and concepts. They are mostly employed in specific sectors, including book publishing, advertising, editorial, and animation. To become an expert in this domain, an illustrator must be brilliant in these mentioned styles, such as developing realism, cartooning, or character design, based on the pr...
I had done some cartooning, so I went home and drew some cartoons of people trying to surf on Lake Michigan. And then I didn’t know what I was going to do with it, put it on mugs or make a calendar, I had no idea. But I ended up putting one on a t-shirt. And then from ...
A Guide to Better Figure DrawingLearn to draw figures like they did in the fifties. Lots of examples tips, and tricks. Ways to make the figure more dynamic, how to draw pinups and glamour girls.$5.95 The Art Student's Guide to the Bones and Muscles of the Human Body and Lessons on ...
But thanks to Michael Faraday, the brilliant 19th-century scientist, and one of his namesake inventions, the Faraday cage, we humans have developed plenty of ways to control electricity and make it safer for our computers, cars and other inventions — and for us, too. Faraday cages shield th...
Editorial Reviews From the Publisher Leil Lowndes is one of today's most sought-after communication speakers and consultants through her company Applause, Inc. and is author of the international bestsellers How to Make Anyone Fall in Love with You and How to Talk to Anyone. About the Author...
Editorial Reviews Review Praise forHow to Train Your Dragon: How to Be a Pirate: "Quick wit and a heroic heart win out over brawn and bravado... but underneath it all, this is [an] exploration of what true heroism and leadership are all about."―Kirkus ...
But there’s still something that I’m struggling to do: break through the somber tones affecting most comics journalism today and publish something that is deeply, truly, gut-bustingly hilarious. Editorial cartoons don’t count. While they rely on fact, the use of caricature and, y...
But thanks to Michael Faraday, the brilliant 19th-century scientist, and one of his namesake inventions, the Faraday cage, we humans have developed plenty of ways to control electricity and make it safer for our computers, cars and other inventions — and for us, too. Faraday cages shield th...