Learning how to draw can be challenging, but we have you covered with this free eBook that’s full of expert drawing techniques.
By following each step-by-step tutorial, you’ll be on your way to drawing with confidence and accuracy.
Start by exploring depth as you learn to draw still lifes or landscapes, then move on to adding value to make your drawings more realistic, and don’t forget learning to draw colorfully—as that’s key to emotion and expression to many works on paper.
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What’s inside my free eBook on learning how to draw?
Learning to draw is a matter of familiarizing yourself with a few essential drawing techniques that act as a foundation, no matter the subject matter or style. But discovering and working on those building blocks of drawing on your own can be frustrating if you aren’t sure where to start. That is where the free drawing instruction eBook comes in.
Drawing Instruction on Depth
Drawing Logic: Getting Depth Into Your Drawings by Bob Bahr
You’ll find that learning how to draw is really a matter of understanding a few principles of drawing, and one of those learning to draw with depth. The illusion of depth in drawing is often a matter of learning to draw compositions that visually push back into the fictitious picture plane—giving the appearance of space and distance where none really is. Drawing techniques for depth that you’ll find in include:
- Overlapping objects:Â Learn how, even in a simple black and white drawing, you can create the illusion of distance by positioning objects, figures, architectural and landscape features in front of one another
- Atmospheric perspective:Â Objects that you want to appear far off should be drawn differently than those in the foreground of a drawing. Learn to draw objects to achieve an atmospheric perspective in your work.
- Level of detail:Â If you want steps on how to draw the illusion of distance, one of those steps will be learning what level of detail is appropriate for objects close to you and what is right for objects in the distance. This is often a matter of learning varying qualities of light and dark as well as softening and blurring the marks you make.
Learning How to Draw: Value
Value Basics by Jon deMartin
Learning to draw objects with a use of values is what gives them a more natural appearance. Value is the level of lightness or darkness in any given color, and when applied translates toward a strong understanding of shading.
In this free guide, you’ll learn the system of terms that goes along with learning how to draw with value because once you know the name of and can identify the values you are looking at, you are going to more easily learn to draw them.
You will also discover drawing instructions on the nature of planes or the facets of forms. It is crucial to understand how light hits the different planes of an object determines the value of the light on that plane.
Free Online Drawing Lessons on Color
Effective Use of Color by Kenneth J. Procter
Color is one of the most exciting and rewarding parts in drawing because color can be used expressively to project emotion and feeling, but it can also be used to reinforce the realistic qualities of your drawing.
- Using pastels for rich color is something many of the great masters of art did centuries ago, and you can continue in their footpaths.
- Learn how to call attention to your drawing with color from Mary Cassatt. See how J.M.W. Turner used heavily pigmented body color to capture the glowing sunsets he is so famous for! Understand the reflective sheen of a bird’s wing just like Albrecht Dürer.
- Discover how Odilon Redon used a palette of earth tones in order to intensify his colors and make them glow.
DIY Feather Quill Pen
The Quill Pen and How to Use It by John A. Parks
In this free eBook, you’ll also find this Learn to Draw with a Quill Pen bonus chapter that will reveal the history of one of the most prolific and popular tools of drawing masters past and present. Plus, you will learn, step by step drawing with a quill pen, which was the instrument and predominant tool of the Old Masters. And learn from contemporary masters of today, many of whom still use the quill pen for drawing techniques that set their work apart.