Tuesday, August 12, 2025

Why I Start Beginning Art with Linear Perspective

After all the beginning-of-the-year routines, seating charts, and basic art vocabulary lessons, I like to dive right into linear perspective with my Beginning Art students.

Why? Because it’s a powerful way to demystify drawing. Many students walk into art class thinking drawing is some magical talent you’re either born with or not. But with perspective, I can show them a few simple techniques that immediately improve their work, and that early success builds confidence and buy-in.

We start with 1-point perspective, where students learn about the horizon line, vanishing point, and converging lines. Projects like a cityscape or interior scene give them room to experiment while reinforcing these foundational skills.

Then we move into 2-point perspective, where they see how shifting to two vanishing points creates more dynamic compositions. They often feel like “real” artists after mastering this step.


Once they've built the structure, we take it further with shading. Students apply graphite or colored pencil to add light, shadow, and depth, making their drawings look realistic and three-dimensional.

If you want ready-to-use lessons for your own classroom, I’ve put together:

These resources include step-by-step instructions, videos, and rubrics so you can focus on teaching and giving feedback instead of reinventing the wheel.

Teaching perspective isn’t just about lines and vanishing points. It’s about giving students a tool they can use again and again to make their drawings stronger. I’ll be honest, I struggled with teaching perspective for years. Students work at such different paces, and the range of ability is wide;  some are ready to build complex architectural scenes, while others are still learning how to use a ruler as a straight edge.

Over time, I found ways to break it down so every student can experience success, no matter where they start. When they realize they can create believable space and depth with just a few steps, you can see their confidence grow and they start to buy in to the idea that you might actually be able to teach them how to draw.

Whether you’re introducing perspective for the first time or refining your students’ skills, these lessons are designed to make the process clear, approachable, and fun for both you and your students.

Monday, August 04, 2025

Sale on Teachers Pay Teachers! August 5 & 6

 ðŸŽ‰ TPT Sitewide Sale — August 5 & 6! 🎉

Save up to 25% off ALL my resources during the Back-to-School Sale!

I'm offering 20% off everything in my store and TPT is adding an extra 5% off at checkout when you use code: BTS25

Looking to start the school year strong? Here are some favorites to check out:

Welcome to Beginning Art BundleEverything you need for the first few days: syllabus, survey, parent brochure, newsletter, and a creative kickoff assignment.



Unit 1: Introduction to Art: A complete bundle with vocabulary slides, an Edpuzzle on Lowenfeld’s stages, a fun mixed media project, and more! Perfect for the second day of school.


Unit 2: Elements of Art & Principles of DesignScaffolded lessons, practice activities, and engaging visual resources to help students build foundational art vocabulary and visual literacy. A must-have for your early units!


AP® Art & Design Complete Course Guide - Planning for advanced students? My full AP resource pack includes case studies, editable assignments, and a full Canvas course!


Art Room Newsletter & Open House Brochure Templates: Build strong communication from the start with templates designed to save you time while looking professional.


✨ Whether you’re organizing your first week or diving into a year-long course, now is the perfect time to stock up and save!

🛒 Visit my store here: teacherspayteachers.com/store/windy-lampson
📆 Sale ends August 6 at midnight!
💸 Use promo code: BTS25 at checkout