Well, I have to say that I had the most pleasant morning. I've been meaning to visit the museum for several weeks, but it's only open on a Sunday and this year it's moved premises. Never mind. I had a really nice chat with David, the chap who was on the desk when I arrived, made sure that he didn't mind me making a sketch, and then got on with it. There wasn't anywhere to sit down, so I made this one standing up. This is one of a very few single decker buses in the museum - it was made for use in Llanelli, to fit under bridges in the docks. I showed it to David, and he was extremely complimentary - asked me to be the first person to sign the brand new visitors' book, and took a photo of me holding my sketch for the Museum's newsletter. How nice was that?
Faithful iron horse
In peaceful retirement
Her dreams are of diesel
And the hot, sticky tarmac
Of summer dock roads.
Experiences of an urban sketcher based in South Wales - does exactly what it says on the tin. All images in this blog are copyright, and may not be used or reproduced without my permission. If you'd like an original, a print, or to use them in some other fashion, then email me at londinius@yahoo.co.uk.
Sunday, 29 April 2018
Saturday, 28 April 2018
One Sketch #34) Chapter Arts Centre, Canton, Cardiff.
We of the Urban Sketchers South Wales group haven't had a group sketchcrawl yet this month. So I posted a couple of days ago to ask if anyone else in the group fancied meeting up today for a sketching session. Clara, the group organiser and I decided upon the Chapter Arts Centre in Cardiff, which I'd never actually been to before.
Here's the two pages from my sketchbook:-
The top page shows a father and son I sketched, the counter, and my coffee cup and a box of sauce bottled on my table. Below there are three head and shoulders figures I sketched, along with part of the exterior of the centre. I was working in my sketchbook, which doesn't take watercolour very well, and I have to be honest, I just wasn't in a watercolour mood today.
So many Saturdays
Mine is sketching,
His is a cappuccino and Facebook.
Hers, cod, peas, chips
And staccato gossip.
Here's the two pages from my sketchbook:-
The top page shows a father and son I sketched, the counter, and my coffee cup and a box of sauce bottled on my table. Below there are three head and shoulders figures I sketched, along with part of the exterior of the centre. I was working in my sketchbook, which doesn't take watercolour very well, and I have to be honest, I just wasn't in a watercolour mood today.
So many Saturdays
Mine is sketching,
His is a cappuccino and Facebook.
Hers, cod, peas, chips
And staccato gossip.
One Sketch #33) Old London Underground District Line Train
You know, I'm not really sure what prompted the rush of nostalgia yesterday which prompted me to make this sketch of an old District Line London Underground Railway train. Whatever it was, this is partly how I remember London Underground trains - big, boxy red District line trains. I grew up in Ealing, at one end of the District Line, and I've always loved the Tube, representing, as it did, the thing that was going to take me into the centre of the city, where interesting things like the Science Museum and Natural History Museum awaited.
I can still feel it
The sheer excitement
Of rumbling through Hades.
Tartarus and Elysium
Looked much the same
As we snaked through
Plague Pits
And Roman ordure
And surface within yards
Of spacecraft
And dinosaurs.
I can still feel it
The sheer excitement
Of rumbling through Hades.
Tartarus and Elysium
Looked much the same
As we snaked through
Plague Pits
And Roman ordure
And surface within yards
Of spacecraft
And dinosaurs.
Thursday, 26 April 2018
Tip: Shading to make your ink sketches zing
Last weekend I wrote about making
straight lines in an urban sketch. With good reason, since, in my opinion, if
you can make a straight line, and you can make a curved line, then you can make
a sketch.
Okay, it sounds simple when I say it
like that, but I can’t stress to you enough that the more you practice looking,
measuring distances with your eye and translating these distances onto the
piece of paper in front of you, then the easier and more natural it becomes.
So once you’ve got the lines, what’s
important then? This brings me to shading.
Now, the fact is that not every
sketch you’ll make needs a huge amount of shading. For example, this sketch I
made in Kaunas:
Which does have a minimal amount of
shading, and this sketch I made in the Tramvaj Café in Wenceslaus Square in
Prague:
Both of them have very small amounts
of shading, because I didn’t feel at that time that I made them, that either
sketch needed any more.
On the whole, though, you’ll want to use
a greater or lesser amount of shading in many of your sketches. Done effectively,
shading gives tone, and makes your sketches appear more three dimensional,
allowing them to zing off the page. For example:
This was a sketch I made quite recently.
I think that the different amounts of shading on this sketch give a real sense
of the building’s proportions, and help place it within time and space.
Shading with a sketching pen, my
preferred medium, is trickier than shading with, for example, an HB pencil. As
an example I’m going to share three sketches with you, of the same subject –
one which is a simple line drawing without shading, one sketched and shaded
with an HB pencil, and the other sketched and shaded with a sketching pen. The
object is a bust of Julius Caesar.
