Print a black and white photo of a person, animal, building you like, or landscape on regular printer paper. Any image that you like will work. You will use this photo as a reference to recreate it as a pencil and watercolor piece.  You don’t need to use an originally black and white image. Just make sure the printed-out version is in black and white. Instead of printing from a computer, use an image in a photography book and make a black and white photocopy of it. Photocopiers can be found at many libraries and office supply stores. If you’re experienced in drawing and want to use your own personal drawing, you can skip this step and make your drawing in graphite on a piece of watercolor paper. Then skip down to the step about filling in your drawing with colored pencil. On the back of the printed photo, cover the paper in graphite using a soft 6B or 8B graphite pencil. You want to get a nice layer of graphite all over the parts of the image that you’ll be using in your drawing. Start with a sharpened pencil while scribbling, and allow the point to get dull. Sharpen your pencil again if it becomes so dull you can no longer use it. When you’ve covered the back of the print-out in graphite, flip the paper over and clip it, front side up, to a similarly sized piece of watercolor paper. Be sure that the image is securely in place so that it doesn’t slide around when you’re tracing it. Use multiple clips or tape on every side to make sure the image is secured to the watercolor paper and won’t move around. On your image print-out, trace major lines and smaller details directly onto the image with ballpoint pen. Do not color anything in; simply trace the details. The pressure from the pen will transfer graphite lines onto your piece of watercolor paper behind the image. You can make a few extra lines to denote important shadows from your image, but the actual shadowing will come later. When you have finished fully tracing the image in detail, remove the print-out from the watercolor paper. You should have a good traced sketch of the image on your watercolor paper now. If there are any parts missing or ones that are too light, add more graphite scribbles to the back of your print-out and trace it onto the watercolor paper again. Using your print-out for reference, shade the darkest parts of the image on your watercolor paper with black or sepia colored pencil. Coloring the darkest parts first will help you transform the outline of the image into a version that looks more and more like the actual image. Next shade the lighter parts of the image using a warm grey colored pencil. Choose colors that you would like to use on your piece. If the original image was in color, you can use these colors as a reference point, or make your piece have totally different colors. It’s entirely up to you. Mix your paints with plenty of water so that the colors are nice and light. Using your light, watered-down colors and a small paintbrush, begin adding color to details of your drawing. Some people like to keep the color in their pieces at a minimum, while others like their image to be more drenched in color. Allow your colors to dry for half an hour before moving on to the next step. After you’ve painted parts of your image in the very watered-down colors, you can add more bright highlights with less-watered down colors according to your preference. To go over some of the darkest areas of your piece, dip a clean paintbrush into water and add just 1 drop of water to some black watercolor. This will give you the densest black to add to the dark areas of your image. When you’ve filled in the darkest areas, lighten the black watercolor to grey by adding more water. Use the greyish watercolor to fill in lighter shadows on your image. Allow your watercolors to dry for half an hour. Let your watercolors dry for at least a half an hour. When the paint is dry, use your colored pencils to add more texture to your piece. If your image is an animal, pencils are especially useful in creating fur.  Use your pencils to add subtle details to your piece such as blades of grass, lines on leaves, texture of brick or stone on a building, or hair on people. If you think your piece doesn’t have enough watercolor, you can always go back and add more. Just finalize the piece with pencils as your last step.
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One-sentence summary -- Print a black and white photo you’d like to draw on regular printer paper. Flip the paper over and cover the image with graphite scribbles. Turn the paper back over and clip it to your watercolor paper. Use a ballpoint pen to trace your image. Remove the image print-out from the watercolor paper. Fill in the image with colored pencil starting with the darkest parts. Mix some watercolors with water. Apply watercolor to various parts of your pencil drawing however you like. Use black watercolor to highlight details and shadows. Add texture with colored pencil to finalize the piece.


This is a good basic way to turn a guy on. You can kind of tailor your scent choice to something you know he'd like but it's always better to err on the musky side, as this most closely resembles the scents associated with sex.  Avoid strong perfumes and perfumes with an "old lady" scent. Make sure you apply the perfume correctly. Use your body language to put ideas in his head. Sensually lick an ice cream while you're out on a date. Run your hand up and down the top of your thigh while you're sitting together on the couch. Lean in close to talk to him. Bend over dramatically to pick something up off the ground. There are lots of ways to make him start thinking sexual thoughts, so just take advantage of whatever situation you find yourself in. It should be a little flirty, a little dirty, and a whole lot of tempting. The husky voice and the closeness of your lips as you whisper something slowly, and sensually will have him begging to take you to bed. "So now what do you want to do?", "You are such a tease.", "What do you want me to do to you?", etc. You get the gist. Step 1, wear brightly colored underwear that are not granny-panties; Step 2, have just a bit of it peek out over the top of your jeans when you bend over; Step 3, profit. Or he'll profit. It's mutual profit. If he knows you're turned on, that's going to turn him on more than anything else. If he touches you in just the right way or says something that drives you wild, tell him. You can also send him texts or let him know in other ways as well. Try, "God, I want you right now." or "I cannot stop thinking about what I want you to do to me." Congratulations: now he's thinking about your lips. It's as easy as that. Just a little bit of this paired with looking up at him through your lashes will tell him you're about ready to devour him, you're just too polite to say it.
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One-sentence summary --
Wear perfume. Use body language. Whisper something in his ear. Let him see just a bit of your underwear. Show him that you're turned on. Bite your lip while you're having a conversation.