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Showing posts from February, 2016

Mouths Are Scary

I have a confession to make about today's drawing: the mouth was the last thing I ended up drawing, and I was hoping I would run out of time before I got to it. Drawing mouths is a tricky thing - the teeth can end up too big, the lips too flat. I suppose noses are difficult for the same reasons. Deep down, I felt like I was doing a great job on the rest of the drawing and adding a mouth could ruin the entire thing. I had to remind myself: this is a sketchbook, this is an opportunity to learn, nothing in these pages is precious, everything is an idea and a learning experience. China marker is great for a left-handed person like myself - it doesn't smudge or smear. Unfortunately, it also doesn't smooth out very well. This makes it difficult to create certain textures - or a lack thereof.

Baseball

Sports photos are still a very great source for poses. Today, I tried using a china marker for my drawing. I really like the way this material covers large areas in a very controlled way. The only downside is how permanent the marks are: erasing and smudging just won't get rid of them. The legs are a bit short and the arms are weird - but the pose is definitely there.

A Mess

More graphite stick experiments. I've found it is difficult to draw over the top of graphite sticks once they have been placed. Rubbing the dust into the paper creates a surface that is too slick to allow more graphite onto it. Just like watercolor - it seems the best way to work is gradually from light to dark. It's a mess, but it's a mess I can learn from.

Profiles and Smudging

The covering power of graphite sticks is fantastic! I am also impressed by the dark values they can lay down. With a little more time spent on the under-drawing, this would have been a more accurate portrait (I also wish I hadn't forgotten my eraser, yeesh). By starting with a thick outline of the profile, I was able to carve out the facial features. They look really strange - but I think I just need a little more practice with these (relatively) new materials.

Golf and Exquisite Corpses

I have been having some difficulty finding really interesting poses and faces in the magazines I have access to. Fashion magazines feature models with expressionless faces - their "perfect" bodies standing straight with their arms at their sides. A magazine featuring golfers though, that's what I call interesting. Golfers are always in interesting poses with looks of passion and concentration on their faces. They aren't always beautiful 20-somethings - more often they are experienced middle-aged people with wrinkles and scars. I used graphite sticks today. I think there is something worth exploring here.