Mixed Media, All Up to You

The Creative Playbook: 365 Activities to Supercharge Your Imagination – written and illustrated by Georgia Perry
Hardie Grant Books, 2026


I have many art books, drawing and painting guides, illustrated journals, and meditations on how to create (and I have reviewed some here and here and here and here).  Georgia Perry’s illustrated drawing book and journal with prompts is one of the best I have seen. Everyone’s priorities for this interactive genre may be quite different. The Creative Playbook is not a slim pocket volume to tuck into your cross-body bag. I have several of those and I use them all the time. But this is a 352- page hardcover with wonderful graphics and a design which is both gorgeous and practical.  There are images of blank pages, and cloud shapes meant to enclose the thoughts that you brainstorm. Fill-in-the-blanks are not juvenile exercises, although the book is perfect for young adults, and older middle-grade readers, as well as the grownups who are its intended audience.

Overall, the design is minimalist. There are suggestions, but plenty of blank space to experiment. The colors range from white and pastel to jewel and earth tones. Some exercises call for extended drawing and writing, while others, such as a photographed vending machine, invite a brief result. Swatches of color encourage you to think about matching them to your ideas, while other prompts are more fanciful. “If today had a texture, what would it feel like?: It does, and it might feel dramatically different at different encounters with that page. You will be asked to “open a book or magazine to a random page,” and rewrite a sentence to reverse its meaning. A request to open a book at random can never be a worthless idea! From the literary to the sensory, how about the plan to convert a memory into a fragrance? That would be inexhaustible.

If drawing, writing, painting, imagining, designing, fill you with joy, you need to get this book. At the end, there is an “about the author” and her dedication, “Thank you. To my parents, who encouraged creativity above all else.” Here is your chance to fulfill that role.

How To Draw a Strawberry

15 Minute Art Drawing: Learn How to Draw, Colour and Shade – written and illustrated by Jessica Smith
Hardie Grant Books, 2023

I have many books that teach aspiring artists how to draw, using different media.  Some are specifically designed for children, and others for adults.  Jessica Smith’s 15 Minute Art Drawing is beautifully adaptable for older children and young adults, even if those groups are not its exclusive audience.  Smith’s instructions are clear, her tone reassuring, and the illustrations’ simplicity and rich color are inspiring.  Creating images of a strawberry, a dalmatian, or a pattern of repeating stars are within reach of almost anyone.

Drawing can be frustrating, especially for children, or adults, who are concerned with making mistakes. If you have ever watched a child crumple up a piece of paper when results don’t match her expectations, you will appreciate the design of this book, where optimism and realism both guide the artist.  Two wonderful books for both children and adults that offer an overview of the artistic process are Elizabeth Haidle’s Drawing Is and Jeff Mack’s time To Make Art. For young children, the stories in Builder Mouse, by Sofia Eldarova, and Spaghetti: A Mouse and His Treasure, by Merrilees Brown, depict animal artists who are undaunted by obstacles.

The composition of Smith’s book, including the ratio of image to white space, is perfect. “Project 2: Citrus” starts with a freely sketched oval of color in primary and pastels, and moves toward a finished fruit.  Pens, markers, and pencils can all be part of the project; Smith offers specific suggestions, but oil pastels and watercolor would also work. Often she writes in the first person, advising, but not directing: “I used a blue pen here to add the shadow and I love how you can still see the color of the orange through it.” I love how she phrases that, expressing emotions about how rewarding it is to draw.

“Project 11: Leaves” could not be better for the artistically timid: “This simple project is nice and speedy, and uses only three steps!” Yet the resulting drawings look sophisticated and evocative. I can’t emphasize enough how difficult that is to achieve in an instructional art book.  Smith goal seems to be a genuine desire to enlist the reader’s enthusiasm. She manages to combine a sense of humility and enthusiasm about the results of her work, and, by extension, that of her readers.  Some of the other projects include a bowl of noodles, a house, a mermaid, and a woman dressed in “busy patterns and popping colours” and holding a grid-patterned shopping bag.  There are even two-page spreads of drawings that take a step back from the instructions and simply focus on beauty. The color reproduction is excellent.

The sum of an art book may be greater or less than its parts.  15 Minute Art Drawing lays out a premise, verbally and visually, and guarantees success within its terms.  The book begins with an autobiographical sketch and includes an overview of tools, materials, and the use of color.