A workbook by Polina Bright

Look at any bird and know how to begin.

By the end of this book, the bird on your paper will match the bird in your head. Not because you practiced more. Because you learned to see what was always there.

Get Drawing Birds · $39

You already know what the bird should look like. You can see it.

But somewhere between your eye and your hand, it falls apart. The proportions drift. The pose goes stiff. You spend an hour and the result looks like a bird, technically, but not the bird you saw.

That frustration has nothing to do with talent or practice hours.

It's a seeing problem. You're drawing the surface of a bird without knowing what's underneath it.

There's a structure inside every bird. Once you see it, the proportions make sense. The pose holds together. You stop second-guessing every line. You look at a bird and you know exactly where to start.

Drawing Birds shows you that structure. Every chapter builds on the last. By the end, you don't need the book anymore. You just see differently.

What changes after this book

You'll pick up a pencil, look at a bird, and know exactly where your first line goes. Not because you memorized steps. Because the structure is visible to you now.

01

You see the bird before you draw it

Every bird reduces to three shapes and one line. Once you know what to look for, the form appears before your pencil touches the page.

02

Proportions stop being a problem

Head too big? Body too long? Those mistakes come from drawing without structure. The book gives you a way to get proportions right from the start, every time.

03

New birds stop being intimidating

Rounded body, extended body, head-dominant, long-tailed. Once you understand how body types work, every new bird is a variation on something you already know.

04

You draw with confidence, not guesswork

7+ guided studies walk you through complete birds from first construction lines to finished drawing. Then the book gives you practice exercises to do it on your own.

What the book covers

Each chapter builds on the last. You start with the simplest foundation and end with complete birds you drew yourself.

Structure and foundation · three shapes, one line, and suddenly the bird appears on the page
Shape variations · why two birds with different builds start differently, and how to see that instantly
Angles and balance · what makes a pose feel alive instead of stiff
Head, beak, and eye placement · the details that make your bird recognizable
Wings and feather flow · how wings fold, layer, and connect to the body
Tail construction · shapes, types, and how they complete the bird
7+ guided studies · complete birds from first line to finished drawing, covering different views and body types
Independent practice · exercises to do on your own, so the method becomes yours

What changes

Right now

You start drawing and immediately feel lost
The bird in your head never matches the bird on paper
Wings look flat. Poses feel stiff. Something's always off.
You avoid birds you haven't drawn before
Hours of work, and you still can't say what went wrong

After this book

You look at a bird and know exactly where to begin
Your drawings look like the bird you intended
Wings sit naturally. Poses feel alive. Proportions just work.
A new bird is a new variation, not a new problem
You draw with confidence, and you can see yourself improving

What people are saying

"Really good book. Just enough of good and useful information for the beginning of the journey. Everything is explained clearly and well. Love those pages for practices. Thank you Polina for creating this for us."

Yevheniya K

"It has helped me to look at birds in a different way creatively and Polina's birds are gorgeous! So happy I purchased this to improve one of my favourite subjects to draw and paint!"

Liana M

Polina Bright

About Polina Bright

Polina is a professional watercolor artist whose bird and botanical work is known for its precision and detail.

Drawing Birds is the method she uses in her own work, structured as a workbook so anyone can follow it. The same way she sees a bird before she draws it is what this book teaches you to do.

As she writes in the book: "You do not need talent to follow this process. You need a pencil and willingness to practice. Each page builds on the one before it, and by the end you will be able to look at any bird and know how to begin."

Get Drawing Birds
$39

Early-bird pricing · the price increases when the current run sells out.

The complete Drawing Birds digital workbook: no filler, every page builds on the one before it
The full structural method, from first shapes to a complete bird drawing
7+ guided studies covering different views and body types
Printable practice pages you can draw on directly
Independent exercises so the method becomes yours
A curated selection from Ink Birds, original ink art for desktop and mobile
Instant digital delivery
Get Drawing Birds · $39

Common questions

Is this for beginners or experienced artists?

Both. If you're a beginner, the book gives you a clear starting point so you're never staring at a blank page. If you're experienced but your birds never quite look right, this gives you the structural foundation that makes everything else click.

I already have the free Practice Pack. How is this different?

The Practice Pack is a sample. It introduces the approach with a few exercises. The book is the complete method: structure and foundation, shape variations across body types, head and beak construction, wing and tail anatomy, 7+ guided studies, and independent practice. The Practice Pack shows you the idea. The book makes it yours.

Is this a physical book or digital?

Drawing Birds is a digital PDF workbook. You get instant access after purchase. The practice pages are designed to be printed so you can draw on them directly.

Will the price go up?

Yes. The current $39 is early-bird pricing. When the current run sells out, the price increases permanently. No discount codes, no sales.

What if I'm not sure it's for me?

The book starts at the very foundation - three shapes and one line. If you've never drawn birds before, you have a clear place to begin. If you have, but the results never quite matched what you saw, you'll see exactly what was missing. The 'maybe this isn't for me' feeling usually disappears in the first ten pages.

Can I use this for watercolor, ink, or digital?

Yes. The method is about seeing structure, not about a specific medium. The exercises use line drawing, so the principles apply whether you work in pencil, ink, watercolor, or on a tablet.

The next bird you draw will be different.

Not because you tried harder. Because you learned to see what was always there.

Get Drawing Birds · $39