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Stefanie Lechthaler
Product test

Terrible at drawing? Nonsense! This book will show you how it’s done

Stefanie Lechthaler
23/6/2025
Translation: Jessica Johnson-Ferguson

From rough sketches to smaller concept visualisations: Sketchnote Journal will help you along the way with helpful tricks and simple exercises. Time to hit those pens – no excuses!

There’s always that one child in art class at school. The one who’ll be staring at a blank piece of paper, arms crossed witha frown, making it very clear to the teacher: I can’t and won’t draw.

If you can relate to that kid, this is your chance. No need to run and hide, quite the opposite, in fact. Trust me, it’s a sign. Go and fetch that dusty sketchbook and check if your felt-tip pens are still working.

Not just for beginners or the inartistic

The book is aimed at shy drawing novices and anyone wanting to emphasise written content with easy-to-understand, personal drawings.

Finger warm-up

After the introduction, the book continues with warm-up exercises. Manic scribbling and repetitive shapes get me in the flow and limber up my rusty fingers. The exercises should also help me shake my tendency for perfectionism. It works well, I guess I should do it more often.

Practising ad nauseam

Once my fingers have got into the groove, the journal introduces me to the basics of symbols. Broken down into individual grey parts, I learn how to build the icons step by step until they’re complete. Just like how I learned to write.

Spanning almost fifty pages, there are exercises on various symbols. The aim? To put together a collection of icons that’ll come in handy in everyday life. The journal recommends you create an «icon library» to fall back on.

After just a few repetitions, drawing the icons becomes easier. But what it’s really about is understanding the drawing style and then finding your own. So I put the template aside, look around my chaotic desk and let a few objects inspire me. And lo and behold, the key isn’t to draw them as realistically or three-dimensional as possible, but to trace them back to the basic shapes featured in the visual ABC.

A few pages in, it’s time to transform everyday objects into symbols. Oops, looks like I got one step ahead of the book.

Emotional people and objects

The part I found the most fascinating was the bit that tells you how to draw emotions to make your sketches come to life. Once you’ve got that down, two eyes and a mouth will turn a drawing of our planet into a weeping earth. And if you add four strokes for arms and legs, you’ll have that same earth jumping for joy or crossing her arms in anger.

The same chapter covers how to breathe so much life into stick figures they’ll resemble real people. This inspires me to draw the wonderful team I work with.

Letters and layout

To really set the scene for your illustrations, the book concludes with the basics of hand lettering. It provides templates to decorate posters and presentations with expressive titles. The journal also briefly discusses methods for arranging and structuring a presentation and gives you various examples. This is the moment when everything you’ve learned comes together and you’re asked to give it a go.

My first attempt is a flop. The pages look overloaded, too bright, confusing and not how I imagined them. But instead of giving up in frustration, I go back a few pages, read up on tips from previous chapters and have another go. The second attempt goes more smoothly. Not perfect, but definitely progress.

And that’s exactly what this journal’s about: keeping at it, trying out new things and improving and learning along the way. My third attempt is a success and I’m happy with the layout. I’m ready to design the whiteboard for our next team-building workshop.

In a nutshell

An easy introduction to sketching

The Sketchnote Journal is a great introduction for anyone who thinks they can’t draw. At the same time, it makes notes easier to understand and more appealing by adding small sketches. Apart from many practical exercises, the book also offers plenty of space for you to try things. Because of its cover, it’s quite hard to do the exercises on the first and last pages of the book. Nevertheless, this journal’s a great tool if you want to create and design your own presentations and templates.

Pro

  • Easy introduction
  • Many practical exercises
  • Easy to implement

Contra

  • Tricky to draw on the first and last pages
Header image: Stefanie Lechthaler

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Painting the walls just before handing over the flat? Making your own kimchi? Soldering a broken raclette oven? There's nothing you can't do yourself. Well, perhaps sometimes, but I'll definitely give it a try.


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