2/12/20 Philodendron leaf (from photo) |
In light of my current focus on botanical drawing, this is
the sketch I made for a Valentine card. Sadly, I had to draw it from a photo, as
I don’t have a philodendron plant (for the sake of its own health and safety). Unlike
me, my mom had a very green thumb, and I have fond memories of her several
philodendrons and their shiny, heart-shaped leaves throughout the house.
Technical note: One of the techniques I learned in Crystal Shin’s workshop was using an incising tool to mark leaf veins into the
white paper. Then when colored pencil is applied lightly over the debossed
lines, they resist color. Afterwards an appropriate hue can be added to the vein
lines with a very sharp pencil point. In class, I borrowed our instructor’s
tool, which had a fine, smooth point to avoid damaging the paper’s surface. Making
this philodendron leaf sketch at home, I didn’t have an incising tool, and
other things I tried (like needle nose pliers) were too rough and scratched the
paper. I’ve heard that people use dried-up ballpoint pens for this purpose, but
I didn’t even have one of those in the house.
My next idea was a white colored pencil. I remembered that
my vintage Prismacolor Verithins are among the hardest colored pencils I’ve
used, and I happened to have a white one. It turned out that in addition to
being very hard, it’s also old and brittle, so when I applied pressure, the
sharp point kept snapping.
Finally, I looked around at other somewhat hard colored
pencils on my desk, and I spotted a Tombow Irojiten in a pale yellow
hue. It’s certainly not the hardest colored pencil I own, but it was handy. It
turned out to be just right as an incising tool, and the color was also just
right so I didn’t even have to apply color to the vein lines afterwards.
Your shading on the philodendron leaf is amazing!!
ReplyDeleteThanks, Joan! I appreciate your stopping in at my blog regularly, even with all that's on your mind lately!
DeleteWow, really nice!
ReplyDelete