Tag: Drawing

Easel Brush

| September 26, 2009 | 0 Comments

Easel Brush
Antique Toy Museum collection for sale
Baltimore collector strives to keep her unique museum whole, long after she’s gone For eight years, Anne Smith’s Antique Toy Museum has sat quietly at 222 W. Read St. on the outer fringes of Mount Vernon, housing a vast trove of mostly late-19th- and early 20th-century playthings. But Smith, who has decided the time has come to sell off her collection and move to Florida, considers it more than …
Brush Easel

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Markers Pen

| April 15, 2009 | 0 Comments

Markers Pen
What kind of pens or markers, the firm?

I sign the back of a giclee print on canvas but I'm afraid pen / ink marker bleed through the fabric. Is there any good pens or markers for that? "Thanks

Sharpies are the best, which are the fine lines in all kinds of colors. Test first!

JetPens.com TV Uni-ball POSCA Color Metallic Marker Pens

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Drawing Pad

| February 21, 2009 | 0 Comments

Drawing Pad

How to Draw Comic Characters

Is not it amazing when you pick up a comic book and read it for the first time?

We all remember our first comic book and how one often turns into another, then another and finally an almost insatiable addiction. How the characters begin to come to life within a well scripted and well drawn series.

Comic books have for many years driven the imaginations of young and old alike which had many of use running around pretending we are Batman, Superman, and Supergirl or with friends as the team of X-Men.

Whether you picked up a ‘Walt Disney’ production or a ‘Japanese Manga Graphic Novel’, be it ‘Detective Comics’ or ‘Marvel’ what you will have almost certainly done is tried to draw the characters. Admit it you have!

There are some great artists in those off the shelf books and many of us wish to emulate our artist heroes not just the comic books stars; and there are many ways in which you can do that without the need to be clad in yellow spandex holding the latest laser gadgets.

Immersing yourself into the world of comics when you draw is an experience that is fun, so much so you may find yourself accidentally muttering the words ‘Kapow’ or ‘Smash’ out loud, a common side effect that is not dangerous so don’t worry to much if this happens.

One such method is to actually copy the characters and buildings within the comic. Remember that it is not only the characters that build the books, but the actual surroundings and vehicles also. Being able to draw everything is an advantage and can really bring your work to life.

The method of copying from the comic book is probably the simplest way you can practice and master the art of comic book art. One word of caution here: never use the technique of tracing. Just look at the figures and draw on your notepad. Initially you will have difficulty to reproduce the figures faithfully. But in course of time you will improve if you keep at it. Using tracing you will be able to draw slightly better but that will be of no use as it will not help you to improve your basic drawing skill.

To get started all you need is a set of good quality pencils with a few different graphite (lead) types such as soft and hard, and rather than going out and buying the colored inks just yet you should use normal coloring pencils or paints.

You might also like to grab yourself a couple of nice black fine and medium tipped marker pens for outlining the drawings as you near completion of your artwork, as this help your creation to stand out as it does in the comics; and don’t forget the all important drawing pad for all those sketches and drawings that you are about to work on.

One you are satisfied that you have what it takes to further your artistic capabilities you can pick up some rather neat little publications which can bring your artistry up a few levels.

About the Author

If you are eager to have serious fun from making comic characters you must train yourself in the fundamentals of drawing cartoons. You can find some
cartoon drawing tutorials
here and don’t forget to check this popular
cartoon drawing course

Best iPad App – Drawing Pad!

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Drawing Drafting

| February 9, 2009 | 0 Comments

Drawing Drafting
If your great at drawing,with a education in drafting What is the odd I can work on designing stadiums?

need a degree in architecture;; & how many of these “stadiums” do you think you can build in a lifetime?? or better yet, how many do you think we need?? it’s a GREAT start, expand on it.. good luck!!

Drawing Drafting in Etab

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Copic Original

| January 31, 2009 | 0 Comments

Copic Original
Where can I get Copic markers the cheapest?

