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Drawing Together

To coincide with the Big Draw and illustrated with childrens’ own drawings,Drawing Together shows you how to devise storyboards, make your drawings, and then provides simple ways to animate your drawings.

Drawing Together

Drawing for Children – exercises, ideas, and inspiration

Drawing Together is a series of easy to follow drawing exercises:
- creating backgrounds;
- creating characters;
- creating a storyboard;
- thinking about ideas;
- making a jointed character;
- animating on the computer;
- making a flick book;
- making a sliding animation;
- a doodle worksheet.

animated face

Drawing Together is aimed at children aged 8 and upwards.

Drawing Teaching Ideas:
Many thanks to Eileen Adams from Power Drawing for the following notes:

Storytelling in drawing

The impulse for storytelling in young children’s drawings helps them to structure a verbal narrative. Drawing helps to organise their thoughts into a logical sequence. For them, stories generally have a beginning, a middle and an end. Stories tell us what things look like, what we are like, what we do and how we behave. In the narrative, the intention may be to explain a sequence of events or to show cause and effect. The child may choose to fuse time and space and a complex series of interactions and relationships into one image. The child who has made the drawing will undoubtedly be able to explain these. Alternatively, a series of drawings can show clearly the various phases involved in the sequence. It may be a report. It may involve plot and characterisation.

surf

Children are able to construct narratives using a number of strategies:

- Retelling a story – a familiar story is retold through drawings that show significant parts.
- Picturing a familiar story – the child adapts elements of a familiar story and uses drawing to retell it.
- Telling your own story – drawing comes first, then the child makes up a story in response to it.

Open the Drawing Together online resource

Draw!

Welcome to Draw – one of Access Arts’ most popular resources.

Draw!

The free-to-access Draw online workshop is aimed at adults aged 16 plus, and is packed full of drawing ideas, exercises and techniques.

- learning how to see;
- how speed effects your drawing;
- learning to see outlines;
- learning to see negative space;
- using relationships to help your drawing;
- warming-up exercises;
- why tearing up your drawing can be creative;
- how to make your mistakes useful.

Open the Draw! resource

Learning to Draw – Drawing exercises and inspiration

Draw creates a simple framework from which beginners and intermediate learners can explore and enjoy drawing as a process. The resource encourages users to think about what a drawing might be, and suggests practical exercises which are designed to enable thoughtful drawing action.

Each exercise is designed to make it easier for you to approach drawing with a fresh eye, and to enjoy drawing whether you are a beginner or more practiced artist. Teachers, artists, parents and home users have all found Draw a really useful resource.

Transferable ideas – Drawing for all

Draw is based upon teaching which took place in four venues in Cambridge: Kettles Yard, The Fitzwilliam Museum, Museum of Archaeology and the University of Cambridge School of Architecture. Although the original teaching took place with adults (aged 16+), the exercises and ideas can very easily be adapted for children and younger learners.

Draw! – PDF Download
Buy Draw! PDF

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The online resource is accompanied by the Draw! PDF which provides a printable transcript of the ideas contained within the online resource.

The Draw! PDF is aimed at artists, teachers, workshop leaders and self-learners.

Buy Draw! via LULU here.

Feedback for the Draw online resource:

“I am attempting to rediscover an old passion for drawing – with some success – however I went through the exercises on your site and, wow, yes, I`ve learnt more in half an hour than I would have done scratching away with a “B” pencil for a month !!! Thank you very much !!! Michelle Howe

“I have just read through the drawing workshop for the first time. I think it is excellent…it has inspired me with a few ideas which I can incorporate into my Life Drawing classes and i shall certainly be referring some students to the site. Well done!” Bridget (Derby College….PGCE FE )

“Hello, Congratulations for your excellent drawing course, effective and to the point. Would it be possible to have it published all together in PDF format? Thank you,” Gianluca Turco – Italy

“I am an artist-teacher and found your site this evening. It is just what I have been wishing to find for my students. Thank you very much for this resource. I will pass it along to my art educator email list Monday morning.” Betty Bowen, Oklahoma

” Thank you. I really enjoyed reading the information on your DRAW! website especially the second part, making a drawing. I know I will come back to it for reference and inspiration.”
Catherine Scriven, fine Art student at York St John University college

“Hi, This is an excellent resource, alongside the tate distance learning I encourage all of my A level Art students to complete your drawing course. It opens their eyes and expectations of what they can do to so much more and they gain an excitement and enthusiasm for their art from the drawing course – keep it up!!” Jayne Butler, Weston Sixth Form.

Shy Drawing, Loud Drawing

To coincide with the Big Draw 2007 AccessArt launched “Shy Drawing, Loud Drawing – 12 ways to trigger a drawing”

Shy Drawing Loud Drawing Open New Browser Window

Shy Drawing, Loud Drawing is an illustrated and fun resource which inspires users with new ways of making a drawing. Shy Drawing, Loud Drawing was devised as a way of taking the pressure off the user in terms of “what do I draw? And is it any good?” and to replace these thoughts with two simple criteria: “Can I make a drawing which feels in essence shy?” and “Can I make a drawing which feels in essence loud?”

The online workshop includes:
- drawing exercises;
- drawing games;
- making a drawing inspired by music;
- materials to match inspiration;
- drawing speed, silence and loudness;
- three-dimensional drawing;
- drawing from your wrist, elbow, shoulder, knee…
- making bundles of drawing materials;
- making drawings which argue with each other!

The resource is aimed at all ages and a variety of users. Shy Drawing Loud Drawing online drawing resource aimed at artists, teachers, families and home users. Parents and teachers will be able to modify the ideas for younger users.

Shy Drawing Loud Drawing is the perfect resource to use when you might feel “stuck” by providing simple exercises or “tricks” which stop us thinking too much and get us drawing again.

Shy Drawing, Loud Drawing PDF £3.00

Support independent publishing: Buy this multimedia on Lulu.

The free to access online resource is accompanied by the Shy Drawing, Loud Drawing printable PDF, which explores the ideas contained in the online workshop further and explains how ideas can be modified and developed. Packed full of ideas, strategies and tips which will help both the home user and workshop leader/teacher, the PDF includes:

- a recap of the 12 drawing exercises featured in the online resource;
- how where you draw might effect your drawing;
- how who you draw with might effect your drawing;
- how to organise timing and structure;
- appreciation and evaluation.

Buy Shy Drawing, Loud Drawing PDF £3.00