Home > Humor & Fun > Free Cartoony Drawing Lessons > How to Draw Fun Cartoon Fruity Cereal

Creative Slush by Chris Dunmire

ANTicipating Slushy Sweetness - Eating Creative Fun!

Home aMUSEum of Silly Pun Nit Wits Humor, Free Printables, Creativity Tips & Fun Tidbits!
 

Slush Cup

Home

About

Contact

RSS Feed RSS

Chris On the Web
Creativity Portal
Creative Slush
Coaching Your Creativity

Drawing Lessons

How to Draw Fruity Cartoony Cereal

Nit Wits #6: Silly Rabbit

In Nit Wits #6 ("The Irony of Tricks") I played around with drawing simple foods. In contrast to the organic-shaped carrot fresh from the garden is the round-shaped mold-made fruity cereal.

A fun thing you can try with this lesson is a see-through layered effect. In this case, I gave the illusion of a glass bowl by coloring it lightly (tint) to allow the objects behind it (the floating cereal) to be seen.

Learn how to draw your own bowl of cereal by following my cartoony drawing lesson below. Here's to hoping that Trix Rabbit gets that cereal sometime in the next decade!

Free Cartoony Lesson #2: How to Draw Fun 'n Fruity Cereal

 

You Can Draw Cartoony Things! A Creative Drawing Book for EveryoneNow wasn't that just the bees knees?
Wait — there's more! This sample fun cartoony lesson is published in my printable playbook, You Can Draw Cartoony Things! A Creative Drawing Book for Everyone. If you'd like to use my creativity-inspiring cartoony lessons for classroom projects or workshop exercises, please purchase and download the high-quality print-a-page e-book, which is dirt-cheap and formatted especially for printing and teaching purposes.
— Chris Dunmire, Author of You Can Draw Cartoony Things!

Share |
© 2005-2011 Chris Dunmire. All rights reserved.

HomeContactPublished Creative Work Nit WitsSimple Drawing Lessons
Humor & FunBlog ArchivesSite MapTerms of Use

Content published on this Web site is © copyright Chris Dunmire, www.chrisdunmire.com.
Duplicating any material from this Web site elsewhere online or in print without permission constitutes copyright infringement.
Brief fair-use commentary with links to pages on this site are welcome, encouraged, and appreciated.