Drawing With Carl For Mac
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Simply the best drawing App for kids in the Appstore. 5 ***** and featured by Apple all over the world. Making beautiful drawings has never been so easy thanks to Carl.You can even play with talking stickers that repeat anything you say with a funny voice!
Enjoy many powerful and easy to use tools that helps you make great drawings.Create your own set with Talking Carl and draw Talking Monsters!Explore creative drawing with Mirror painting.Easily share your drawings and vote for the best ones.
Write your name with sticker letters.Draw mustaches or funny eyes on your friends pictures.Add stickers of Carl and his friends.Share your creations on FaceBook or by email.Save to the photo Album.
Drawing with Carl is a fun drawing app for kids. With so many drawing apps out there on app store, this one still stands out as a good one worth checking out. I like the simple interface, many drawing tool options, especially the mirror drawing and pattern drawing.
The first surprise for me of the app is the capability to choose color from the color wheel yourself. Some drawing app for adults allow users to customize the colors this way, but in kids app, I have not seen many apps letting kids pick color from a color wheel that you can move around on the wheel to pick the brightness and shades. It gives kids a lot freedom when create their drawings. It is also a good tool to help kids under the different colors and color attributes.
Anther neat painting feature is to paint with stickers of pre-made shapes, like snow flakes, circles, stars. Kids can choose any of them, and when they touch the screen, say draw a circle, kids will see the stickers lined up in the shape they drew.
The last drawing feature I have to mention is the ability to import pictures, crop the pictures into the shape and size you like, and draw and write on top of the picture. I am thinking holiday greeting cards when I see it.
Now besides all the neat drawing features, I love the mirror drawing option. If kids draw on one side of the screen, they will see symmetrical drawings on the other side appear on the screen simultaneously. It is a great feature for kids to learn the concept of symmetry.
This innovative app is actually an adventure game in which kids use their drawing skills to get out of trouble. By using an apple pencil or a finger, kids navigate their way through multiple levels as they create their own action-packed story. The end result is an immersive experience that sparks imagination while putting drawing skills to the test.
Doodle Buddy gives kids the option to doodle on their own photos or over one of the many different ready-made backgrounds and then share their work with friends to connect over art. The app also includes over 1,400 stamps so budding artists can further decorate their designs, plus a smudge tool that allows kids to experiment with a tried-and-true sketching technique without getting their hands dirty.
This interactive drawing app features progressive, step-by-step lessons that walk kids through the process of sketching a variety of different characters with the help of dotted outlines. Of course, kids who are more interested in freestyling can always just switch into sketchpad mode and have at it.
With the long summer holiday here for many countries, you can almost hear the collective sigh as kids and parents leave busy schedules behind. Hopefully, children will continue reading for pleasure, but without a doubt, they'll also be looking to participate in screen-based activity. If you're looking for ways to involve your kids in something creative with a screen, check out the drawing apps below. I've tried many apps that encourage kids to draw, but these are my favorites.
Drawing with Carl (iOS app) is great for younger kids. As well as easy-to-use tools kids can draw, paint and color with, it has special features they will love: a pattern paint bucket, mirror painting, and "talking" stickers. I also like that Drawing with Carl allows us to draw over one of our own images.
Paper by 53 (iOS app) is now free and works across all ages. With it, you can use your finger or a stylus to draw with the tools: Sketch, Write, Draw, Outline, and Color. In the palette, there are empty spaces for saving special colors, and a large color-mixing well. Recent additions are Diagram Fill and Cut, tools that offer even more versatility. What I love about this app is that it works smoothly, has an undo function and an eraser, and provides as many digital drawing notebooks and as many pages as you want. Kids might try a drawing a day and be able to look back with pride at their progress. They can also use Paper simply as a way to brainstorm and quickly sketch out ideas.
Scribblify (iOS and Android app) has a huge range of brushes, backgrounds and colors that encourage kids to play with color, lines and symmetry. The Scribblify website explains the app well, but kids can pretty much start drawing with it instantly. The bright colors and patterns will appeal to youngsters. It's free but you can pay for more tools in a Premium version.