I decided I want to buy myself a large set of copic markers, preferably a new set. But they are just soo very expen$ive! I was thinking of getting the 72 piece set of the original size markers. Upon checking ebay and some other sites I was disappointed to see they’re still super expensive everywhere..(~$300+ for an official set). . I wasn’t sure if there are any better deals out there someplace?

Does anyone know the cheapest place to get them online?
thanks!

Try ebay. I don’t use copic markers all that much, but I did get a set of Prismacolor pencils that normally run over $200 for $40 on ebay. I always look there for my art supplies before any other place.

http://shop.ebay.com/?_from=R40&_trksid=p3907.m38.l1313&_nkw=copic+markers&_sacat=See-All-Categories

Ocean’s Shugo Chara! Character Transformation Contest (CLOSED)

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Drawing Painting

| October 21, 2008 | 0 Comments

Drawing Painting
TALKIN’ TEXAS: Professor writes poems to accompany his wife’s portraits
When Steve Schneider of McAllen was working toward his Ph.D in literature at the University of Iowa, one of his professors, W. D. Snodgrass, who had won a Pulitzer Prize for poetry, showed a group of slides full of impressionist paintings, then proceeded to read poems he had written about each painting.
chrysanthemum drawing (Chinese Painting)

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Inch Drawing

| May 18, 2008 | 0 Comments

Inch Drawing

See comments on the drawing scale and drawing

A scale drawing is a drawing that represents a real object. Scale image is the relationship between the size of the drawing with the actual size of the object. These plans tend to be the kind of href = "http://www.drawingsforweb.com"> drawing to scale, which means that plans are linked to the actual size the place or object. different scales can be used for different designs in a set. An architect of the scale specialist teachers. It is used in the measurement of reduced scale drawings such as plans and floor plans. There is marked by a series of calibrated scales (ratios). For greater accuracy and durability of materials used should be dimensionally stable and sustainable. Scales were traditionally made of wood, but nowadays are usually hard plastic or aluminum. architect scales may be flat, with four scales, or have a symmetrical section three lobes, with 6.

The scale engineer is a tool to measure distances and transfer the measurements to a fixed length. It is commonly made of plastic and has more than twelve inches (300 mm) long, the extent of ticks at the edges or not usable by attrition. It is used in the manufacture of technical drawings, commonly called the blues, to scale. For example, "One-tenth size" would appear in a drawing to indicate a part larger than the document itself. It should not be used to measure workpieces to see if they meet specifications. The engineer of the scale was created when machining parts need higher precision than the binary division of the thumb as usual level architecture of the houses and furniture. We use, for example through the establishment of circuits with the spacing of children integrated circuit chip tenth of an inch.

A design office is in its old form, a kind of multi-purpose office that can be used for any type of drawing, writing or drawing on a large sheet of paper or read a book or other large format large format document or for drafting precise technical illustrations characteristics. The drawing board was an office mate of a common platform in the study of a knight or a private library, during the pre-industrial and early industrial era. More recently, Engineers and designers use drawing board for the design and modification of drawings on paper with ink or pencil. different design tools (square, protractor, etc.) are used to draw lines parallel perpendicular or oblique. There are tools for drawing circles, arcs, curves and other symbols. But with the gradual introduction of computer-aided drafting and design (CAD or CAD) in the last decades of the 20th century and early 21st century, the table work is increasingly rare.

A drawing table is also sometimes called a mechanical desk because, for several centuries, most offices was mechanical drawing. Although computer-aided design, many designers, artists, architects and some structural designers still rely on paper pencil and graph produced in a drawing table. Modern drafting tables typically rely on a steel frame. Steel provides as much power as the old oak drafting structures of tables and easier portability. The steel frame provides links to be installed lifts that control both the height and angle of the surface of the board drawing. The surface of the drawing board generally covered with a thin vinyl sheet called 'council housing. This provides an optimum surface for pen and pencil drafting. Allow bars to be used without damaging the wood surface of the board. A board cover must be frequently cleaned to prevent accumulation of graphite making new drawings dirty. Some drafting tables incorporate electric motors to provide up and down and adjust the angle of the surface of the drafting table. These tables are at least as strong as the original oak and brass tables and sacrifice portability for the convenience of push-button adjustment table.

