Lately I’ve been building a small lesson plan around printable drawing sheets, and I rely on sites that organize content by skill level: Easy Drawing Guides and DragoArt work great for progressive steps, while Super Coloring and JustColor have tons of printable outlines that kids love. For girls who like fashion or character design, look for templates labeled fashion dolls, wardrobe templates, or character bases — these let kids practice proportions and clothing details.
For educational value, Scholastic and PBS Kids sometimes publish themed worksheets that combine drawing with reading or science prompts — perfect for keeping creative time useful and fun. If you want a wider pool of styles, seek out community repositories like Teachers Pay Teachers (filter to free) and niche blogs run by illustrators; many offer PDF packs for email subscribers. I also convert a favorite screenshot into a printable by adjusting contrast and printing in grayscale — works great for creating custom tracing sheets. Watching a child’s style evolve from tracing to inventing their own characters makes this whole hunt feel worth it.
Quick tip I use when I need something fast: search for free printable coloring pages and add a theme word like 'princess', 'fairy', or 'unicorn' if you want girl-friendly designs. Sites like Super Coloring, Crayola, and HelloKids usually pop up first with PDFs you can print instantly. I also keep a few teacher blogs bookmarked for cute activity sheets and fashion templates that double as drawing practice.
Another easy move is to grab a step-by-step guide from 'Art for Kids Hub' or 'Easy Drawing Guides' and print each step on its own page so kids can follow along. For a crafty twist, print outlines lightly for tracing and let kids decorate with stickers, glitter, or fabric scraps — those mixed-media sessions are my favorite to watch.
Hunting down free printable drawing sheets has become a weekend hobby for me, and I've collected a pile of go-to places that always have cute, girl-focused content. I usually start with big, reliable sites like Crayola and Canon Creative Park — they have tons of free coloring pages, simple step-by-step drawing guides, and themed packs (princesses, animals, fashion templates) that print cleanly on normal paper.
I also dig through 'HelloKids', 'Super Coloring', and 'Easy Drawing Guides' for more step-by-step tutorials that kids can trace or use the grid method with. Pinterest is my treasure map: people curate themed boards (fairies, unicorns, Kawaii characters) and you can usually find direct printable links. For printable worksheets that lean educational, Scholastic and PBS Kids occasionally offer free drawing pages tied to stories and characters.
A trick I use: combine a printable outline with a blank template — print an outline at low opacity for tracing and a blank for free practice. Teachers Pay Teachers has many free downloads from classroom artists, and some Etsy sellers offer a free sample pack. I love seeing how a simple sheet becomes a little masterpiece; it’s a tiny creative party every time.
I keep a stash of free sheets bookmarked for my niece and the neighborhood kids. If you want the quickest route, check 'Art for Kids Hub' for video-guided drawings and then search their site or channel description for printable sheets people have uploaded. YouTube creators often post free pdfs in descriptions, or fans turn tutorials into printables on Pinterest.
I also follow a few Instagram and Tumblr artists who drop free printable character outlines or fashion templates on occasion — searching hashtags like #freeprintable or #kidscoloring can surface current freebies. If you’re into themed packs (mermaids, ballerinas, pets), type that theme plus ‘free printable drawing’ into your browser and add ‘pdf’ — it usually finds teacher resources or craft blogs with downloadable sheets. I love how easy it is to mix a commercial coloring page with a homemade drawing prompt and turn it into a tiny art lesson.
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Naked Pages
Vic To Ria
10
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"You wanna gеt fuckеd likе a good girl?” I askеd, voicе low.
Shе smilеd. “I’m not a good girl.”
I growlеd. “No. You’rе not.”
Shе gaspеd as I slammеd into hеr in onе thrust, burying mysеlf all thе way.
“Damian—!”
I covеrеd hеr mouth with my hand.
“Bе quiеt,” I hissеd in hеr еar. “You don’t want Mommy to hеar, do you?”
Hеr еyеs widеnеd.
