and vertically, but also depth-wise. That would be like taking the lines in Plate 1a and straightening them up like Plate 1b, which you can see, destroys all illusion of depth.
I am relentless in my crusade against this kind of seeing and drawing. You all have at least some knowledge of perspective, but sometimes the mind wanders and you fail to make use of what you do know. To further complicate matters — beyond just knowing the rules, you have to carefully observe (and feel) the pose so that you can put the two together. So much depends on perspective — not just what is called linear perspective (see Plate 3), which is a system for linear depiction of three dimensions, but also what I will call Spatial Perspective.
In drawing human or animal figures, which are loaded with complicated planes, there would be so many vanishing points you would need a computer to keep track of them. But take heart, there is a simpler method, thanks to Bruce McIntyre, former Disney Studios artist and subsequent drawing instructor. This method involves a few very simple rules which, once understood, are easy to apply, effective, and fun to use.
Here in Plate 2 are the six principles of perspective.
Take the hands first. They illustrate the second rule (see Plate 2), Diminishing Size . The hand farthest away being the smallest. Next, the left hand overlapping the forearm, the forearm overlapping the
upper arm, the shoulder overlapping the chest area, the front of the neck overlapping the far shoulder — all illustrate the fourth rule, Overlap . The way the forearm delineates the contour of the arm as it overlaps the upper arm, and the left shoulder follows the contour as it overlaps at the trapezius muscle, illustrates the fifth rule, Surface Lines. Plate 4b further explains the Surface Lines rule.
The last rule, Foreshortening, is present everywhere in every third dimensional drawing. It should be felt rather than diagrammed, although at times, a few perspective lines may help. Here Donald demonstrates how that particular perspective rule has been pushed to great extremes. This is called forced perspective and is universally accepted as normal.
Related:
Amazon: Drawn to Life: 20 Golden Years of Disney Master Classes, Volume 1: The Walt Stanchfield Lectures.
Download the full PDF for the Perspective Drawing chapter here.
To aid adults in understanding more background about Grandfather's Story Cloth, author Linda Gerdner has put together a set of discussion questions (and their answers) that address many of the difficult issues presented in the book. Prefacing the questions, she writes,
"While children will enjoy reading Grandfather's Story Cloth on their own, we also suggest sharing the experience with the guidance of an adult who can answer questions and initiate discussion. To assist adults in the interactive learning process with the child, here is a list of questions with corresponding answers focused on enhancing understanding of the behavioral and psychological symptoms of Grandfather and Alzheimer's disease. These in-depth answers give adults a broader base of knowledge about the book, and they in turn can discuss the ideas at the child's level of understanding."
The file is 23K. Adobe Reader or other pdf reader software is required for viewing and printing the free download.
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Good news! The 32-page teacher's guide for Jouanah: A Hmong Cinderella is now available for free download as a pdf file. This version of Cinderella by Jewell Reinhart Coburn and illustrated by Anne Sibley O'Brien reflects the folklore and traditions of the Hmong tribe of Laos, and the teacher's guide has, up until now, been only available for purchase as a three-ring binder.
The guide includes an introduction to the Hmong, prereading activities, and 18 reproducible activities that explore both the literature and the culture reflected in the book.
The file is 1.8MB. Adobe Reader or other pdf reader software is required for viewing and printing the free download.
Download now!
Blog: DRAWN! (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Design, Books, Typography, downloads, vintage, calligraphy, Add a tag
Gorgeous. This lovely calligraphy is from Studies in Pen Art, published by William E Dennis in 1914. Download the entire pamphlet as a free PDF from Luc Devroye’s typography links.
(via peacay’s Google Reader shared items)
Blog: A Fuse #8 Production (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Qwerty, Add a tag
You may purchase it for me at any time you so desire.
That is, if you can find a way to buy it.
Thanks, as ever, to BB-Blog for the pic.
Thanks!
I adore this (and all of your work). Thank you!
i love how you use all sorts of medium! wonderful!