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12/7/21 Maple Leaf neighborhood |
If you’ve studied classical drawing as I have, you know that
much of the emphasis is on depicting form realistically. It’s all about observing
and using light to give the impression of three dimensions on a flat picture
plane. Even when thick clouds obscure the sun, you’re supposed to squint hard
and try to see whatever shadows there might be to help you describe the forms.
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Simple tools for a flat day. |
On foggy days, I am always struck by how flat everything looks. Fog obscures light so uniformly that everything in the far and middle distances looks two-dimensional, and even the closest parts show only slightly varying shades of mid-gray. It’s also hard to resist giving distant trees more texture. In fact, I pulled out a blending stump to take away what little texture the side of my pencil point had made.
Two years ago I sketched the same scene in the fog from a slightly different angle.
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