![]() It creates interesting texture, and requires a certain amount of looseness and impulsivity. SCUMBLING, also sometimes called “brillo pad technique” is a bit less controlled and more random, and involves using your pen or pencil to make lots of random, squiggly marks to build up areas of shadow. You see it used a lot also in etchings and printmaking. Hatching works well with pen and ink, or with pencil. In the sphere above, for instance, the hatching lines radiate from the highlight, and run longitudinally down the sphere, rather than parallel on the page. Curved hatching can be particularly useful for conveying a rounded object, with the hatch-marks following the curved contour of the object to emphasize form through interior contour – while simultaneously creating shading. These lines are often straight, but can also be curved. HATCHING is the technique of creating shadow with small, thin lines, oriented in a consistent direction. ![]() There are a number of different ways to apply drawn media to a page to create value. In this week’s post, we’re going to focus on shading techniques! Specifically, in how we create marks that build up to areas of shadow. ![]() In Lesson Three, we talked about paying attention to light and shadow in shading forms. ![]()
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