How to Draw a Tree

$17.91
by David LaRochelle

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The key to drawing a tree—or anything, for that matter—is to understand your subject. How do you get to know a tree? Use all your senses!  Would you like to draw a tree? Here’s how. First you’ll need to make friends with your tree. Feel it. Smell it. Listen to it. Look at your tree from close up and far away. Notice all the things that make your tree special, from the shape of its leaves to the variety of colors hidden within. There are so many words that could describe a tree: prickly, shimmery, scraggly, squat, ancient, graceful, crooked, proud. What words would you choose? All these details will help when you sit down to draw your tree. You can show everything you observed, from color to texture to shape. Then you can introduce your tree to others—using your words and your artwork. Every tree is unique, and there are many different kinds. The pages of How to Draw a Tree show a wide array of species, with the name for each tucked into the illustrations, encouraging readers to slow down, appreciate, and learn. Through direct questions and lively examples, longtime children’s book author David LaRochelle invites readers to explore their natural surroundings. Colleen Muske’s whimsical, vibrant illustrations help readers see trees in a new light. Drawing a tree involves getting to know your subject before even picking up a pencil. The more you look, the more you see. Beyond an art or science lesson, this book encourages young artists to go outside and spend time in nature, exploring firsthand what they plan to draw. Embracing geographic and seasonal variability, LaRochelle’s observational text coaches would-be artists using simple tactics for noticing. After a basic directive (“Go outside and find a tree”), suggestions encourage appreciation of each selected subject’s varied attributes, including texture, color, shape, leaves, branches, and more (“Some trees smell like a chest in your attic”). Featuring background textures, Muske’s undulating artwork emphasizes arboreal diversity, with scenes featuring nonrecurring children, depicted with varied skin tones, spending fall, winter, spring, and summer days among species such as a live oak, Norway spruce, and Joshua tree, shown in endpapers. Emphasizing perception over creative technique (drawing-specific instructions never materialize), the creators successfully underscore the importance of mindful attentiveness as a first step toward art-making. Ages 3–7. — Publisher's Weekly David LaRochelle  has been writing and illustrating award-winning children’s books for over thirty years. His children's books,  Go and Get with Rex and Mr. Fox's Game of "No!" , received the Theodor Seuss Geisel Award. His work has been included in such honors as the ALA Notable Children’s Books, Bank Street College of Education’s Best Children’s Books, Junior Library Guild Selection,  Parents  magazine’s 30 Best Children’s Books, Amazon Best Books, and more. His books have earned starred reviews in  Kirkus, Booklist, Publishers Weekly,  and  School Library Journal.  He lives in White Bear Lake, Minnesota. Colleen Muske  is the writer and illustrator of  Linden: The Story of a Tree . She lives in Stillwater, Minnesota.

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