Throughout the summer birding project, we have been encouraging new birders to try different ways to observe birds. Sketching is one way to deepen your observation skills.
We asked a master illustrator, David Sibley, to share tips on how to draw, and we invited readers to share their attempts. Below is a selection of what you sent us, along with insights into how it changed your birding experience.
Tell us in the comments: Have you tried sketching? Has it changed the way you observe birds?
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“Drawing birds has given me a new perspective on birdwatching, allowing me to slow down and appreciate their features through each brushstroke.”
Jia-En Ho, 21, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
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“When you are up close and personal, you see common details that lead to a better understanding of bird physiology, plus barn owls have the sweetest faces.”
Cassandra Myer, 70, Viera, Fla.
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“Drawing birds makes me look at them more closely and find all the details. It helps me like them even more.”
Josiah Haley, 9, Lock Haven, Pa.
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“I find observing birds changes how I draw them. Rather than attempt photorealism, I sketch as quickly as possible to capture the birdiness of my subject.”
Jared Nielsen, 44, Baltimore, Md.
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“This started as a drawing and became a collage which I’ve just completed. It’s a mockingbird, and some of the pieces of paper are piano sheet music.”
Margaret Dimon, 70, Naples, Fla.
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“Drawing birds has changed the way I observe them. I now see more details about their features that I would regularly ignore. I see how delicate their beaks and feathers are through drawing since these are typically translucent.”
Marisol Dominguez, 29, El Paso, Texas
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“My favorite color is brown, and I am very fond of birds that many people may overlook just due to their ‘boring’ coloration. I think that the different shades of brown that the ovenbird has, as well as its spots, are very beautiful.”
Mari Kamidoi, 20, Ann Arbor, Mich.
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“I’m inspired by the Western kingbird. They are also one of the earliest morning singers around, making these funny noises that sound as if a marching band conductor is warming up. While that might sound obnoxious to some, I find it to be comforting against the quiet desert morning.”
Ryan Spaulding, 38, Bishop, Calif.
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“During lockdown I heard a cooing outside my window every morning. An owl or a pigeon? It was the one sound that soothed me over the sirens. I often find the little visitor peeking in my window or hanging out on my fire escape.”
Paula Heaphy, 51, Brooklyn
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“I found this poor bird lying on the sidewalk in front of my house. She was quite dead but for no apparent reason. There was no sign of feline-induced trauma, and nothing appeared broken.”
Dean Cole, 66, Bloomfield, N.J.
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“I'm sending my drawing of a kingfisher (based on a photograph), which I drew a couple months ago for a class at the Art and Design High School in Manhattan.”
Isadora Davis, 17, Brooklyn, NY
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“I am absolutely passionate about birds. It is a pleasure to share some draws with the birding community.”
Roi Amaru García Ruiz, 10, Foz Bay, Lugo, Spain
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“I am sending you a sketch of a lesser spotted woodpecker (Dendrocopos minor) seen last winter in El Pardo, Madrid.”
Pablo Herráiz Carbonaro, 46, Madrid
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“My drawing with watercolor markers. A common visitor to my backyard, where they loudly caw each morning if I am late with the daily in-shell peanut allotment.”
Julie Frost, Rochester Hills, Mich.
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“Mr. Sibley is correct — after spending two hours trying to reproduce a picture of a Carolina wren, I realized I could close my eyes and picture every marking on that bird. Three days later, I was rewarded by seeing that bird at my feeder and immediately could identify it.”
Jaki Hurwitz, 71, Neavitt, Md.
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July 21, 2023 at 06:44PM
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How Sketching Birds Changes the Way You See Them - The New York Times
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