That's what the Hood School in North Reading told my mother in 1977.
He can't do X, and Y, and Z, they said.
(I actually didn't want to do X, or Y, or Z. At one point
they insisted I learn how to skip -- which I insisted boys didn't do -- and so one night, thinking they were helping me, all my relatives were, to my horror, skipping across the living room at my grandmother's house.)
One complaint against me was that I didn't draw hands on my people.
That's because I drew my people with
their hands behind their back, so I could avoid drawing the clownish hands that all 5-year-olds drew.
I will concede, however, that I was no Rembrandt.
So if I were ever to produce something image-related, it would have to involve
selling public-domain art, created by someone else.
Now you can do that, and in fact lots of people do very well that way, but you can't just put public-domain art up as is, without modification. Sites like Etsy have very strict rules about that.
But there are simple ways of complying with those rules that can generate a fun little side business for you, and Amy Harrop has brand new, step-by-step training on how to do it.
I've known Amy for seven years, and she really is the expert when it comes to creating and selling printables like this, so you're learning from the
best.
Now you will probably not retire in Hawaii by doing this.
But you can make some sales, get your feet wet, learn about online selling, and have a skill to hand down to your kids, the older of whom will enjoy doing this with
you.
I'd say that's a pretty good deal, especially for something that involves really no capital expenditure and just a willingness to follow directions.
But save some smackers while it's still on the launch sale:
http://www.tomwoods.com/publicdomain
Tom Woods
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