Introduction
Materials
How to Proceed
Fitting Parts Together
Line, Tone, and Color
What is Drawing?
Your Pencil & Eraser
Mechanics of Sketching
Pulling Lines onto the Paper
The Infinity Drill
Your First Drawing and Review
Your Second Drawing
Parts of a Drawing
What to Draw
Preparing Your Setup Stand
Geometric Shapes
Simplified Shapes
Ovals
Symmetrical Shapes
See Where a Line Begins and Ends
The Other Way to See
Overall Proportions
Sketching Rhythm
Flowing-in Lines Nonstop
Flowing in a Sketch
Drilling Flowing-in a a Sketch
A Beginning Sketch
A Precise Overall Shape
Direct From a Distance
Goodbye Old Habits
Three Basic Principles
The Basic Concept; Relating
Using the Basic Concept Fully
Work From Large to Small
Split Dimensions Large to Small
Cycle Throughout the While Thing
Unite the Parts of a Drawing
Continuing to Draw
Improving What You Already Have
The Big Correction
Completing a Drawing
The First Three Steps
Step One: Observe
Step Two: Decide What to Do Exactly
Step Three: Visualize it Done
Step Four: Do it Until it’s Right
Stay in Control
Key Points
A Stable Point
Using a Stable Point to Correct a Drawing
Triangles
Correcting a Drawing with Simple Shapes
Flows
Negative Spaces
A Review of Visual Tools
Comparing Measurements With a Stick
Measuring For Accuracy
A Plumb Line
A Mirror
Change Versus No Change
Overlapping Lines and Shapes
Converging Lines
Perspective With Ovals
Slanted Lines
Fitting it All Together
Finishing the Course