Choose your medium. Drawing pop art works best with thick markers, paint pens and thick slabs of charcoal. Pop art is not a place for pastels and fine pencil lines.
Use clean lines and shapes. There's no fuzzy stuff here. Avoid feathery details, subtle shading and other techniques that weigh down the drawing. Keep it sleek and clean. You want your pop art to pop off the page.
Go for a popular subject. Automobiles, French fries, baseball and, yes, even apple pie are mainstream American topics. Opt for them or something similar for its high visibility and instant recognition.
Be bold. Striking black and white works great with pop art. If you must add color, pick a vivid and highly noticeable neon and use sparingly for a punchy effect. Let your main subject speak for itself and not be forced to compete with anything else on the page.
Play with perspective. Pop art likes to be zany, and nothing will bring that out more than making your main subject 800 times larger than anything surrounding it.
Use duplication. Pop art plays out well when you reproduce the same image several times. Think of your main apple pie surrounded by several, smaller apple pies or, better yet, on a page filled with tiny, bold apples.