Anyone can learn to draw. It's not some magical talent a few people are born with. It's a skill you can train. We can help.

Drawabox is a set of free exercise-based lessons that focus on the fundamentals - the skills you'll need to make sense of all the other resources and tutorials out there. First we focus on the basic mechanics of mark making, and how to use your arm. By the end, we develop a strong understanding of form, 3D space and construction.

I won't lie to you - our approach is tough and involves a lot of hard work. It's also structured and gives you a clear path with concise explanations and assignments you can complete and submit for review.

You can read more about Drawabox and how it came about here.

Or you can join the community of thousands of beginners and professionals alike and get started.

Homework

Once you've completed a lesson, one of the best ways to refine your understanding of that material is to help others by critiquing their work. After having done thousands of critiques and having improved immensely over the last few years, I can attest to that myself.

  • 25 Wheel Challenge

    dargonfyl

    5:26 AM, Friday January 9th 2026
  • Lesson 5: Applying Construction to Animals

    thelollypop

    4:41 AM, Monday January 5th 2026
  • Lesson 4: Applying Construction to Insects and Arachnids

    amirstl

    2:34 AM, Saturday January 17th 2026
  • Lesson 7: Applying Construction to Vehicles

    QriousK

    4:17 PM, Thursday January 1st 2026
  • Lesson 2: Contour Lines, Texture and Construction

    Seanman

    8:19 PM, Friday January 16th 2026
  • Lesson 2: Contour Lines, Texture and Construction

    Asr

    7:34 PM, Friday January 16th 2026
  • Lesson 2: Contour Lines, Texture and Construction

    Titanheart

    5:42 PM, Friday January 16th 2026
  • Lesson 4: Applying Construction to Insects and Arachnids

    cranalate2

    1:34 PM, Friday January 16th 2026
  • Lesson 2: Contour Lines, Texture and Construction

    fromjpn

    12:39 PM, Wednesday January 14th 2026
  • Lesson 3: Applying Construction to Plants

    MORIF

    12:32 PM, Sunday January 11th 2026

Questions/Discussions

Take a moment to answer someone's question, or contribute to a discussion, if you have anything to offer.

  • Waiting on revision review 7th-17th

    Laxes

  • 250 box challenge - lines come out easier/better in one direction

    Nothingv

  • Shape and Form (Again)

    AgesLABS

  • Pangolin Implicit Texture

    Stulern

Sketchbooks

Along with Drawabox work, our community members also post other artwork to their sketchbooks.

  • DrawingDad11's Sketchbook: 2025 - personal

  • dargonfyl's Sketchbook: 50% work

  • Fluid_Draws05's Sketchbook: The Cat-Huggle Hoodie

  • Nessuno's Sketchbook: Waking Panko

  • Kingrhem's Sketchbook: Guts from Berserk

Below this point is mostly ads. Indie projects, and tool/course recommendations from us.
This section is reserved for low-cost advertising space for art related indie projects.
With how saturated the market is, it is tough for such projects to get eyes on their work.
By providing this section, we hope to help with that.
If you'd like to advertise here, you can do so through comicad.net
The recommendation below is an advertisement. Most of the links here are part of Amazon's affiliate program (unless otherwise stated), which helps support this website. It's also more than that - it's a hand-picked recommendation of something we've used ourselves, or know to be of impeccable quality. If you're interested, here is a full list.
Michael Hampton's Gesture Course

Michael Hampton's Gesture Course

Michael Hampton is one of my favourite figure drawing teachers, specifically because of how he approaches things from a basis of structure, which as you have probably noted from Drawabox, is a big priority for me. Gesture however is the opposite of structure however - they both exist at opposite ends of a spectrum, where structure promotes solidity and structure (and can on its own result in stiffness and rigidity), gesture focuses on motion and fluidity, which can result in things that are ephemeral, not quite feeling solid and stable.

With structure and spatial reasoning in his very bones, he still provides an excellent exploration of gesture, but in a visual language in something that we here appreciate greatly, and that's not something you can find everywhere.

We use cookies in conjunction with Google Analytics to anonymously track how our website is used.

This data is not shared with any other parties or sold to anyone. They are also disabled until consent is provided by clicking the button below, and this consent can be revoked at any time by clicking the "Revoke Analytics Cookie Consent" link in our website footer.

You can read more about what we do with them, read our privacy policy.