How to Draw Ice Cream
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How to Draw Ice Cream
Welcome to Stinky's Art Class. We have the best students in the world. Todays lesson is how to draw ice cream.
Good morning people and welcome to Stinky's Art Class! Today's lesson is how to draw ice cream.
What a better way to start the morning than by drawing ice cream. Okay, let's jump right into it. Thanks for attending class today. So first thing we want to do is think about what kind of ice cream we want to do. Like an ice cream cone.
We got to think about a canvas. You can draw the ice cream cone sideways and make it a five scooper because this ice cream will fall on the ground. So you have to draw it up and down. So if we draw a small cone, we can have two scoops. And I got a special idea here, we're going to draw a cone.
Class, I'm already starting to think let's draw some fingers holding the cone. That'd be a good idea. There we go. Look at that. Now, this is a waffle cone, so you got to put in the texture, right? How's it looking so far, class?
Okay, look at your fingers. Okay then, let's go ahead and before we draw the arm, let me figure that out. Let's draw the ice cream. Oh, that looks good. Was that vanilla? Okay, then we got to do scoop number two.
Scoot over to there. Let's draw that arm. Okay wow, that looks like a guy. Now, this one's got some sprinkles on top. And this one's got some sort of.
Okay, yeah. It's looking like a pretty nice ice cream cone for a nice, hot summer day. Okay now, let's try. Do friends eat ice cream cones together? They're going to give each other a toast. And the ice cream cone toast. How about that? You ever heard of that? So let's do the same thing in reverse.
Sometimes it's good to draw your art like if you were looking at it in a mirror. Have you ever thought about that? Now this is a waffle cone. This is a big scoop.
And this one. What do you think, class? Should we just do a one scooper? I think so, this one looks like it.
Those are some candy or chocolate flavor or something. And they're doing the toast. Stinky and Squiggly right here. This is a Stinky new one scoop. And that's Squiggly eating two scoops. We're having a toast. Such a great lesson. We're toasting off the grate. Oh, I forgot something. That little fun class. Sometimes that's what you do.
You know, sometimes you get excited about your art and you just, you know, turn it in real quick. You put it up for sale and you're so excited. You want to show everybody it, that you kind of forget maybe some of the details that you can add to it to make it a masterpiece. It's like me, I was ready to just call it a class.
I was just excited. I mean, obviously it's ice cream drawing, but, you know, I was excited. I was ready to, you know, just be done and get this out there to all my students. And, you know, then I took a quick glance at it and I realized it's not finished. Yeah, I need to put some details in there to show that I'm, you know, I'm perfecting my art, that I'm out there doing my best believing in myself.
And I want you as a class to do the same thing. Like, I know you get excited about your art when you're completed, but go ahead and, you know, take some time. Once you're ready to just send it out, do one more review and just make sure you didn't leave out any details. Now, I'm not saying go glob a bunch of paint on a masterpiece that you already finished.
I'm just saying go look and make sure you, you know, made the fingernails and put an extra little sprinkle on your ice cream, something like that. I'm not talking about glob and paint and, you know, creating a whole new drawing within a drawing, within a drawing, within a drawing. No, you don't need to do that.
Just take it simple, okay? Alright class, I hope you enjoyed the lesson today. Keep following us, invite your friends, families, friends, and enemies. Everyone's welcome in our art class. You know, starving artists, rich gallery owners, all the artists, and all the Michelangelo and Leonardo's. And, you know, the Van Gogh's. You know, we're all welcome in this class.
I got high level stuff. Come in. Epic. You don't get epic art lessons in a college, a university, high school, elementary school, or middle school. Well, maybe middle school. You might have some epic stuff, but you kind of got to get underground to Stinky's Art Class.
You know, we're a small group, but the words out on Stinky's Art Class and people are flocking to it. Okay, class dismissed. Have a great day, bye.
Welcome to Stinky's Art Class. We have the best students in the world. Todays lesson is how to draw ice cream.
Good morning people and welcome to Stinky's Art Class! Today's lesson is how to draw ice cream.
What a better way to start the morning than by drawing ice cream. Okay, let's jump right into it. Thanks for attending class today. So first thing we want to do is think about what kind of ice cream we want to do. Like an ice cream cone.
We got to think about a canvas. You can draw the ice cream cone sideways and make it a five scooper because this ice cream will fall on the ground. So you have to draw it up and down. So if we draw a small cone, we can have two scoops. And I got a special idea here, we're going to draw a cone.
Class, I'm already starting to think let's draw some fingers holding the cone. That'd be a good idea. There we go. Look at that. Now, this is a waffle cone, so you got to put in the texture, right? How's it looking so far, class?
Okay, look at your fingers. Okay then, let's go ahead and before we draw the arm, let me figure that out. Let's draw the ice cream. Oh, that looks good. Was that vanilla? Okay, then we got to do scoop number two.
Scoot over to there. Let's draw that arm. Okay wow, that looks like a guy. Now, this one's got some sprinkles on top. And this one's got some sort of.
Okay, yeah. It's looking like a pretty nice ice cream cone for a nice, hot summer day. Okay now, let's try. Do friends eat ice cream cones together? They're going to give each other a toast. And the ice cream cone toast. How about that? You ever heard of that? So let's do the same thing in reverse.
Sometimes it's good to draw your art like if you were looking at it in a mirror. Have you ever thought about that? Now this is a waffle cone. This is a big scoop.
And this one. What do you think, class? Should we just do a one scooper? I think so, this one looks like it.
Those are some candy or chocolate flavor or something. And they're doing the toast. Stinky and Squiggly right here. This is a Stinky new one scoop. And that's Squiggly eating two scoops. We're having a toast. Such a great lesson. We're toasting off the grate. Oh, I forgot something. That little fun class. Sometimes that's what you do.
You know, sometimes you get excited about your art and you just, you know, turn it in real quick. You put it up for sale and you're so excited. You want to show everybody it, that you kind of forget maybe some of the details that you can add to it to make it a masterpiece. It's like me, I was ready to just call it a class.
I was just excited. I mean, obviously it's ice cream drawing, but, you know, I was excited. I was ready to, you know, just be done and get this out there to all my students. And, you know, then I took a quick glance at it and I realized it's not finished. Yeah, I need to put some details in there to show that I'm, you know, I'm perfecting my art, that I'm out there doing my best believing in myself.
And I want you as a class to do the same thing. Like, I know you get excited about your art when you're completed, but go ahead and, you know, take some time. Once you're ready to just send it out, do one more review and just make sure you didn't leave out any details. Now, I'm not saying go glob a bunch of paint on a masterpiece that you already finished.
I'm just saying go look and make sure you, you know, made the fingernails and put an extra little sprinkle on your ice cream, something like that. I'm not talking about glob and paint and, you know, creating a whole new drawing within a drawing, within a drawing, within a drawing. No, you don't need to do that.
Just take it simple, okay? Alright class, I hope you enjoyed the lesson today. Keep following us, invite your friends, families, friends, and enemies. Everyone's welcome in our art class. You know, starving artists, rich gallery owners, all the artists, and all the Michelangelo and Leonardo's. And, you know, the Van Gogh's. You know, we're all welcome in this class.
I got high level stuff. Come in. Epic. You don't get epic art lessons in a college, a university, high school, elementary school, or middle school. Well, maybe middle school. You might have some epic stuff, but you kind of got to get underground to Stinky's Art Class.
You know, we're a small group, but the words out on Stinky's Art Class and people are flocking to it. Okay, class dismissed. Have a great day, bye.