It’s completely normal to feel a bit paralyzed when you first open a sketchbook. Most people think they need "talent" to start, but as Betty Edwards (author of Drawing on the Artist Within) teaches, sketching is actually a technical skill—just like reading or driving. If you can be taught the rules, you can do it. Here is the "no-nonsense" roadmap I recommend for every total newbie: 1. Stop Squeezing the Pen (The Grip) If you hold your pencil like you’re writing a grocery list, your sketch will look stiff and scratchy. - The Tip: Move your hand to the middle or end of the pencil. This forces you to use your elbow and shoulder, giving you those long, confident "urban" lines. - Classroom Action: Head to our "Warm-Up" lesson. It will show you how to "unlock" your arm so you aren't just drawing with your fingers. 2. Don’t Just Draw "Freely"—Build the DNA "Drawing freely" often leads to frustration because your hand can’t yet produce what your eye sees. Instead, look for the "Y" Shape. - The Tip: Almost every building in the world can be simplified into two blocks. If you can draw a vertical line and two angled lines at the bottom (forming a "Y"), you’ve created your first 3D corner. - Classroom Action: Check out the "Timber Blocks" module. It’s the foundation for everything we do. 3. Focus on "Sighting" (Your First Superpower) Before you worry about shading or detail, you must learn to measure. This takes the guesswork out of art. - The Tip: Hold your pencil at arm’s length with a locked elbow. Use your thumb to "lock in" the width of an object (your 1.0 unit), then compare that to its height. - Classroom Action: Watch "The Pencil as a Ruler." Once you know a building is exactly 1.7 times taller than it is wide, the panic stops and the "calculating" begins. Why We Do This One of the big differences between taking a photograph and creating a sketch is time. A photo takes a split second, but a sketch is "slow medicine." By looking carefully at the details and proportions, you will remember the scene long after you’ve forgotten where you took a photo.