Write an article based on this "Do lip trills and hum. Sing scales. Practice smooth projection with words and phrases. Be prepared to feel silly. Cool down. Practice wisely on a regular basis."
Hold your lips lightly together and blow air out of them while humming, like you're making a raspberry. Focus on having a relaxed throat and an engaged core while you do this. Practice lip trills going from a low to a high note and vice versa. Once you’re used to the lip trills, practice doing scales with them. To help your body learn to relax while you sing, tense up your body and then right after releasing the tension, do a lip roll from low to high; repeat, this time going high to low.  Humming is another gentle way to warm up your voice. Try humming along with music on your way to school or work or, if you’d prefer not to do that sort of thing in public, hum while you cook or while you’re in the shower. Starting as low as you can comfortably sing, gently move up the scale using a “me” sound until you reach the highest note at which you are comfortable. Then, move down the scale from high to low using an “e” sound. You can also practice "woo" scales. Your mouth should look as though you’re sucking in a long string of spaghetti as you inhale. When you exhale, make a “woo” sound. It should sound buzzy, similar to the sound made by a kazoo. Keep the sound steady as you exhale; do this 2 to 3 times. Next, go up and down your scales using the “woo” sound. Say groups of single words or entire phrases without stopping between the words — treat them as a single word. Lengthen the vowels and exaggerate the vocalization of each word as you say and/or sing it.  As you speak/sing, imagine that you’re filling a room with your voice. Focus on smooth transitions: when switching between higher and lower, and louder and softer parts of a song, imagine moving up and down a ramp — not a staircase. Example words: moon moan mourn mane mean.  Example phrase: many men munch many melons. A lot of vocal exercises can sound and look pretty funny. Relax and have fun with it. Two fun and silly exercises that help open up your throat:  Sing “meow” slowly, emphasizing its three sounds — mee, ahh, and ooo. Make weird faces by stretching out your tongue in all directions. You can do this while singing or even just making weird noises. As with physical exercise, cooling down after doing vocal exercises is important. One way to cool down is to do the same simple vocal warm-ups you started with (for example, yawning, light coughing, rolling your lips, and humming). Another way to cool down is simply to gently glide up and down, and down and up, on the sound “m”, so that you feel a tickling vibration in your lip/nose area. If you really want to improve your voice, you need to practice often. Sing with intention and try to improve specific things, such as working on your vocal range or nailing a difficult note in your favorite song. Aim to sing for 30 minutes at a time, then take a 30-minute vocal rest. During the vocal rest, don't sing, talk, whisper, or otherwise use your voice.