Recensione:
Whether you're a notebook doodler who wants to develope some skills, an expert illustrator looking to take it to the next level, or someone who dosn't even own a pencil but loves excellent hot rod illustrations, How To Draw cars Like A Pro is your book...Rod & Custom...Being a car enthusiast and artist, I believe that this book is a very well explained, contains awesome illustrations, and provides an easy to follow hands on course for all automotive enthusiasts and artists. The book provides a good sense of feel for drawing cars, while at the same time not limiting the reader, or rather, the drawer to drawing the 'stereotypical' car. The drawer is able to take the concepts reviewed in the book, and then incorporate his or her ideas to expand one's abilities. This is a great review for professional designers, a handy resource for all designers, and a good learning tool for the younger artists. I enjoyed reading (viewing) this book and recommend it to anyone even the slightest bit interested....Model Engineers workshop...As a mechanical engineer and an artist I have always liked building street rods and custom vehicles. I have been a huge fan of Thom Taylor's designs and ability to put them on paper for years. Taylor goes methodically through the basics and reasoning, with examples by himself and other great artists, to give one the foundation needed to start drawing with sound fundamentals. The artistic quality of the book itself is worth the price....Artworld dot com...I bought this book for a 16 yr old motorhead and I was a little worried when I ordered it that it would be too juvenile. It isn't. He said it was 'awesome and thanked me about 3 times (and if you know 16 yr old boys this is high praise). It has a good variety of techniques and subjects (i.e.: shading, color techniques, trucks, interiors, race cars, cartoons) and a little bit on how to pursue this as a career with art design schools and all. That made it even better in my opinion. If your teen is really into drawing cars and may even think about auto design as a career, this would be a good book to get them started...Car & Driver...As an artist who is good with characters but weak on perspective and mechanical forms, I have looked at a lot of books over the years about how to solve the problems associated with drawing vehicles. This is the best, the clearest, and the most useful. I use it as reference whenever I have to draw cars and sometimes I look at it just for enjoyment --draw dot com
Being a lifelong fa of the late and sorely missed Ed' Big daddy' Roth, I origionally intended to review Thom taylors and Ed Newt Newtons book describing how to draw crazy cars and mad monsters. however, as taylor's previous book How to Draw cars Like a pro has many interelated techniques, I thought it would be more productive to review them together. Like many people, I have been scribbeling pictures of cars most of my life. As a child of the Sixties, at a time when monster comics, model kits, and T-shirts were all the rage, and the likes of The Munsters and The Addams family were appearing weekly on our monochrome TV's, I attributed much of my inspiration to Roth. What i did not realise untill recently was that Newt Newton who joined Roth studios from art college in tthe early sixties was actually the designer of many of Roth's outrageour show cars and T-shirt designs. don't get me wrong - as the father of the infamous Rat fink, roth was a talented artist in his own right, but it was probably Newton's work with which i was familiar. Unfortunatly, my natural artistic skills are limited and i confess I never progressed further than detailed doodles. I therfore could have benefited from both these books - How to Draw Cars Like a Pro, and How to Draw Crazy Cars and Mad Monsters - 40 years ago, which complemet each other nicely. Only the supremely talented can become artists overnight and they wouldn't need instruction, so Taylor sensibly starts with the basics. In each book he explains about the tools of the trade, perspective, light, shadow, proportion, ellipses, light source, and refelections. as you might realistically expect much of this knowledge is repeated in both books. to be fair, there is no other way round it. However, the deeper into each volume you delve the more the content evolves towards the chosen subject matter. There's some similarity when describing how ot draw caricatures of vehicles but inevitably the carzy cars and mad monsters book leans towards cartoons. Taylor explains in easy to understand steps how to develope simplistic scribbelings into finished drawings and paintings. he describes the different methods of colouring developing drawings form teh coloured pencil and felt tip marker pen to the use of paint and more involved computer generated techniques. In demonstrating these methods he features the work of many other artists a number of whom you may recognise. In Draw Cars Like a Pro there are examples from Street Rodder magazine's resident cartoonist Dave bella s well as car designer Steve stanford and artist darrell Mayabb and Greg tedder. The Crazy Cars book is equally colourfull and features work from low brow artists Dave Big Deal Lance,Mr Distortion, Sorchick,Keith Weesner,C Cruz. Of course authors Taylor and Newton both contribute considerable material that is both informative and inspiring. Thank you Mr Taylor and friends. --Classic American, March, 2010
L'autore:
Renowned car designer Thom Taylor is an inductee into the Hot Rod Hall of Fame. He has designed cars for industry-leading builders like Boyd Coddington, Roy Brizio, and SO-CAL Speed Shop, and for individuals like Eric Clapton, Tim Allen, and Billy F Gibbons. He is the author of the MBI bestseller How to Draw Cars Like a Pro.
Lisa Hallett is a writer and editor based in Southern California. Her work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, Emmy, and Westways.
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