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197+ Works 2,137 Members 11 Reviews

About the Author

Series

Works by Walter Foster

Drawing: Horses (1987) 119 copies, 1 review
Drawing: Animals (2003) 60 copies
How to Draw and Paint Cats (1986) 57 copies
Basic Animation (HT25) (1989) 54 copies
Beginner's Guide: Anatomy (2003) 53 copies
Drawing: Dogs (1997) 52 copies
How to Draw With Pastels (1997) 46 copies
The Art of Watercolor (1988) 34 copies
How to Draw and Paint Landscapes (1958) 28 copies, 1 review
Modern Cartoon (1989) 22 copies, 1 review
The Magic of Oil Painting (1989) 21 copies
101 Heads in Pen, Pencil and Brush (2026) 21 copies, 1 review
Disney's How-To-Draw Bambi (1992) 15 copies
Oil Painting 2, Book No 100 (1950) 15 copies
Comics (1949) 12 copies, 1 review
Leren tekenen. Dl. 2 (2011) 11 copies, 1 review
Fine Prints to Copy (1970) 11 copies
Cars (DMA Learn to Draw) (2006) 11 copies
How to Draw 7 copies
It's Fun to Paint Old Shacks and Barns (1983) 7 copies, 1 review
Leren tekenen. Dl. 1 (2003) 7 copies
Dieren tekenen (2003) 6 copies
Draw and Color: Insects (2007) 5 copies
Gezichten tekenen (2003) 4 copies
Discover and Draw Dragons (2009) 3 copies
How to Draw Batman Beyond (1999) 3 copies
How to Draw Princesses (2003) 2 copies
Draw and Color: Animals (2005) 2 copies
Watercolor Project Book (2002) 2 copies
Dogs 1 copy
Mensen tekenen (2018) 1 copy
I Can Draw 1 copy
Wild About Watercolor (1999) 1 copy
A Kids Travel Journal (2001) 1 copy
Wild About Watercolors (2000) 1 copy

Associated Works

Easy Ways to Do Chinese Painting (1960) — Afterword — 37 copies
Gimlet Takes a Job (2023) — some editions — 24 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Foster, Walter Thomas
Birthdate
1891
Date of death
1981
Gender
male

Members

Reviews

14 reviews
This little book (large in scale) is full of encouragement, even 70 years on!

The lessons are simple in nature, and the advice may be basic, but at every turn are words of encouragement 'O.K. now you try it.', 'It is SO simple, once you understand.'. There is even advice on setting up a studio in your garage or bedroom, and where to place your drawing board. Today the internet image search replaces a *Morgue, but even then, I still keep files of reference material and cuttings because as vast show more as the world wide web is, it can still feel a little generic at times.

The back page has: a note to Mother, Wife, Dad or Sister:-

Please do not fuss at our pal here, because he or she does not put away their drawing materials after each time they work. They should have a den or corner they can call their own, with a "no tresspassing (sic)" understanding with it and for heavens sake never clean up or destroy what you may consider junk, it might be a prized possession.

now a note to you, my sprouting artist.

If your folks assign a spot to you, see that it is kept orderly and clean, even with your materials out ready for work, and this is necessary because, if you have to get ready each time chances are you will put it off and not work at all. Lay out your work so you can sit down and start right in.

My first corner was in our basement, next to the furnace. Warn in winter cool in summer and no one to bother. There the small foundation was laid that became my life's work. "art is love" they say but may I add worth every moment of it.
good luck and success


This should give you an idea of what sort of book this is.
It is very basic. But firm foundations are built on good basic advice.

These books served me well growing up, and I have fond memories of working studiously from them as a child.

*Morgue a file of collected image source material, cuttings from magazines, your own reference photographs, etc.
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This book was something I found during one of my regular trips to the book store . I was instantly attracted to it and bought it as a gift for my cute lil cousin. She loves drawing and I thought it was an ideal gift. The instructions are easy and kids can follow them and get good results. The best part of the book is even adults will find it engaging if they have inclination towards art , animations or just draw for relaxation.

Each Princess has a separate section , with instructive drawings show more on how to draw her face and body.

It makes for a great gift for kids and is productive too.
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Drawing: Horses
Learn to draw step by step by Walter Foster is a book I requested from NetGalley and the review is voluntary. This may not be a beginner's book but maybe an advanced beginner 😁. There are great guides for understanding the shapes to use for various parts of a horse's body. Great shady tutorials. Great step-by-step instructions with lots of illustrations! Great art instruction book!
I haven't tried the drawing techniques yet, but I simply enjoy browsing through it, looking at the 1940's styles and styles of drawing.

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Statistics

Works
197
Also by
3
Members
2,137
Popularity
#12,039
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
11
ISBNs
154
Languages
8

Charts & Graphs