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    What art supply would you give your 9 year old self?

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    • Laurel Aylesworth
      Laurel Aylesworth last edited by

      Looking to buy some art related gift for my art-inclined niece (she's 9). Looking back, what gift/book/art supply encouraged you to keep creating when you were a kid?

      www.laurelaylesworth.com
      instagram.com/laurelaylesworth

      smceccarelli QuietYell Kevin Longueil anthemsweet 4 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • smceccarelli
        smceccarelli Pro SVS OG @Laurel Aylesworth last edited by

        @Laurel-Aylesworth I had a very weird childhood because the person I spent most time with was my 10-year-older brother - so what interested me then (Frazetta and Royo mostly) is not very relevant. But I can tell you what inspires and activates my 9-year-old daughter. She likes to follow books that teach how to draw using simple forms (their are many for children), she loves zentangle in all forms and she has recently fallen in love with a book by Linda Ravenscraft about drawing fairies. She uses my light table a lot (much more than I do) to copy drawings and photos from books and magazines. I have lent her my Winsor and Newton watercolors and showed her how much more intense the colors are compared to the children watercolor sets - and now she would love to have better watercolors than the classic children ones.
        Ah, and she absolutely adores Calvin and Hobbes.

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        • QuietYell
          QuietYell SVS OG @Laurel Aylesworth last edited by QuietYell

          @Laurel-Aylesworth At the moment, I am thinking about the "Art of [Some Favorite Animation/Film]" kinds of books (like "Art of Zootopia" or "Art of The Secret of the Kells" or "Art of Spirited Away" or "Art of Star Wars", etc.). I didn't have those back then, but I think that it would have been inspirational & aspirational for me [also showing me how these were created, which would have set me off on the right foot early on]. A place to start for perusing them (or buying) might be http://stuartngbooks.com/; though, you won't likely be able to get an order by Christmas, unless you live or are traveling in/near Torrence, California!

          Also, a lot of my inspiration and initial development came from comic books & copying the art there...

          As far as art supplies... I probably would have benefited from a prismacolor set and decent paper. I think it would make a good compliment to the watercolors that @smceccarelli mentioned, allowing her to explore wet & dry media and consider mixed media.

          Scott Monaco | QuietYell.com
          IG/FB/LI: @QuietYell
          IG-2: @QuietYellSketches
          TW/PIN/BEH/DEVART: @ScottMonaco
          SCBWI: http://bit.ly/1r8Dmqr

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          • Kevin Longueil
            Kevin Longueil SVS OG @Laurel Aylesworth last edited by

            @Laurel-Aylesworth Anatomy for artists book would be number one. I was pretty young when i got my first one but i remember wanting one for a couple years before i got the nerve up to ask for one 🙂

            Portfolio: kevinlongueil.com
            https://www.instagram.com/kevinlongueil/

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            • andyjewett
              andyjewett last edited by

              Drawing Comics the Marvel Way was a big deal for me (that and every Peanuts/Calvin and Hobbes book I could get my hands on)... I know my kids have enjoyed several how to draw books that carry a theme they are interested in (Pokemon) and my oldest daughter loves the books that you are asked to finish drawings in.

              Forever and always colored pencils and marker sets along with some sketchbooks though. I think I may have received my first drawing table around age 9-10 (made me feel like I was a real cartoonist!).

              Andy Jewett
              ILLUSTRATOR | DESIGNER

              PORTFOLIO: andyjewett.com
              TW/IG: @andyjewett

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              • Eric Castleman
                Eric Castleman last edited by

                For me it was watching movies along with having an art book available to draw while watching

                EricCastleman.com

                SCBWI profile
                https://www.scbwi.org/members-public/eric-castleman

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                • anthemsweet
                  anthemsweet @Laurel Aylesworth last edited by

                  @Laurel-Aylesworth Is it too late to answer? I would have loved high-quality materials that "real" artists use. Really good colored pencils or high quality paints with really good brushes with a good shape. Toned paper with a good tooth I would have loved. Good materials can be really eyeopening. My own kids love that sort of thing, for sure.

                  https://www.etsy.com/shop/anthemsweet?ref=hdr_shop_menu

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                  • J
                    John Conti last edited by

                    you have to go with the loomis books so much great info and basic enough for an enthusiastic 9 year old.

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                    • MirkaH
                      MirkaH last edited by

                      Do you know what she is drawn to? I was all about horses, so any horse related thing was super cool. And I practiced drawing from the cartoon illustrators work from the horse magazine we subscribed to. So it could be a book for reference if she already has a lot of other art supplies. Or then I'd get a nice set of colored pencils

                      http://www.mirkah.com
                      http://instagram.com/mirkadraws
                      http://www.twitter.com/mirkahokkanen
                      http://Shoppicadoodlepress.etsy.com
                      http://facebook.com/mirkahokkanen

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