Art & Photography
Picking up a brush, a pencil, or a camera is mostly about getting started without buying a thousand dollars of stuff you don't need yet. These guides cover the supplies a beginner painter, drawer, or photographer actually uses on day one — and the upgrades worth saving for once you know what kind of work you want to make.
17 guides in this family
Card Magic & Close-Up Magic
Card and coin magic is one of the most rewarding skills you can learn — and one of the most underserved by beginner guides. You need almost nothing to get started, but what you buy and what you learn first matter enormously. Here's exactly what to buy, what to practice, and what to ignore.
Read the Card Magic & Close-Up Magic guide →Photo by Joseph Two on Unsplash
Scrapbooking
Scrapbooking has a dedicated ecosystem of gear — and most of it you don't need to start. An album, some cardstock, a trimmer, and a pack of embellishments will get you making real pages this weekend. The craft store will try to sell you a cart full of tools. Here's what actually matters, and what can wait until you've filled your first few spreads.
Read the Scrapbooking guide →Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
Macro Photography
There's a whole world smaller than your thumbnail that most people never see. Macro photography brings it into focus — dew drops on spiderwebs, the texture of a bee's wing, the geometry of a flower's center. The gear is specialized, the technique is patient, and the results are unlike anything else photography can produce.
Read the Macro Photography guide →Photo by Jamie Street on Unsplash
Diamond Painting
Diamond painting is part craft, part puzzle, part meditation — and one of the most satisfying hobbies you can start for under $30. You press tiny resin diamonds onto a color-coded adhesive canvas until a full mosaic comes together. No artistic skill required. Just a clear table, decent lighting, and a few free hours. Here's everything you actually need — and what you can skip.
Read the Diamond Painting guide →Photo by Mihai Lazăr on Unsplash
Pastel Drawing
Pastels are one of the most immediately satisfying art mediums — vivid color on your first stroke, no drying time, no brush-cleaning. The learning curve is real but gentle, and you can make something genuinely beautiful in your first session. Here's exactly what you need to start.
Read the Pastel Drawing guide →Photo by Nur demirbaş on Unsplash
Gouache Painting
Gouache is the paint TikTok's art community can't stop talking about — opaque and matte like acrylic, workable like watercolor, and forgiving of mistakes. Before you spend anything, there's one decision to make: traditional or acrylic gouache. Here's exactly what you need to start.
Read the Gouache Painting guide →Photo by orva studio on Unsplash
Linocut Printmaking
Linocut printmaking gives you a working print studio for under $50. You carve an image into a soft block, roll ink across it, and press it onto paper. The process is meditative, the results are immediately satisfying, and the learning curve is gentler than it looks — if you start with the right block and gouge set.
Read the Linocut Printmaking guide →Photo by Charlies X on Unsplash
Stained Glass
Stained glass is one of those crafts that looks museum-serious until you try it. Then you realize the fundamental moves — score, snap, foil, solder — are learnable in a weekend. Here's what you actually need to start the Tiffany (copper foil) method, and why the gear decisions that trip up most beginners are simpler than the forums make them seem.
Read the Stained Glass guide →Photo by Jakub Żerdzicki on Unsplash
Drone Flying
Camera drones went from Hollywood to your backpack in five years. The good news: DJI cracked beginner-friendly years ago, and the right setup costs less than you think. The confusing part: FAA registration, airspace rules, camera versus FPV — there's real terminology between you and your first flight. Here's how to cut through it.
Read the Drone Flying guide →Photo by Rob Wingate on Unsplash
Digital Art
The tablet aisle is a minefield — display or non-display, Wacom or XP-Pen, iPad or computer. Before you spend a dollar, here's what actually matters for beginners and a clear path to a setup that'll carry you through your first year.
Read the Digital Art guide →Photo by Asfand Effandi on Unsplash
Hand Lettering
Hand lettering is one of the cheapest creative hobbies around. A $20 set of brush pens and a ream of smooth paper is all you need. The learning curve is satisfying — you'll have something worth sharing within your first week. Here's what to buy and what to skip.
