About the Author Mark and Mary Willenbrink are the husband and wife team of the internationally best selling Drawing for the Absolute Beginner, with their Absolute Beginner titles translated in more than a dozen languages. Mark and Mary enjoy teaching the fundamentals of art while encouraging everyone to “Have fun and keep up the good work!” Mark is a fine artist and art teacher who strives to do a sketch a day, while Mary is an author who loves reading, writing and spending time with family. The Willenbrinks live in southwestern Ohio with their growing number of rescue cats and dogs.
Features & Highlights
This inspiring book makes drawing in a realistic style easier than you may think and more fun than you ever imagined.Authors Mark and Mary Willenbrink (
Watercolor for the Absolute Beginner
) cover it all—from choosing materials and the correct way to hold your pencil, to expert advice on the tricky stuff, like getting proportions and perspective right, drawing reflections, and designing strong compositions. (It's not as scary as it sounds…not with Mark and Mary as your guide!)At the heart of this book, a series of fun, hands-on exercises help you practice and perfect your strokes—24 mini-demos lead up to 9 full step-by-step demos. Each exercise builds on the previous one as you develop your skills, build your confidence, and enjoy yourself along the way. The lessons you learn by drawing simple subjects such as coffee mugs, clouds and trees will help you take on progressively more challenging matter like animals, still lifes, landscapes and portraits…the kinds of subjects and scenes you've always dreamt of drawing.This book is just the ticket for budding artists of any age. It's never too early and never too late to discover the pure joy of drawing.
Customer Reviews
Rating Breakdown
★★★★★
60%
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Most Helpful Reviews
★★★★★
5.0
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The One to Get!!
I discovered this unassuming volume after buying four other drawing books and looking through about fifty more. While finding a lot of good things in the other books, none of them had what I was looking for in a beginner's guide - a solid step-by-step foundation course starting from square one. Too many drawing books, I learned, either turned into art displays - filled with beautifully rendered drawings and too little instruction, focused too much on certain aspects of drawing at the exclusion of others, or were poorly organized with a vague sense of direction. What I wanted was a solid stone on which to build my drawing and (eventually) painting skills...and I found it!
Where Mr. and Mrs. Willenbrink have succeeded so magnificently is in both the completeness and organization of their material. They assume nothing while providing valuable insight on every page. Their goal is to get you drawing - quickly and correctly. Not a word is wasted on lofty theories and no drawings are displayed without full and easy-to-follow instructions on how they were created. This is a book that will teach you how to walk before trying to teach you how to run.
The book's six chapters are laid out clearly and logically, starting with how to hold the pencil and a great overview of sketch types. From there the chapters cover basic shapes, measurement and perspective, value, and composition, with over 25 step-by-step practice drawings to apply what has been discussed.
I could not find a better presentation of this material in any other drawing book. If you dream of being an artist and don't know where to begin...start here!
795 people found this helpful
★★★★★
2.0
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How to draw an owl! Step 1: Draw a circle. Step 2: Draw the rest of the owl.
Not even remotely for the "absolute beginner". The book starts off by immediately jumping into determining light values in different forms. What? I haven't even drawn a square yet, and you're asking me to shade a coffee mug in different forms with almost no instruction?
The book is broken into mini examples that you are supposed to mimic, however even the very first example require previous drawing knowledge and experience.
But rather than talk about it, I've attached a photo of the steps 3 and 4 (out of 4 total steps, although step 1 technically isn't a step) of the 5th mini example (out of like 30) you are supposed to follow.
738 people found this helpful
★★★★★
1.0
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NOT for beginners!!!
Even an intermediate student, in an art class, would struggle with this text. You are not given clear instructions, you are just given expertly rendered pictures that if you are a beginner you have no chance at all of duplicating. I should have known it was a loser when it started out teaching you to draw a coffee cup without telling you you should have a coffee cup in front of you to draw. You were meant to just follow their exceedingly difficult instructions that leave you frustrated, demoralized, and ready to put down your pencil forever. Shame on these people for putting this book out, just to make themselves feel like hot shot artists and leave the rest of us in the dust. I'm an absolute beginner, I believe I can learn to draw, but not with this poorly done book. To say it is for absolute beginners and the title is misleading to the point of being false advertising. I feel cheated. These people are dishonest. I wish them well in their Rembrandt quality art that no beginner has a prayer of duplicating.
