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Here’s a drawing that I found beyond the edges of the original. I tiled more drawing board around the original in a moment of creative juiciness, and the rest of the story appeared.
To meet my criteria of a “beyond the edge” drawing, which I’m making up as I write, I have to approve of each tile as it looks alone, and also how it looks combined with the other tiles.
The Particulars
I began the drawing with the upper left tile, added three more pieces of drawing board (Strathmore 500 Bristol Board Vellum), and that’s when I discovered that I was drawing pears that appear to be wrapped in paper, perhaps as if they’re in a gift box.
There isn’t any deep meaning in this drawing. I just like pear shapes. They’re cute, with their pointy tops and round bottoms. Also, I’d like to take a bite out of one. Yummy!
This drawing could simply be the result of hunger. C’est la vie!
The nitty gritty with a twist.
The surfaces of the pears look relatively smooth on this medium textured board, but I didn’t use a blender tool. I don’t have anything against using blenders, I just didn’t want to smudge the beautiful texture of graphite on this vellum bristol board.
I’ve come to appreciate paper textures, even rough ones, when they are hatched with a smooth technique. A slightly rough paper texture can sharpen the look of a hatch because the eye can focus on it, unlike with smudging, which blurs the hatch.
Here’s how I draw a smooth looking texture on rough paper.
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This example isn’t “smoothed” and you can see that it looks a little bumpy. There are a few odd lines and other blemishes.
I drew this shape with a dark 2B hatch around the edge. Then I filled the center with HB and 2H while blending in the edge by hatching over that area again.
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The smooth looking shape on the left has the light spots darkened, and the dark spots lightened.
First, I pinched a kneaded eraser into a tiny point and “tapped” out the dark lines and spots in the lighter part of the shape. Then I carefully filled them back in with a hard sharp lead (2H) until they disappeared into the surrounding area. I used a softer lead (HB) to fill in light spots in the darker hatching.
That’s my process for making a smooth looking hatched surface on a roughly textured paper. It’s just plain old pencil to the paper technique, with lots of practice.
Keep drawing everyone!
Carol