How to Draw Stupid and Other Essentials of Cartooning


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How to Draw Stupid and Other Essentials of Cartooning

October 24, 2009 by Michelle  
Filed under How To Draw Books

How to Draw Stupid and Other Essentials of Cartooning
 
Manufacturer: Watson-Guptill
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List Price: $16.95
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Product Description

Draw stupid, succeed big!

* Edgy art instruction plus savvy insider advice

* Award-winning author, well known in cartooning, comics, and animation

* Funny and irreverent--perfect for Adult Swim fans

Okay, dumdum. This one is pretty much idiot-proof. Even you should be able to figure out How to Draw, Stupid, and Other--what? No commas? Whoops, sorry. But How to Draw Stupid and Other Essentials of Cartooning is simple enough for even the simplest readers. Author Kyle Baker, who only acts stupid, is in fact "the greatest cartoonist of all time," or so he tells us. Here he presents a hard-working instruction book that provides artists with the essential skills needed for success. From the principles of drawing to turning those principles on their ear (or their rear), from conveying movement to creating a step-by-step sequence, from idea sketch to finished drawing, How to Draw Stupid and Other Essentials of Cartooning is the smartest purchase any aspiring artist can make, regardless of mental acuity.

Product Details

  • ISBN13: 9780823001439
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed

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Customer Reviews

World's greatest cartoonist
 
Review Date: September 18, 2008
Reviewer: C. Meesey, Los Angeles, CA USA
An excellent and comically informative book for the novice and professional alike.
Contains many universal truths of cartooning presented with empirical cartoon examples.
A great read in itself and yet before you know it, you've learned all kinds of neat stuff!
Perfect as a gift for the budding cartoonist, or the seasoned pro.
Highly recommended!
Don't be Stupid. Buy this Book.
 
Review Date: January 31, 2009
Reviewer: Grant Beaudette, Missoula, MT United States
The majority of books with "How to draw..." in the title are so predictably similar they could be (and have been) drawn by almost anyone. With "How to Draw Stupid" on the other hand Kyle Baker succeeds in making a book that's uniquely his.

Baker's lighthearted look at cartooning really doesn't have any concrete drawing lessons, but instead looks at the basics of communicating and being entertaining. It focuses more on how to draw feelings than figures.

Most of what Baker teaches in this short but sweet book are things that should be second nature to cartoonists except for the fact that no other books ever seem to talk about them. Such as making iconic characters by designing them so simply even a 4-year old can draw them. Or drawing the pictures first and figuring out the words later. Even the seemingly redundant "To be a cartoonist you need to actually make cartoons" is a pretty profound statement when you think how many people aspire for something but never act on it.

And best yet, the book actually does cover how to draw stupid. I was legitimately surprised by that.

By being short on anatomy and long on character "How to Draw Stupid" easily stands out from the drawing book crowd by giving us lessons you won't find anywhere else.
Cecil
 
Review Date: December 1, 2008
Reviewer: D. B. Nelson, in my own little world
This has become one of the gems in my library... Eisner, McCloud, Kyle Baker gives you a kick to become the cartoonist you want to be. A must for anyone looking at pursuing cartooning. I loved it.
Listen to a pro
 
Review Date: May 11, 2009
Reviewer: Studio Products Inc., Haverhill, MA United States
The biggest gift that Baker includes are tidbits of the attitude (philosophy) that guides and drives him. As a longtime illustrator, his advice makes enormous sense to me, but probably won't reach most timid artists who look for a safety net (if I can't make it, at least I'll have a teaching degree). That attitude all but guarantees failure whereas Baker's risk-it-all approach is the attitude winners...no fall-back position. Either make it as an artist or shrivel up.

Obviously his advice is not for everyone...just the artists we'll be hearing from.
Cheap, Quick, and Entertaining to Read
 
Review Date: August 25, 2008
Reviewer: Z. D. Petilla,
Cheap, Quick, and Entertaining to Read

I saw this one at another Book Store and bought my copy that day. I've read many books on the subject and would say this goes there with McCloud's "Making Comics". If you are a novice, the books works for a crash coarse; if you read a lot of books on the subject it's a good review.

One artistic helpful hint was his small complaint on model sheets. Moreover, the book really shines in talking about the business of making comics.

The only down fall is the book is short and touches on everything you need to know, but The rest you'll have to find somewhere else.
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