358 people found this helpful
★★★★★
4.0
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Quite Helpful But Not For The "Absolute Beginner"
I like this book quite a lot. I got it as a review of basic drawing principles I learned in college, and for this it is really useful. It reviews much of what I learned in the first four art classes I had, explaining tools, going over basic skills like how to hold a pencil for different effects, creating value cards, and starting out with the basic shapes of an item and working towards the details. I'd forgotten many pointers my profs had shared that are repeated here, like how to use a sighting stick and what the basic proportions are for the human face and body. The demos/how-to's also cover a good range, including human and animal portraits, buildings, cars, a fruit still life, and a couple landscapes.
While I have never been a "natural" in terms of drawing, I have had 7 college drawing courses and three adult-ed classes at an art center in the last few years. This is to say, while this book is actually perfect for me, providing meaningful instruction and review at my present (still beginner) level, I think I would have been very upset and overwhelmed with it had I gotten it a few years ago, before taking any of the aforementioned classes. Likewise, you will notice that many of the other reviewers who got the most out of the book actually have some drawing background. The discussion of perspective is a great review, for example, but had this been my first introdution to perspective, I would have been competely lost, as the disussion is more an overview of the concept than the step-by-step tutorial that a real "absolute beginner" needs to follow. A good 20+ pages of the 128 page book deals with perspective either as its main focus or as a needed skill to follow the demo, including the demos on drawing planes, trains, and automobiles, as well as plotting shadows and drawing ellipses. Thus while I heartily recommend this book, I would reserve it for the person who has a little more background than an "absolute beginner" lest one become discouraged by attempting to follow instructions that are not sufficiently detailed for one with no previous knowledge of perspective.
295 people found this helpful
★★★★★
4.0
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Very Traditional Approach to Pencil Drawing
This book is one of four instructional drawing books which I bought to try to get myself back into sketching and drawing, an activity which I enjoyed in my youth. Besides the "Absolute Beginner" book, I got the "Absolute and Utter Beginner", "Drawing with Children" (Mona Brookes) plus one about drawing faces. As you can see, I decided to go "all the way back" and get a good foundation to the craft. I draw nearly every day now, doing up to seven sketches or studies. My fat little sketchbook is half full now with studies from the "Face Book", still life pictures I've done of stuff in my room, and many drawings from the Willenbrink book. I dove right into this book and have been mostly pleased with it.
The book starts begins with a list of basic tools and supplies. It fits the bill for those who are looking for a guide to strictly pencil drawings (not colored ones, charcoal or ink or pastels: I'll do that later), and requires few supplies. Hobby Lobby had some small kits with most of the stuff in them: various pencils---from soft to hard, a little sharpener, plus a sandpaper pad to put a fine point on your pencil, and two kinds of erasers. Besides that you need sketchbook(s), a nice drawing board, and some drafting-type tools---an "eraser shield", folding ruler, triangle, t-square, and "dividers". Be sure to pick up a spray-can of fixative so that your drawings don't get all smudged onto the pages of your book, and pick up a hem-gauge from a fabric store.
Chapter One which introduces Sketching and Drawing was very helpful to get me thinking about art and "seeing" with artist eyes. In fact, I would like to have spent more time on these exercises and others ones like that. You learn ways to hold the pencil, and some types of stokes you can make, then moves on to structural sketches, value sketches, black-white sketches, contour sketches, and finally combining these approaches for a "finished" product. The same two models, a coffee mug and a man's face were used in each exercise, which was great because it gave you the chance to look at the same thing in several ways--like blocking out the shapes, simplifying it into just black and white or line drawing without looking at your paper, or even drawing from memory with your eyes closed.
OK and now unto the "basics", which in this case means: draftsmanship-- mostly perspective, and lots of it. This is important if you want your drawings to look realistic, but I find it to be dry and a bit intimidating, so I didn't get very far into it yet. Since I wasn't ready to do this stuff, I thought I'd have to set the book aside, but after thumbing through it, I found some projects I could do without studying the prospective stuff. I have done the exercises on drawing a standing cat, a cat face, human faces, trees, and drawing and shading stones, and others. I liked how the author listed which sections in the book you needed to have studied to be ready to do each project.