Read the Hand Lettering guide →Photo by Kit (formerly ConvertKit) on Unsplash
Calligraphy
Modern calligraphy is one of the most rewarding slow hobbies you can start — the learning curve is real but shorter than it looks. Within a month of consistent practice, your letters will look like actual calligraphy. Here's exactly what you need to get there, and what you can skip entirely.
Read the Calligraphy guide →Photo by Kit (formerly ConvertKit) on Unsplash
Oil Painting
Oil painting has a five-hundred-year track record for a reason: the paint is blendable, forgiving, and produces depth no other medium can match. The learning curve is real — solvents, drying times, fat-over-lean rules — but none of it is complicated. Here's what to buy first and what to ignore.
Read the Oil Painting guide →Photo by Subhkaran Singh on Unsplash
Acrylic Painting
Acrylics are the smartest medium to start with — they dry fast, clean up with water, and work on almost any surface. The learning curve is gentler than oils, the gear is simpler than watercolor, and a solid starter kit costs under $80. Here's what actually matters.
Read the Acrylic Painting guide →Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
Watercolor Painting
Watercolor is famously 'difficult' in ways that dissolve once you understand what the medium is actually doing. Water does most of the work — your job is to learn to guide it rather than fight it. The barrier to a beautiful first painting is lower than you think; the barrier to reliable control is higher. Here's how to set yourself up correctly from the start.
Read the Watercolor Painting guide →Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash
Pencil Drawing
Drawing with pencil is the foundation every other visual art builds on. The barrier to starting is almost nothing — a pencil set, a sketchbook, and the willingness to put down bad sketches until the good ones start appearing. What separates beginners who improve from those who stall is daily practice with the right materials. Here's what you need.
Read the Pencil Drawing guide →Photo by Jill Dimond on Unsplash
Art & Photography glossary
Words you'll see in tutorials, on lens boxes, and in the comments of every drawing subreddit. Most of these are simpler than they sound.
- Aperture Photography
- The adjustable opening in the lens that controls how much light reaches the sensor. f/2.8 is wide open (more light, shallower depth of field); f/16 is small (less light, more in focus).
- Bokeh Photography
- The quality of the out-of-focus background. Smooth, creamy bokeh is what makes a portrait pop off the screen. Cheap lenses produce harsh, busy bokeh.
- Composition
- How elements are arranged inside the frame. Rule of thirds, leading lines, negative space — frameworks to lean on until you can break them on purpose.
- Exposure triangle Photography
- Aperture, shutter speed, and ISO — the three settings that together determine brightness. Change one and you compensate with another.
- Gesso Painting
- White primer for canvas or board. It seals the surface so paint adheres properly and colors stay true. Pre-gessoed canvases skip the step but cost more.
- Glazing Painting
- Applying a thin translucent layer of paint over a dry one. Builds depth and luminosity. The reason old masters' paintings glow.
- Hatching Drawing
- Parallel lines used for shading. Cross-hatching overlaps multiple directions for darker tones. The pencil/pen artist's bread and butter.
- ISO Photography
- Sensor sensitivity to light. Low ISO (100) = clean image, needs more light. High ISO (3200+) = brighter in dim conditions but adds noise/grain.
- Palette knife Painting
- Flat blade used to mix paints on the palette and apply paint to the canvas in bold textured strokes. A different feel and finish from brushwork.
- Shutter speed Photography
- How long the shutter stays open. 1/1000s freezes a bird in flight; 1/30s blurs anything moving. Slower speeds need a tripod or steady hands.
- Underpainting Painting
- A first monochromatic layer that establishes light/dark values before any color goes down. Makes the final painting feel anchored and three-dimensional.
- Value
- How light or dark a color is, ignoring hue. Get values right and bad color still reads; get values wrong and perfect color falls apart. The single biggest skill in painting and drawing.