Free Art Instruction: A Few Good Links
Posted by: RC in Art Instruction, Oh the places I've been..., tags: Andrew Loomis, Famous Artists Course, George Bridgeman, Kent WilliamsComiCrazys Archive for the Famous Artists Cartoon Course Category — 18 free lessons and counting; available in both PDF and JPEG formats.
Comic Tools: Tutorials — learn about basic anatomy, balloon shapes, Kirby energy dots, perfect white-out consistency, ruling pens, cutting techniques, art corrections, scanning, and lots more.
Download Here: “Constructive Anatomy” by George B. Bridgman
Lessons from the Easel – The Basics by Charles Sovek
Rey’s Anatomy by Rey Bustos – a display of images that use Flash technology to interactively cross fade from photos of real and sculpted human figures to drawings of those same figures with the skin removed to display the underlying musculature.
Save Loomis! — download PDFs of Fun with a Pencil, Figure Drawing for All It’s Worth, Drawing the Head & Hands, Successful Drawing, Creative Illustration, and Eye of the Painter, all for free.
Scott Burdick: Demonstrations – nine in oil, one in watercolour. Even if the subject matter is not to your taste, you can learn something here about the traditional alla prima method of working out a painting in oil from the initial block in to the final strokes of detail.
Tom Richmond’s MAD Blog Cartooning/Caricature Tutorials — noses, hands, crowd scenes, cross hatching, and more.
The Tools Artists Use — find out what tools your fellow artists keep in their toolboxes that you might add to yours.
BONUS LINKS:
Agent 44: Fixing It Old School — learn how cartoonists make art corrections in the real world.
Build Your Own Easel! – Free Easel Plans by Benjamin Grosser.
Felipe’s Art Tutorials — Felipe’s detailed explanation of Burton Silverman‘s watercolour technique alone makes this site a keeper.
From Idea Sketch to Final Painting: Kent Williams, Mother and Daughter (2009), oil on linen, 42 x 50 in. — not art instruction per se, but much can be gleaned from step-by-step process photos, and the finished work is a knockout!
Making a Canvas Board! by Larry Seiler

