Draw 50 Animals: The Step-by-Step Way to Draw Elephants, Tigers, Dogs, Fish, Birds, and Many More...

Draw 50 Animals: The Step-by-Step Way to Draw Elephants, Tigers, Dogs, Fish, Birds, and Many More...

Lee J. Ames

Language: English

Pages: 64

ISBN: 0823085783

Format: PDF / Kindle (mobi) / ePub


Fifty furry, scaly and feathered friends are here for aspiring young artists to learn how to draw. DRAW 50 ANIMALS is a step by step easy to use drawing book that will help anyone develop their technical drawing skills and build a repertoire of animal subjects. Author Lee J. Ames distinctive drawing method has proven to be successful for children and adults alike over the past thirty years how to draw everything from animals to airplanes.

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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 © 1974 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 2012. www.crownpublishing.com

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 instructor’s “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

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 instructor’s “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

from teachers, from libraries, and most importantly … from inside yourself? Lee J. Ames To the Parent or Teacher “David can draw a jet plane 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

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