A Collection of Improving Exercises
A downloadable game
THIS LISTING IS FOR A PDF OF THE GAME (SEE BELOW). A PRINT COPY OF THE GAME IS AVAILABLE HERE.
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Also titled "A Continued Introduction to Perspective Drawing Techniques Suitable for Intertidal Scapes and Still Lives; the Workbook, Volume II in a Series" by Tim Hutchings, dated 1924.
Item description: The interior is printed in black and red ink. The handsome end pages are a red pattern with white dots. The book has ostentatious gilt page edges. The blue cloth hardcover has handsome designs in silver and gold foil on front, back, and spine.
From Goodreads: This book, copyrighted 1924, is part of a series of drawing manuals authored by Timothy Brian Hutchings. While a large number of this specific volume are known it is not known if the examples from the rest of the series are extant. It is possible that the other books in the series were never actually printed, or that the disposable nature of the books means that few survive.
While this book does contain cursory instructions regarding perspective drawing it is meant to be an adjunct to another book which is presumed lost. Nonetheless, the exercises in the book may prove useful to budding artists of all skill levels.
The book as a whole has twelve pages of instruction, twenty-eight pages with literary excerpts or weighty quotes from the author regarding the art and science of perspective drawing, around 6300 words, and roughly one hundred drawing exercises. Each exercise is isolated on its own page and it seems that the artist is expected to draw within the book. There are four pages with handsome illustrations, one of which repeats at the beginning and end of the book.
It is the opinion of this reviewer that any value in this book lies in the exercises. The conceit is that reader/artist is a romantic beachcomber and each exercise introduces a new item washed up by the sea. For example, Exercise 9 reads "A cluster of glass or cork fishing floats. Five minute time limit. The sun reflecting in the glass is blinding; the view through the glass, distorted."
All in all it is a curiosity of limited utility but is a novel read even if the exercises are skipped.
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So:
All the above is set dressing, of course. That's a fake Goodreads review. This is not actually an old book. It IS a handsome thing and I DID make it, but the Tim Hutchings mentioned in the book isn't the Tim Hutchings that is me. Not really.
Read the bold text below for a more precise explanation of what you are buying. If you are 100% committed to buying a new Tim Hutchings game without risking any spoilers DON'T read the bold text; just know that you are getting a handsome book with a weird game-like experience inside and trust to the fates.
The PDF built out of a photocopy of the book, so know it doesn't match the book exactly–it is a ratty old reproduction which resembles the generations old photocopy packets I'd get in college.
A more thorough explanation of what you are getting is in bold below. Spoilers!
I've been privy to the careful development of this utterly
crack-brained project and can assure you it is one of
the weirdest game-like objects you will ever encounter.
Highly recommended.
-Jason Morningstar
A sample of the PDF. It is not directly made from the book files but is instead a generations-old scan of the the print book itself.
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Spoiler-like things: This book is a diegetic trick. Of course it wasn't made in 1924. It was printed in 2023. And don't take the promotional copy above seriously–there's no Goodreads page for this book.
This is a game–of sorts. At least, it couldn't exist outside of the context of games. Like a book it can be enjoyed alone or with others, but there are no mechanical challenges that require other players. Dice are not needed. You can go through the book alone or with someone else; you can put the book down and resume it later. There are no tricks, do not cut up the spine looking for hidden clues.
This is, maybe, a perspective drawing manual. Some simple lessons are there; the shadow drawing lesson might be useful. If you are serious about perspective drawing I'd recommend you go and buy a 'how to draw in perspective for advertising' manual from the 1960s–it's how I learned and, dang, true perspective rendering is technically intense.
The fundamental activity in this game book is drawing. There are roughly one hundred drawing challenges that, generally, follow a formula of 'an item has washed up on the beach, draw it for us!' And that is it. There is more but I won't promise more.
You don't have to draw in the book, or draw at all. You can just read through it like you do with so many other game-books. It might have interesting things to say in that context as well. Interesting to me, at least.