All-in-all I found this method book to be not only basic, but rather formulaic. A finished project was shown, prefaced by three or four steps of how the artist gets to that point. This is helpful if you like to "copy" art--which I do, but, so far I don't think that my pictures have really improved that much yet, nor do I FEEL artistic yet. I'll continue to use this book, but I'm going to use the other method books now, too, to round out my learning, because I am intrigued by the other approaches and drawing exercises. Must--get--those--creative--juices--flowing! I hope that helps!
294 people found this helpful
★★★★★
2.0
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Not really for the absolute beginner
I didn't purchase this over amazon, rather I went to my local bookstore and checked this out page by page.
I am an absolute beginner. I know how to draw a triangle, circle, and square. I know how to scribble- that's it. I have a hard time even making cylinders, pyramids, and cubes- that's beginner for you.
The book spends most of the time showing you how so many have improved and making you draw the weirdest objects. It didn't teach me how to use lines or shapes, rather it figured I already knew how to see all of those in various things. I found more helpful tutorials on the web than this. I found a lot of steps rather confusing and I didn't really get how they assumed I should know when and where my light will hit on an object and therefore I should automatically know how to shade & shadow.
Trust me, this is not for beginners. I learned a lot more browsing 'You Can Draw in 30 Days' and searching online tutorials than this item.
194 people found this helpful
★★★★★
2.0
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NOT for beginners
Not for the beginner. There is some good instruction, but the ABSOLUTE beginner needs at least one drawing course before tackling this book. Preferably two.
Also, it has too much information about tools in the intro. An absolute beginner only needs paper, pencil, and instruction about drawing free hand. Circles, lines, squares... cubes, cylinders, pyramids... then some object with step-by-step instructions. This book skips sooooo many steps!!
My husband wants to learn to draw and I got this book, trusting the title. Never again!! Read the reviews! He cannot draw from this book any more than he can explain particle physics. And I'm not going to be his teacher... that's a bad deal for a wife!!
I'll be reading reviews from now on.
158 people found this helpful
★★★★★
2.0
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Not what I expected
I was disappointed in this book. I think it is too hard for an absolute beginner. The lessons contain a lot of instruction and one or two images to try to duplicate. I needed step-by-step instruction. They also spent a lot time telling you what supplies you need when all you really need is a pencil and sketch pad. If you really want to learn to draw and you have no experience, purchase Mark Kistler's "Learn to Draw in 30 Days".
98 people found this helpful
★★★★★
3.0
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People need to calm down and read the entire book.
I would consider this a good beginner drawing book for use among many other references and learning tools. It's matter of fact and clinical in its presentation.
I see many people complaining about this not being for beginners. Reviews seem to point out how some early examples of drawings go from shapes to sudden completed professional drawings. I would assume that if you've got the patience to become a good artist or draftsman then you'd have the patience to turn a few pages and realize that this book goes into detail on the techniques used to make these completed drawings. I would say these early examples are meant as an overview of what's possible.
Keys to Drawing is a much better beginners book but this is still useful and is much better than some people would lead you to believe.
Basically, calm down, have patience and read a few chapters before whining about how a few examples seem daunting.
90 people found this helpful
★★★★★
1.0
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Not for Beginners
I wanted to like this book and the first few pages gave instructions on how to hold your pencil to create different kinds of lines, but the next pages expected you to practice these lines by drawing a realistic coffee cup and a cat's face. It was discouraging because there were no steps leading up to a it, so the end result (for me) were repeatedly awful pictures. The book's instruction was like all you need to become an artist is to angle your pencil a certain way and voila.
While I hoped this book would give me the skills to move beyond doodles, I didn't find enough basic steps before it quickly jumped to needing artistic know-how like shading, light, and shapes which the book gave no to very little instruction on, so I donated this book to my local library after several months of frustration.
Maybe this book is better for helping a beginner progress to intermediate, but its not a book I'd recommend for an absolute beginner.