Digital Art Classes

🎨 Live Digital Art Class #2 — Shapes, Design & Interactive Art Building on the Basics Welcome to our second live digital art class! This session builds on what we explored in Class #1 and introduces two powerful, beginner-friendly tools: Google Drawings and Scratch (scratch.mit.edu). This class is all about learning how digital art connects to design, storytelling, and simple interactivity — no prior experience required. In this live class, we’ll explore: 🟦 Creating art using shapes, lines, and color in Google Drawings 🎨 How designers think about layout, balance, and visual clarity 🧩 Turning drawings into simple interactive characters or scenes in Scratch 💻 How these free tools can be used for art, animation, and creative coding ✏️ A guided, hands-on demo you can follow along with in real time This class is perfect if you’re curious about digital art and how art can come to life through interaction and movement. 📍 Who this class is for: Beginners, students, educators, parents, and anyone interested in digital creativity, animation, or game-like storytelling. 🛠️ What you’ll need: A laptop or desktop (Chromebook friendly) A Google account Scratch account (free) Mouse or trackpad (stylus optional) No pressure, no grades — just experimenting, creating, and learning together.

🎨 Live Digital Art Class #1 — Beginner Friendly Your First Live Online Session Welcome to our first live digital art class online! This session is designed for beginners and curious creatives who want to learn the foundations of digital art in a supportive, low-pressure space. In this live class, we’ll cover: 🖌️ Basic digital drawing tools & workflows 🧠 How artists think in shapes, layers, and values 💻 Tips that work across Photoshop, Procreate, and free alternatives ✏️ A guided drawing demo you can follow along with in real time You don’t need to be “good at drawing” — just bring curiosity and a willingness to try. 📍 Who this class is for: Beginners, students, educators, and anyone interested in digital creativity. 🛠️ What you’ll need: A tablet, laptop, or desktop Any drawing software (paid or free) Optional stylus or mous