If you know me from other places, you know that as of about six months ago, I decided I wasn't going to just collect blank sketchbooks anymore, and decided instead to fill them up. (Which doesn't sound like that big of a deal until I mention that I've got five THOUSAND pages' worth of blank sketchbooks sitting here. I may have been, y'know, hoarding them a bit.)
So I'm pretty much constantly looking for inspiration/motivation to fill some pages.
Enter this book.
It's a beautiful object, in itself. The artwork depicted is all the author's, which is nice. (Some books sorta verge on name-dropping/cliquishness with the same names over and over, so seeing the author's artwork all the way through was refreshing -- and her art's fantastic, which is a bonus.) The information's presented well, and is both thorough and motivating.
And the part I liked the best is that it's not just for beginners. So many books are sort of dumbed-down for the masses of big box store crafters, watered down so that there's almost no substance left. Put this specific color here, then use this specific pencil to make this specific mark, and voila! You've made what I made, exactly how I made it! This is not that. There are no step-outs (or very few, and they're not...well...specific.), no do-as-I-do "tutorials". There's just idea after idea, all of which are open-ended and inspirational, that kick-start the creative process.
I had to stop every few pages to draw something. Filled up a few pages in my own (overwhelming number of) sketchbook. Which is EXACTLY what I came here for. It's perfect for that.
Moreover, there are some foundational exploration ideas that let you pretty much inspire yourself on an ongoing basis, which is fantastic.
Very happy I picked this up. If you're a step over a rank beginner and are looking for some next-level inspiration and ideas -- this is a good one to pick up.
(p.s. because I'm sure someone will be offended: when I say "dumbed down", I don't mean that general crafters are dumb. I'm saying that someone who's been a fine artist for a few years has different experience, and, frankly, we're usually pretty bored with the same tutorials over and over again, while someone new to a medium or activity *requires* a simplified, easier version to make the activity accessible. There's literally nothing wrong with being a beginner or a dabbler -- every artist started out as one, and I love seeing new people getting creative. And I'm also adding to that statement that a beginner has different needs than someone intermediate, and that those needs are going to need to be simplified and made palatable for newbies. Maybe "simplified" is a better word than "dumbed down", but after seeing four billion of the exact same tutorials in every book, I'm probably just a little bit frustrated that there's not much out there for the intermediate-in-skill-level folks, and it leaked over in word choice.
TL;DR: Crafters are not dumb. Obviously. The presentation of certain information *can be*, though. It's not about you. :D)