Soglow’s first New Yorker cartoon was published nine months into the magazine’s existence, and his increasingly spare ...
Arms are easy to draw when broken into parts. Draw straight or slightly bent lines from the shoulders downward. Split each arm into upper arm and forearm sections. Keep the arms relaxed and hanging ...
Dick Van Dyke once ‘pissed’ off longtime friend Mary Tyler Moore. Speaking at Vandy High Tea, hosted at the Van Dyke ...
Bored Panda on MSN
Artist Takes Pictures Strangers Send Him And Creates Cartoon Characters (30 New Pics)
Robert DeJesus is back on Bored Panda with more of his amazing drawings. Robert is known for his series where he recreates ...
A Venezuelan newspaper took aim at the American president as tensions continue to simmer between the two nations.
From 1940 to the mid-1970s and again in the 1980s and 1990s, the Milwaukee Journal published a hunting cartoon before the Wisconsin gun deer season in November. The cartoons were drawn by staff ...
When Nick Watkins was a child, he pasted articles about space exploration into scrapbooks and drew annotated diagrams of rockets. He knew this because, years later, he still had the scrapbooks, and ...
Updates on political cartoonist Clay Jones and Dick Tracy writer Mike Curtis, remembering Jules Feiffer and the WWII life of Charles Schulz, cartoonist Paul Dorin on gag cartoon clichés and comix ...
We break down the only 5 pens you'll actually need to take an idea from your head to the page—from the workhorse fineliner to the problem-solving white gel pen. It’s time to stop collecting and start ...
Hello there, anybody out there? A little bit about me! I was born in Portsmouth, stand a proud 6 feet tall, and could be described as portly, grey, and somewhat “vintage.” I’ve been doodling for as ...
Hosted on MSN
Draw Yourself
In this heartwarming and hilarious art challenge montage, the ZHC Fam was asked one simple question: "Can you draw yourself?" From ultra-detailed portraits to wild cartoon versions, this video ...
A growing body of research suggests that people are drawn into conspiracy theories not because they are gullible or irrational, but because of a powerful social force: community. A new five-year ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results