I pullеd out slow—thеn slammеd back in hard.
Shе moanеd against my hand.
“God, you’rе so tight,” I groanеd. “You wеrе madе for this cock.”
Hеr lеgs wrappеd around mе, pulling mе dееpеr.
I prеssеd my hand hardеr against hеr mouth, muffling thе sounds of hеr criеs as I thrust into hеr again and again.
Thе bеd crеakеd. Hеr body shook.
“Thought I wouldn’t find out you wеrе a littlе slut for mе,” I growlеd. “Kissing mе. Riding my facе. Acting so damn innocеnt.”
***
Naked Pages is a compilation of thrilling, heart throbbing erotica short stories that would keep you at the edge in anticipation for more.
It's loaded with forbidden romance, domineering men, naughty and sex female leads that leaves you aching for release.
From forbidden trysts to irresistible strangers.
Every one holds desires, buried deep in the hearts to be treated like a slave or be called daddy! And in this collection, all your nasty fantasies would be unraveled.
It would be an escape to the 9th heavens while you beg and plead for more like a good girl.
This erotica compilation is overflowing with scandalous scenes ! It's intended only for adults over the age of 18! And all characters are over the age of 18.
I swallowed hard. “Teach me the things that bad girls like.”“Oh, my sweet, little bunny, I’ll teach you lots of things, but I won’t make you a bad girl…” He smirked and pinned me to the bed, causing me to arch my back, whilst peering down at me with a smoldering gaze.“I’ll make you MY good girl,” he promised instead.***I was a good girl my whole life. When I found out my fiance cheated on me, banging my sister right after he secured my family’s investment, suddenly, I didn't want to be a good girl anymore, so I went to his father.Ellis Peterson never cared to be in a relationship. Rumors said that he had an extraordinary hold on women. He led me to his personal playpen, a "dungeon" filled with toys. I just never thought that I would become one of his toys.Daddy Dominant's Good Girl is created by Reina Bellevue, an eGlobal Creative Publishing signed author.
"Hank, there's something hard down there pushing into me."
On the driving school car, I was teaching my goddaughter how to drive by letting her sit on my lap, my hands over hers on the wheel.
But right after we started, the engine stalled, and the whole car jerked hard.
Her round hips settled deep into my thighs.
To make things even more intense, she was wearing nothing but a skirt that barely covered her.
Note: This is a super erotic +18 pages of her diary. Read at your own risk.
When the thunder rolls and the lights flicker, Lexi writes, and nothing is off limits.
Trapped between the walls of a religious household and the firestorm inside her own body, Lexi is a quiet 21-year-old woman with a loud, unfiltered diary. Orphaned at twelve and raised by her aunt and pastor uncle in a small Georgia town, Lexi lives in the shadows — but her fantasies, frustrations, and forbidden desires fill every page of her private journal.
Naked Pages: The Diary of Lexi is a confessional coming-of-age erotica told from the perspective of a young woman exploring her sexuality in secret. From heartbreak and betrayal to late-night cravings, self-discovery, and unexpected temptation, Lexi’s journey is messy, raw, and deeply honest. She’s not searching for love — she’s chasing something real: connection, pleasure, and control over her own story.
As she transitions into a new life in Atlanta, surrounded by new people and new dangers, Lexi’s entries grow even bolder. And every chapter she writes pulls us deeper into her unfiltered world — full of heat, heartbreak, and hard truths.
This is more than just her diary. It’s her freedom.
Nineteen-year-old virgin Monalisa always believed she was broken—frigid and untouched by any man’s desire—until she moves back into her late mother’s luxurious mansion after a tragic death. There, she discovers overwhelming, shameful lust for her ruthless 49-year-old werewolf billionaire stepfather, Damien Voss. The powerful Alpha who demands she call him “Daddy” while he systematically corrupts her innocent body, claims her as his submissive mate, and drags her into a world of bloody pack wars, savage knotting, and total surrender. As bodies pile up and her old life dissolves, Monalisa must confront whether her future holds anything beyond endless filthy pleasure and violence… or if this dark, consuming bond is exactly what she was born for.
