0:00
/
Preview

Encounter With Style — Part 1: Drawing Tigers 🐅

Explore 3 illustrator styles, build a paper mannequin, and get a fresh encounter with your own Style!

In this workshop Adam and Katie guide you through five exercises designed to do one thing: give you a direct, personal encounter with your own style.

Not a lecture about style or a draw along session.

An encounter; meaning you leave the workout with actual drawings, actual discoveries, and at least one moment where you look at something you made and think I didn’t know I could do that.

What You’ll Do in This Workshop

You’ll study three of the most commercially successful illustrators — and draw tigers informed by each of their styles. Then you’ll build a paper mannequin of a tiger from cut shapes, pose it, and use everything you’ve learned to draw a final tiger in your own style.

By the end you’ll have at least four tigers. Each one different. Each one yours.

Here’s a look at all the tigers arthlete RachelBrokenicky drew during the workshop.

She worked with a variety of materials including collage, ink, and paint. How fun to use all those materials in just one hour!

Now Rachel has 4 different styles that she can use when drawing tigers or when she’s not drawing tigers… the beauty of this workshop is that it applies to any subject!

Subscribe to catch the replay so you can sketch with new styles, too:


The Three Illustrators

Eric Carle — painted paper, texture, collage. He selects rather than creates. His hands work first, his eye chooses after.

Quentin Blake — loose expressive line, big paper, whole arm movement. What looks spontaneous might be the fifth attempt.

Oliver Jeffers — simple shapes, big brush, essential gesture. Constraint in one direction creates freedom in another.

Experience three of the most enduring styles in picture books — study, borrow, and combined to your own unique visual voice.

What Happens in the Room

Here’s what three participants said after this session:

Shipra arrived late — her toddler had just gone to bed. By the end she was drawing tigers that danced, inspired by Indian folk art traditions she grew up with. She said the session started tentative and ended joyful.

Jill discovered something she didn’t know she needed: animals with tiny feet. “I would have never known how much I needed that without this Art Gym.” She giggled through the whole session and left with drawings she loved.

Brenda tried butter paper for the first time and found herself in completely uncharted territory. “It’s like I was on a new machine — and tomorrow I’m going to hurt a new muscle.” That’s exactly what a good workout feels like.

Workout Plan

Use the chapter markers below to jump to any section:

  1. Welcome and materials prep

  2. Studying Eric Carle — texture and painted paper

  3. Exercise 1 — painting tiger textures on butter paper

  4. Studying Quentin Blake — loose expressive line

  5. Exercise 2 — drawing a tiger in Quentin Blake style

  6. Studying Oliver Jeffers — simple shapes and big brush

  7. Exercise 3 — drawing a tiger in Oliver Jeffers style

  8. The paper mannequin method explained

  9. Exercise 4 — cutting and posing your paper mannequin

  10. Exercise 5 — drawing your final tiger in your own style

  11. Gallery share — participants show their work and reflect

Total runtime: 1 hour 56 minutes (including sharing)

Encounter With Style — Part 1: Drawing Tigers 🐅 CHEAT SHEET!

On Style

  1. You can’t pick a style the way you pick a pair of shoes — it has to emerge from doing

  2. “You can’t find your own voice without being influenced by other artists” - Lisa Congdon

  3. Style has layers — the materials you use, the way you draw a line, and most importantly, the way you think

  4. Finding the right material often unlocks your style — once the material feels right, the style follows

  5. Your failed copies of other artists’ styles become your own style anyway

On Studying Other Artists

  1. When looking at an artist’s work, note: the lines, the shapes, the colors, the textures, and the attitude

  2. Quentin Blake works really big — moving his whole arm, not just his wrist — try it

  3. Quentin Blake makes multiple attempts — what looks spontaneous may not be the first try

  4. Oliver Jeffers recommends using a bigger brush — it forces simplicity and captures essence over detail

  5. Eric Carle selects rather than creates — he makes painted papers first, then chooses shapes from them

On the Paper Mannequin Method

  1. Break your subject into 7 simple shapes and cut them out with scissors

  2. “Draw with your scissors” — the irregularities become part of the style

  3. Pose your shapes before drawing — you’ll find poses you’d never imagine from your head

  4. The inefficiency of working with paper is what makes it good — it slows you down in the right way

On Materials

  1. Butter paper (baking/parchment paper) is slightly transparent — overlapping colors create depth automatically

  2. Working with a limited palette forces interesting decisions — constraints create style

  3. Spoiled brushes with hardened bristles create great texture

  4. Leftover paint? Create texture papers — paint scraps become future collage material

On Working Loose

  1. If you feel tight, work bigger — bigger paper, bigger brush, bigger movements

  2. Things don’t have to be right the first time — do drafts, throw paper away, try again

  3. The collage forces commitment — once you cut, that’s the cut. It removes overthinking

  4. Flattening your digital layers can help you get into flow — fewer decisions, more drawing

  5. “Make a mark and let that determine the next mark” — stop planning, start doing

On Sketchbook Practice

  1. Set up your sketchbook with notes on one side, artwork on the other — three artists, six pages

  2. Share your work even when you don’t like it — other people see things you can’t

  3. Try something you hate — knowing what doesn’t fit you is valuable style information

  4. The goal isn’t to finish — it’s to fill pages and pick up what works

Take It Further

Art Gym Gallery

Share your work in the Art Gym Gallery!

Here’s some work by Yumiko Kitazono, Alicia Fairbourn, and Katie Stack

Want your art featured in the gallery? Join the next live session or watch this replay and submit your work. You can showcase your art here:

Add your art to the Tiger Gallery


Membership and benefits.

Art Gym publishes a new live workshop every month.

Strengthen your art muscles with monthly, skill-based workouts!

When you subscribe to art gym you will get instant access to this workshop PLUS

  • Upcoming live workshops

  • 12 workshop recordings

  • All the galleries

  • A community of artists committed to their practice

See you at the Art Gym! 💪✏️

Live workshops are scheduled every month, and replays are available for past sessions.

Monthly — $25/month

Annual — $125/year (equivalent to $10.42/month — you save $175 vs paying monthly)

Click this link to Join Art Gym

This post is for paid subscribers