About the Author

Myself Rosy. I am the SEO. We are provide free ideas on 3d drawings, drawing tutorials, images for web, graphics for web, drawing artist and many more. For more information log on our web site. Website :- http://www.drawingsforweb.com Email Id :- admin@drawingsforweb.com

Mike Lyon 75 x 45 inch pen and ink drawing

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Drawing Guide

| February 12, 2008 | 0 Comments

Drawing Guide
How do I start a simple drawing of a site map ? Where can I get a sample ?

I need to draw a simple site/map layout for a friend & so far I have only done this stuff for school can someone direct me to a site where I can get a sample ? or what guide can I use?
I’m referring to a drawing of a house but in this case it would simpler as I just need to draw the layout of the property

site map

https://www.google.com/webmasters/sitemaps/docs/en/sitemap-generator.html

http://devintelligence.com/sitemapgenerator/

http://www.sitemapspal.com/

Real Time Drawing Tutorial: Female Body

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Drawing Pencil

| February 12, 2008 | 0 Comments

Drawing Pencil

Pencil drawing, tips and equipment

The use of any art medium requires a little knowledge. This article focuses on the tools you should use, and some of the techniques of pencil drawing.

Firstly, consider the pencils themselves. In my experience, paying more for a pencil merely buys a better quality casing; the performance of the leads is pretty similar across the price range.

The import thing when buying graphite pencils is to have a range of different grades. “H” pencils have hard leads. “B” pencils have soft leads. The higher the H or B number, the harder or softer they are; so an H9 is very hard, and a B9 is very soft.

In terms of drawing, pencil “harness and softness” equate to lightness and darkness. A hard pencil will make a very faint, sharp grey line, while a soft pencil will make darker and less sharp mark. Pencil drawing is a matter of recording light and shade, so you need to use a range of lighter and darker pencils to capture tonal variations.

The range you choose is up to you, and dependant on the style of drawings you wish to make, but the “Bs” are suitable for most drawings. I would recommend the minimum of an “HB” (neither hard nor soft), B, 2B, 4B, 6B, and 9B.

The choice of paper again depends on type of drawings you wish to make, but generally, the best type of paper will be very smooth (e.g. cartridge paper). Paper quality is important. Imperfections in the surface of a smooth paper have a nasty habit of filling-in with graphite, and forming blotches.

Pencil work can require a fair amount of blending and reworking, so it is advisable to use a paper that is reasonably robust. My personal recommendation is that you use the heaviest weight paper you can – something that will stand-up to a bit of a battering.

Always apply pencil very lightly, and never press hard. The aim should be to float the graphite on the surface of the paper, and not to produce an engraving. Pressing hard will make the pencil mark darker, but it will also deform the paper. Far better results can be obtained by using a darker (softer) pencil lightly, when you need to draw darker areas. Altering the angle of the pencil to the paper can help if you tend to be heavy handed. Briefly, when the pencil is vertical to the paper, it’s easy to press down hard. Leaning the pencil reduces the amount of pressure than can be applied to its tip, and the least possible amount pressure is achieved when the pencil is leaned so far that is almost horizontal.

When shading an area, don’t randomly scrub the pencil back and forward in all directions. Try to apply pencil strokes in a uniform and specific direction. The best direction is often one that describes the shape of an object, so if shading something that is round, used curved strokes.

The hardest thing to do with pencil is lay down and area of flat and even shading. The problem is often that the pencil strokes overlap, with the result that the overlapping areas are darker. One way to avoid this is to always shade an area two or three times to achieve even coverage. So long as you use the correct grade of pencil lightly and consistently, you will not end-up with darker shading as a result. For example, three layers of B should not be as dark as one layer of B2 (but it should be smoother). 

