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International Children’s Education Sharing resources, supporting families and teachers overseas... You are here: Parents > Articles Ed Emberley booksby Diane Lilleberg
Ed Emberley's Drawing Book of Animals Ed Emberley is a Caldecott Medal artist whose how-to books are the kind adults buy for children and then use themselves. On the dedication page of his animal drawing book there is a picture of the author as a little boy with the inscription, “For the boy I was, the book I could not find.” There are three titles that I often recommend.Whenever parents see one of them, they purchase it. The books provide a lot of fun for everyone in the family in settings where fun is sometimes hard to come by or when dressing up curriculum is difficult to do without the stimulation of other ideas. They show how to draw objects step-by-step. Under each step, Emberley illustrates the shapes that are used to extend the drawing. Just continue left to right, and there you have it! While these books are only a preamble for more “serious” art, they are fun and useful for anyone, whether creating invitations, cards, and finger puppets. Not only are they a great preparation for more formal treatments such as the Mark Kistler books, they can be used for all ages through high school. Even preschoolers will benefit. These books provide a medium to build their small muscle skills. Just require that their drawing tools are held correctly and set them loose! The left to right orientation of the steps will be good exercise, too. My three favorites are listed below:
In this book, Ed Emberley shows readers how to draw a menagerie of different animals—from polliwogs to
giraffes—by using the simplest of shapes, lines, and letters. The polliwog, for instance, is drawn with a
O, an S, and a • (
This book uses only seven basic shape starters (•, U, D, ∆, c, and
This title is a child’s dream book, showing how to draw over 400 things—“enough things to make a world
of your own.” If you can draw a Y or a 3, More books by Ed Emberley:
Porcupine Reprinted from the December 2000 issue of Parents Teaching Overseas. © 2005 SIL International, all rights reserved,
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