Sketches (iOS app) is elegant and a good tool for older kids. It has no stamps or distractions, so it helps them concentrate on drawing. They can import photos into it, and also watercolor a drawing. There's a free and a Pro version, and the free version generously allows users to try most features.
Drawing is a wonderful activity to follow up a visit to the museum, park or zoo over the summer. Not only are kids able to consolidate great memories, but they can use drawings to explain what they learned. It also involves creative thinking as they make choices about lines, colors and shapes. Because tablets are portable, children will have a fast, no-mess activity at their fingertips wherever your summer takes you!
A century ago, in 1915, much of Europe was engaged in one of the greatest and most senseless slaughters in recorded history. Poison gas had been used in the Second Battle of Ypres, and the trenches were filling with corpses. Around half a million troops died on the Gallipoli Peninsula in Turkey.
Carl Larsson was born in humble and poor circumstances in Stockholm. He showed early drawing skills, and gained a place at the Royal Swedish Academy of Arts, where he flourished, earning a medal in life drawing. He worked as a caricaturist for a newspaper and a graphic artist for another, and was able to support his parents financially. He also illustrated books and magazines.
The family moved back to Sweden in 1885, where from 1888 they lived in Sundborn, Dalarna (where his house is a museum during the summer). His illustrated book A Home became popular when it was published in Sweden in 1899, and he met even greater success with The House in the Sun (1909), published in Germany.
The last, and what he intended to be his greatest, mural is drawn from the mythical sagas of the Icelandic writer Snorri Sturluson, with additional material from Adam of Bremen. Larsson wanted it to form a contrast with the other murals which he had already painted.
Larsson refused to accept the changes, and resigned from the task in 1914. However, later that year he resumed work, completing a life study for the figure of the king, and preparing another study. Debate continued in the newspapers, and involved government ministers. More recently it has been proposed that the underlying problem with the painting was that it failed to meet the modernist ideals of Sweden in the early twentieth century.
Larsson did see value in learning to paint en plein air, as shown in this oil sketch of a Landscape Study from Barbizon (1878). He visited this area with Hjalmar Sandberg, his close friend who was a pure landscape painter. The two supported one another, and often painted side by side.
Although Larsson never really embraced Impressionism, several of his works show clear Impressionist influence. In his watercolour The Bridge in Grez, Medieval (1885), he uses a combination of high chroma colours applied with generally loose brushwork. Coupled with the much more contemporary fashions shown, it appears far more modern.
Logisim is an educational tool for designing and simulating digitallogic circuits. With its simple toolbar interface and simulation ofcircuits as you build them, it is simple enough to facilitate learningthe most basic concepts related to logic circuits. With the capacityto build larger circuits from smaller subcircuits, and to draw bundlesof wires with a single mouse drag, Logisim can be used (and is used)to design and simulate entire CPUs for educational purposes.
His cartoon style was a single topical highly detailed panel, usually with a great deal more going on than the single joke. Certain recurring characters achieved a great deal of popularity, particularly the extended Giles family, which first appeared in a published cartoon on 5 August 1945 and featured prominently in the strip.
Giles was born in Islington, London, the son of a tobacconist and a farmer's daughter. He was nicknamed "Karlo", later shortened to "Carl", by friends who decided he looked like Boris Karloff, a lifelong nickname. He was actually registered with that name when he died in 1995. After leaving school at the age of 14 he worked as an office boy for Superads,[1] an advertising agency that commissioned animated films from cartoonists like Brian White and Sid Griffiths' animation company also based in Charing Cross Road, London from 1929. When Superads closed in 1931,[2] he gained experience in other small film companies in the area before being promoted to an animator in 1935, beginning to work for producer Alexander Korda on a colour cartoon film, The Fox Hunt. Giles then went to Ipswich to join Roland Davies, who was setting up a studio to produce animated versions of his popular newspaper strip "Come On Steve". Six ten-minute films were produced, beginning with Steve Steps Out (1936), but even though Giles was the head animator, he received no screen credit. 2b1af7f3a8