I am very proud of this. It is a good thing, whatever it is. I wish I could find it in a used book store, put it on my own shelf for a decade, pull it down one day and discover it. I'd like to give that to you but, if you've read this far you've already forfeited that sort of experience. I applaud your caution and recommend you extend it to all parts of life.
Finally: My games are doing their own thing. This isn't a product designed to provide the most satisfying entertainment to the widest selection of people. Don't buy this expecting a definite game, or a clear experience. If you have the slightest doubt wait and hear what your trusted friends have to say. Seriously. I am an "artist" and this is art with all the capacity for shock, dissatisfaction, and risk that implies.
Status | Released |
Category | Physical game |
Rating | Rated 5.0 out of 5 stars (13 total ratings) |
Author | timhutchings |
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Comments
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This book came to my attention like an item crashing and leaving a mark on an otherwise solemn island. I loved it.
Hi! Got the physical at my FLGS and was wondering if I could get the pdf by any means?
What is your local store?
Well, not "mine", they dont have anything beyond d&d. got it on holidays in Copenhagen at Faraos Cigarer, about two weeks ago.
Thank you for sharing that. I didn't know that -anyone- was handling it at that level.
email me at dearleadergame@gmail.com
Got my physical copy and "played" it the whole way in one sitting despite not being an artist at all. If you can afford to get the physical book I'd highly recommend it, the paper is excellent for even heavy handed drawers and it's just so cool to have a completed game book to show others. I knew it was going to get dark but it went into a direction I really did not expect with that darkness.
It's also unironically very good inspiration for thinking about perspective.
You did the whole thing in one go! Wow!
The big twist for me is that last sentence of yours.
Charming until it's off-putting, cozy until it's ominous. I'm reminded of the old walking sim, Dear Esther. Gonna buy a physical copy and shuffle it into my local library's stacks. Anachronisms like little windows into a different universe. The gradual descent into stoic incoherence. Poetic, grim, delightful.
Was this created by a vampire 🧐?
I love such conceits and metafictional designs. It's so close to being perfectly of its time but that one anachronism stands out... (I'm sure you put it in intentionally) I also wish there were more of an implied narrative, but c'est la vie.
On the other hand, I can't say my perspective drawing skills will be improved much.
There are a goodly number of anachronistic bits and, even better, things that feel like they probably are anachronistic but you just can't be certain.
This was quite a thing. I read through all of it today and raised my eyebrows several times and felt more and more uncertain and uneasy. 13/10, no notes.
My goal is to get you to raise your eyebrows so high that someone has to wipe them off your back.
So I'll add this to actual GoodReads later this evening, and things will get really complicated.
<nervous laughter>
Having to think how to add the book and in what way, already felt like me playing a game.. in the end I've added it as a 'real' book, and slightly edited the fake GR review to function as the description. I would've added it under the full name of Timothy Brian Hutchings, as it fits the book perfectly, but it also still has to be kind of searchable, so Tim Hutchings it is.
Anyway, here it is:
A Series of Improving Exercises or A Continued Introduction to Perspective Drawing Techniques Suitable for Intertidal Scapes and Still Lives; the Workbook, Volume II in a Series
Lets hope this doesn't get me fired into the heart of the sun, so to speak.
On a sidenote - before adding your book, doing a perfunctory search on the title 'A Series of Improving Exercises' got me one (1) result, and the title just fits in incredibly well:
The Fascinating Scent Tracking Workbook: A Series of Fun Exercises To Improve Your Dog’s Confidence and Your Handling by Susan H Eldred
You monster!
(One of my name dopplegangers wrote a book on boxer dogs and we are all lumped under the same author name on Goodreads.)
I'm especially interested in your 2012 work Creating Church Online: Ritual, Community and New Media
What I love about your work, is that anything is possible, and any title could be yours..!
The other professor me even presented at a game conference once, I think.
this is very interesting - I’m going to surprise my daughter (who is an artist) with it!
Let me know how that goes.
This is the kind of thing worth sneaking onto a library bookshelf, I love it.
If I had my way that would be the only way it is distributed.