Doggie Doodle Diary

doggie doodle diary

If you’re a Kid Can Doodle Doodle Club member, you would have received our exclusive Doggie Doodle Diary. If you hadn’t signed up, here’s an excerpt of the download for you.

Kid can doodle doggie doodle diary excerpt

Doggie Doodle Diary preview

 

Meet Otis, our artist behind the Doggie Doodle Diary. Otis likes to doodle using a method called “continuous contour line drawing.” It means that you don’t lift your pen or pencil until your drawing is done. Sometimes it looks a bit scribbly, because you may go back and forth or around your drawing in order to get all the details in. We dare you to try it!


Otis likes to keep a diary and he draws in it everyday. In this excerpt, you can see what Otis drew on Monday. He invites you to draw too. Do you keep a doodle diary?

printer

Printing Tips

paper printing sides
1. The doodle download is A4 size. If you’re printing in the US, please make sure you select “fit within page dimensions” when printing on letter paper.

2. If your printer allows, select “print on both sides” of your piece of paper.

3. If you can’t print on both sides, you can place the pages together so that the printed sides face out. Glueing them together is optional. OR if you wish to save paper, simply print the second spread only, with the diary entry and drawing page.

Click here to download the doodle excerpt. Please note that by downloading Doggie Doodle Diary you agree to our Terms and Conditions.

Don’t forget to check out Things I Draw (Saw) Today doodle download, created during the lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

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February Art Club

jersey devil

February Art Club

It’s February! This month we’re joining in the February Art Club. It’s started by illustrators Grace Taylor and Lisa Koesterke, who have set a list of prompts for each day of the month.

Here’s the first few drawings we’ve posted so far. The prompt for February 1 was “cryptid,” which we learned is an animal that might be imaginary (or not). Examples include land animals (terrestrial) like Bigfoot, Yeti, Honey Island swamp monster, and the Mongolian death worm, to name a few; aquatic creatures such as the Loch Ness monster, Kraken, or giant anaconda; and less common winged creatures like the Jersey Devil, Mothman or Thunderbird.

February 2nd’s doodle prompt was herbs, so we drew a handful: basil, chives, parsley, dill, mint, and rosemary.

Here’s a friend from SPACE on day 3:

A drawing of a falcon and his friend on day 4…

This self portrait for day 5 is inspired by one of our favorite artists.

Hope you can join us on instagram and draw along with the February Art Club too! Post your doodles with the hashtag #februaryartclub and tag us #kidcandoodle so we can see your drawings! Happy Doodling!

loch ness monster

 

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