The usual approach with pencil is to work from dark to light. The reason for this is as described above, but this additionally acknowledges of the properties of pencil. Graphite is a lubricant. If you lay-down a very light shading first, you will find that this effectively lubricates the paper, and subsequent shading goes on more smoothly and fluidly. So, if you want to shade an area to a “B3” depth, don’t go straight in with the B3; build-up through two of three steps, say a B, a B2, and then a B3. If you wish to shade an area to B8 or B9 depth, similarly go through a few steps, but start with say a B6.

If you want to record really dark shades, it is possible to buy specialists’ pencils, darker than B9, or you can use a little charcoal. Graphite is shades of grey, and never black.

Time for a quick word about sharpening pencils. Most pencil drawing is a matter of recording areas light and shade; it’s not about “lines”, unless technical drawing is your thing. My advice is therefore – don’t sharpen your pencils too often. Shading is easier to do with a blunt pencil, so only sharpen when you need crisp detail (usually the finishing touches).

Blending is a vital pencil drawing technique. Blending is fundamentally smudging.  Smudging can be used to smooth-out shading, and blend different pencil grades to produce a smooth tonal graduation.

Pencil smudges very easily due to the lubricating properties of graphite. You can do it with your fingers (although a little messy), Torchillons (paper stumps), and “Q-tips” (cotton buds on sticks found in most bathrooms) are very good for blending. Whatever you use, make your blending strokes directional rather than random.

An eraser can be very useful. It isn’t there to correct mistakes; it is necessary for cleaning-up (because pencil smudges so easily). The best type is a putty eraser. These are very soft and can be pinched into points or thin edges to take out tiny dots or thin lines of pencil from your picture, without doing any damage to the paper.

The final bit of equipment you like to use is a fixative spray. This stops the drawing from smudging once it is complete, but can also be used mid-drawing to prevent unwanted smudging. Don’t use hair spray (except on your hair): use a purpose made fixative, and don’t over do it (a light spray is enough).

Portraits by John Burton

About the Author

Portrait artist working mainly from clients’ own photographs.

Drawing with pencils (imagine that..)

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Derwent Pastel

| January 17, 2008 | 0 Comments

Derwent Pastel
Need advice on pastel pencils?

Can anyone out there who uses the media of pastel recommend a good pastel pencil that is soft enough so that it is not difficult to apply? I have a set of Derwent but they are quite hard. I realize they have to be hard enough to sharpen and hold together, but I want to invest in a larger set and don’t know which brands might be a little softer and easier to apply than my Derwents when drawing in small areas and detail.

Hi:

If you check out one source for just about anything related to pastels, Dakota, they have a relative hardness scale for various brands of pastels and pastel pencils – maybe that will help you find a set. I would also check out the sales at Jerry’s Artarama, Art Supply Warehouse because it seems like you might normally get a bit of a better price on items from those sources.

You might try to get a set of Nupastels – these aren’t pencils, but they are one of the harder soft pastels and are fairly inexpensive – ASW has a good sale right now I think until the end of the month on these. A lot of pastel artists use these, and they might help you to lay in color – you can sharpen these pretty easily to a point if you rub the stick against a wire screen or shave it off with a razor. You can save the bits of pastel that are removed and reconstitute them into a pastel stick if you add a few drops of distilled water – you can mix the extra pastel dust into a clay-like paste, and form it into sticks and lay it on old newprint to dry. Just be careful breathing in the dust – you may want to use a dust mask and gloves if you try to reconstitute pastels.

Normally, most pastellists I know use pastel pencils to render details, and use regular stick pastels for the majority of painting work.

You may want to check out the wonderful online artist community wetcanvas. Basic membership is free, and there is a pastel forum you might be interested in. There are currently more than 100,000 worldwide members, and it is one of my favorite websites.

Hope this helps and gives you some information.

Serena Costantino in Pastels (DreamPiano)

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