Characterization
Female Lead – Monalisa
Physical: 19, petite but extremely curvy (heavy breasts, wide hips, thick thighs, plush ass).
Personality: Initially naive, shy, and insecure. Believed she was “broken” because no man could arouse her. Gradually transforms into a desperately submissive, cock-addicted mate while retaining inner conflict about morality and her lost future.
Arc: From reluctant virgin to willing bloody little mate. Deep reflections on whether her life will be reduced to endless sex and violence.
Male Lead – Damien Voss
Physical: 49 (appears mid-30s due to werewolf genes), 6'5", muscular silver-fox, scarred from battles.
Personality: Cold, commanding, ruthless Alpha CEO. Deeply obsessive and possessive. Masterful gaslighter who justifies violence and corruption as “destiny.”
Arc: From restrained obsession to fully unleashed feral dominance as he claims his stepdaughter.
Supporting Characters
Late mother: Antagonist in flashbacks (portrayed as jealous/sabotaging via Damien’s gaslighting).
Rivals (Viktor of Silverfang Clan, various scouts/Betas): Fuel the bloody conflicts.
Marcus (traitor Beta): Early catalyst for violence.
My daughter, Tina, locked herself in her room, crying so hard her body shook.
I pried the door open and saw that she was clutching a test paper that was torn to shreds and pieced back together.
It was a math Olympiad selection test. She should have gotten a perfect score, but was given a score of zero instead.
"Mom," she sobbed, "the teacher said 3x5 is not equal to 5x3; that it's taking shortcuts. She tore my paper up in front of everyone, revoked my eligibility for the competition, and told the whole class not to talk to me…"
I looked at the deep red scratch marks on my daughter's wrist and immediately picked up the phone to call the principal.
"What good does it do for your school's reputation to drive a kid who loves math to their breaking point?"
On chaotic weekend mornings I stash a stack of printable drawing sheets next to the markers and call it a parenting victory. I lean on a few go-to sites: Crayola and Education.com have straightforward, kid-friendly step-by-step sheets; Super Coloring and HelloKids offer huge libraries of simple outlines; Twinkl and Teachers Pay Teachers provide themed packs if you want lessons disguised as fun. I also love Pinterest for curated boards—search "easy printable drawing" and you'll find whole folders of dinosaur, animal, and seasonal templates.
I usually mix free public resources with one purchased pack from Etsy every few months, because the indie creators make the cutest step-progression sheets for ages 3–8. If printing is a pain, I put PDFs on a tablet and have kids trace using a cheap stylus or a sheet of tracing paper. For inspiration, I sometimes flip through cheap books like 'Usborne Easy Draw' and then search for matching printables online.
Beyond just pages, I turn it into mini-projects: pick a theme, pick three sheets (outline, pattern, background), and then display the best on a string gallery. It keeps the clutter manageable and the kids proud — honestly, those little exhibitions are the real magic.
I get this itch to find the perfect tutorials — I go through that hunt constantly — and for girls (whether anime-style, stylized, or realistic) I always mix a few types of lessons. For basics and anatomy I lean on Proko for clear, no-nonsense breakdowns of the skull, facial planes, and proportions; pairing that with 'Figure Drawing for All It's Worth' and 'Drawing the Head and Hands' really solidified my foundation. For stylized faces and hair I binge Mark Crilley's step-by-steps and Loish's process videos, because they show how to bend rules while keeping things believable.
Once I have the bones, I practice expression sheets, hands, and hair in short timed sessions using line-of-action and Quickposes for reference. For color and digital painting, Ctrl+Paint and Ross Tran's color videos helped me loosen up and pick palettes that flatter feminine features. I sprinkle in Drawabox lessons to keep my linework crisp. Mix books, YouTube creators, and daily drills — that combo changed my sketches from flat to alive, and I still love discovering a tiny trick that makes a hair strand or eye pop.