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Author   Topic : "Landscape (pencil)"
Berg
junior member


Member #
Joined: 22 Sep 2000
Posts: 45
Location: Holland

PostPosted: Mon Sep 02, 2002 12:43 pm     Reply with quote
I drew this:



I'm not a regular drawer, but now and then I get those 'rushes', and then I create a couple of something. I'm pretty happy with this one, but I would like to hear what you guys think about it. The original is 13x14 cm, made on slightly thicker-then-normal printer paper with a hb pencil.

I'm not blown away by the composition (it's a bit neutral, not interesting). I'm not really satisfied with the distribution of the tones either (lower part of tree is the darkest spot on the pic, which feels wrong).

I'm also looking for some tips/hints on pencil rendering-techniques (don't really know what I expect to hear though - use of different types of pencils/paper, but also types of strokes - things like that)

Thanks for your time and interest,

Berg
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Gecko
member


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Joined: 07 Mar 2000
Posts: 876
Location: Finland

PostPosted: Mon Sep 02, 2002 1:11 pm     Reply with quote
i think you can go a very long way by drawing these small things by sitting down outside and picking some object to copy from life.
squinting your eyes or looking a little cross-eyed so everything goes blurry will help you find the darkest and lightest spots. you can also try to go very high contrast with your drawings, concentrate on contour or just think about masses and go wild with the pencil (you might wanna get softer and harder ones, too). a 100 pages of these fast sketches will already show a lot of progress, i can guarantee that.

this picture you posted looks like you're a little afraid to really put the shadows in there. throw your eraser away and go for it.
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Berg
junior member


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Joined: 22 Sep 2000
Posts: 45
Location: Holland

PostPosted: Mon Sep 02, 2002 1:40 pm     Reply with quote
Thanks for your reply, what you said was very usefull to me! I will certainly try what you suggested. I only wish 'outside' looks like that where I live

Ahh well - no serious complaints though - what I have within walking distance is beautifull enough

Berg
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Gecko
member


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Joined: 07 Mar 2000
Posts: 876
Location: Finland

PostPosted: Mon Sep 02, 2002 2:15 pm     Reply with quote
one more thing:
you said you haven't drawn a lot before, so don't get upset even if you can't bring yourself to draw 5-10 pages in one sitting. do as much as you can, but stop when it becomes unpleasant. you'll build a routine over time and can find yourself drawing or painting for hours... or over a night.

another useful thing is to limit your time, like give some sketches just 1 minute, or 30 seconds, and study some things for hours. these will help different sides of your drawings, you'll learn to control the whole but drawing in detail becomes familiar, too.
the more you do this, the more convincingly you can pull it off from your head later, too.

g'luck.
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Hyptosis
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Joined: 24 Jan 2002
Posts: 507

PostPosted: Tue Sep 03, 2002 3:09 am     Reply with quote
landscapes can be such whores, good job imo, simple, but effective.
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malakyte
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Joined: 04 Mar 2002
Posts: 54
Location: Waterloo, Ontario

PostPosted: Tue Sep 03, 2002 7:02 am     Reply with quote
Hyptosis: LOL!

Gecko:

Still trying to do 20 drawings/paintings a day...when you say do 1 minute sketches, would u suggest doing that for paintings too? like 5 mins say? or what? I've been doing sketchy paintings a lot lately, usually though, i spend an hour on them ...heh, and they are still pretty sketchy! I guess I'm just wondering should I just do shorter ones to get more under my belt in this (beginning stage) of learning to paint?
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Gecko
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Joined: 07 Mar 2000
Posts: 876
Location: Finland

PostPosted: Tue Sep 03, 2002 9:26 am     Reply with quote
malakyte: the point is, don't get stuck in any way of drawing/painting. excersice speed, do color studies, study detail. do it small, big, quick, carefully. 5 min small painting sketches sound good to me, you have to select what you're going to put on the canvas.
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Berg
junior member


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Joined: 22 Sep 2000
Posts: 45
Location: Holland

PostPosted: Tue Sep 03, 2002 12:37 pm     Reply with quote
Thanks again, gecko! I understand what you are saying and I will put it into practice

Thanks Hyptosis, I appreciate that!

Berg
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faeklone
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Joined: 03 Apr 2002
Posts: 215
Location: Calgary

PostPosted: Wed Sep 04, 2002 9:32 pm     Reply with quote
Well, the only advice that I'd give to you is that you may end up being more plaesed with it if you push the values to their limits. Get a darker pencil and make the blacks black and the whites white, and still have all the shades in between. It should really make your composition pop out alot more.
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Ian Jones
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Joined: 01 Oct 2001
Posts: 1114
Location: Brisbane, QLD, Australia.

PostPosted: Thu Sep 05, 2002 6:16 am     Reply with quote
Charming little pic. Cool rendering on the tree leaves.

Gecko: Great advice! thx...
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NeoFun
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Joined: 12 Oct 2000
Posts: 263
Location: California

PostPosted: Thu Sep 05, 2002 12:15 pm     Reply with quote
Your lines look great. The landscape has a personality of its own.
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J-D Leon
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Joined: 02 Jun 2001
Posts: 176
Location: canada

PostPosted: Thu Sep 05, 2002 1:36 pm     Reply with quote
i love it!!!

thats my second favor thing to draw..!! landscape
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Berg
junior member


Member #
Joined: 22 Sep 2000
Posts: 45
Location: Holland

PostPosted: Thu Sep 05, 2002 1:59 pm     Reply with quote
wow guys!

Faeklone: the 'real' piece is a bit more contrasted, but you must be right. I am planning to use softer pencils for darker parts from now on (right?). Is it an idea to use a slightly grey or sepia-shaded paper and white pencil? I should experminent, I think

Ian Jones: Glad you like it! I looked a long time at a tree I could see from my window thinking about a proper way to render the leaves!

NeoFun: You made me blush in front of my computer

JD Leon, thanks you too

You guys really inspire me to draw more! Very kind, all of you. Now it's time for me to practice, I will post if I make progress.

Berg
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