Este no es un libro para colorear ordinario: es un volumen para dibujar, diseñar, colorear, cortar, pegar y crear historias, un reto para la imaginación y la creatividad que en sus 368 páginas entretendrá a niños desde los más pequeños hasta los adolescentes pues en cada uno de los ejercicios propone un punto de partida para dar rienda suelta a la mano y a la capacidad de creación. El autor Nació en Tokio, Japón, en 1945. Estudió diseño industrial en la Escuela de Diseño Duwazawa. Es un autor de renombre internacional cuya obra ha sido traducida a más de 10 idiomas.
This from the author of "Everyone Poops", so you can expect some unexpected humor. This is more than a coloring book; it's hours and hours of fun for kids and adults! The majority of the book gives suggestions on what to draw -- kinda like filling in the rest of the scene. One example is, "Draw people sitting." On the page, there are three images already drawn: a chair, a throne, and a toilet. Your job is to drawn people sitting on those seats.
Another example is "Draw a dead person."
Yeah.
You may want to keep this away from kids that can read until they're old enough to understand what "dead" means. You probably wouldn't want their first introduction to the fragility of human existence to come from a coloring book.
Great for sparking the imagination with simple suggestions. My favorite is a run of four pages that just have one line drawn on each one - the first says "Draw a dragonfly balancing on the pole", the second "Draw a sparrow balancing on the pole", then "Draw a tiger balancing on the pole" and finally "Draw an elephant balancing on the pole". The prompts on each page are simple enough for beginning readers so my daughter loves it!
Yes, this is for kids to color in, but who cares? The thick lines with white inbetween are amazing. The drawings are simple, friendly, and beg to be colored in with a thick pile of paint.