2/28/19 Pentel Color Brushes containing water-soluble inks washed with water for shading -- one of the earliest tricks I learned. (2-min. poses) |
When I first started sketching, one of the earliest speed techniques I learned was using a waterbrush to wash water-soluble fountain pen ink.
Bleeding the ink line is one of the easiest ways to give the impression of shading
very quickly. It was one of my favorite techniques for years. Although I don’t draw
with a fountain pen as much as I used to, I still use this same basic technique
during the shortest poses at life-drawing sessions with brush pens containing
water-soluble ink. With a quick swipe of the waterbrush, I have instant shading
and a hint of form.
2/28/18 Conte smudged with a fingertip (5-min. poses) |
The past few weeks, I’ve had a lot of fun experimenting with
various dry materials and finding ways to smudge lines quickly and efficiently
with the same intention: evoking form with a bit of shading. Dry materials are
not quite as fast as wet ones, of course, but using materials like smudgy Conte
crayon and soft colored pencils can be almost as efficient (charcoal would
probably be the most efficient dry material for this technique, but you know how I feel about that). I haven’t mastered two-minute
poses with dry media yet, but they’ve become my favorite for five-minute (and
longer) poses.
With Conte, I can smudge lines easily with nothing but a fingertip,
but colored pencils are a bit more resistant. In the middle of a pose, an idea suddenly
occurred to me: When I’m using graphite, I don’t smudge with a fingertip; I
reach for a tortillon. Why not try that with colored pencils, too?
Eureka! The tortillon is a much more effective smudging tool
with soft colored pencils than a finger is. Then I started thinking about all
the other smudging and blending tools I had at home. . . the proverbial wheels
were spinning. Stay tuned tomorrow for the results.
2/28/19 Derwent colored pencil smudged with tortillon (10-min. poses) |
2/28/19 Derwent colored pencil smudged with tortillon (20-min. pose) |
That's an effective way to do quick sketches. And I had to look up "tortillon". I didn't know what that little thing was called.
ReplyDeleteYes, it is relatively quick with dry media!
Delete