To make life easier for the purposes
of this demonstration, I worked from a photograph, although normally I far
prefer to sketch from life. Here’s the photograph: -
Here’s the simple line sketch without
shading. I had to take a photo as it simply wouldn’t scan:-
Actually this looks alright like
this. It’s not a perfect likeness, but for a 7 minute sketch, it really isn’t
bad at all. There will be times when you decide that you don’t want or need to
do any shading. This time, however, even though I like the sketch as it is, I
think I can definitely improve it by applying shading. I photocopied the line sketch,
and then I shaded the original in pencil, and the other in pen.
Now here’s the same sketch, shaded in
HB pencil:-
My scanner does not pick up graphite
pencil marks particularly well. Still, even bearing that in mind you can still
see that there are areas of darker and lighter shading on this sketch. Just by
pressing your pencil a little harder you can get darker marks, and a little
less hard you can get fainter marks. Using either a finger, or a paper butt,
you can blend areas of different shading together so you get a smoother
transition from one to another. You can see how the shading marks have added
texture to what was quite a flat sketch to begin with.
Finally the sketch using the ink
sketching pen.
Now, there is nothing wrong with only
sketching in pencil, especially if you think that it shows your work to its
best advantage. However there are reasons why some sketchers prefer to work in
pen – and I’m one of them. For one thing ink pen scans a lot better than
graphite pencil, and so it’s easier to exhibit ink sketches online. Also, I
really like the graphic art quality you can get with an ink sketch.
Now, I wouldn’t claim that this quick
sketch I made using my pen is one of the best things I’ve ever done, but it
does show some of the things you can do to achieve different tones of shading. You
have to think of shading in a different way when you’re using pen. Whether you
press more softly or harder won’t have the same effect that it would with a
graphite pencil, so you have to use lines and ink in a different way to create
variation.
There are four main types of shading
I used on this, but within each of those it is possible to achieve subtle
differences of tone.
The area between the eye on the right
and the eyebrow has been completely shaded in. More very dark areas of shade
like this will create contrast, and give your sketch a striking, graphic
quality, however the more of this one tone of shade you use, the less realistic
your sketch may turn out.
For areas of light shade, I use hatching. This basically means a series of (relatively) straight lines, all slanting in the same direction, making the shape that you want the shade or shadow to be. The wider apart you make each stroke, the lighter the patch of shade will be, so you can see that the shade on the chest of the statue has lines much further apart than the lines on the face.
For areas of light shade, I use hatching. This basically means a series of (relatively) straight lines, all slanting in the same direction, making the shape that you want the shade or shadow to be. The wider apart you make each stroke, the lighter the patch of shade will be, so you can see that the shade on the chest of the statue has lines much further apart than the lines on the face.
To achieve a tone of shade which is
lighter than total shade, but darker than the hatched areas, I use cross
hatching. Basically this means using hatching lines in the way I described in
the last paragraph, then applying another set of lines, this time in the
opposite direction, to the area I want to be darker. You can see this effect on
the lips of the statue, and also beneath the chin on the right.
You can even add another tone of
shade between the cross hatching and the completely dark shading, by adding a
set of vertical or horizontal lines to the cross hatched areas. You can see the
effect of this in the shaded area between nose, left eyebrow, and left eye. As
with hatching, you can achieve lighter or darker areas by making spaces between
lines tighter or looser.
If you combine these 4 ways of
creating areas of shade, then you can create some fairly subtle and appealing
effects, and to my mind, these can be as effective as almost anything you can
achieve with a graphite pencil.
Here’s just a couple from my sketchbook which demonstrate what you can do
with ink – all based on old photographs, since the vehicles they show aren’t
running any more. Look closely and you’ll see areas which I’ve shaded using all
of the methods I wrote about above.
One Sketch #32) My Depression Demon
Right, this little chap needs some
explanation. Last year in 2017 I was diagnosed with clinical depression. It was
a very unhappy time for me, but good medical care, medication and counselling
helped me see my way through. However it’s not a condition I was totally cured
of. I feel that I have a greater understanding of it, and am better able to
deal with it, and that’s a big thing in itself.
Without wishing to bore you with all
the gory details, imagine, if you will, a little demon sitting on your
shoulder, constantly whispering to you all the worst things that you think
about yourself, and doing it in your own voice. Of course I don’t really hear
actual voices – this is just a metaphor – but maybe if you’ve never suffered
from depression it might give you just a little idea what it can be like.
I’ve never felt quite as bad since I
returned to work about a year ago, but I do still have days when I start off feeling
really bad, and I say these are the days that the ‘demon’ is whispering
particularly loudly. I know that usually if I start off a day feeling really
low it does tend to pass by mid-morning, which I believe may be something to do
with hormone levels. So I’m coping. Still, today was a bad day, and I started
off the day feeling very low and empty, and it didn’t get much better for
several hours, which is why I decided to sketch my little demon, if nothing
else, as a way of saying – I know what you are, and today you haven’t manage to
hurt me, so get stuffed! - One day at a time. Doing it one day at a time has
got me almost through a whole year so far.
There is a voice,
That whispers when I'm low
That seeks to drag me further down
I know
That he will go.
My demon of depression.
Chatter on,
Chatter on,
One day you will be gone
One Sketch #31) Three Witches
Yes, there was only time for a very quick sketch yesterday. This was based on a well known oil painting of the three witches from the Scottish Play.
To cut a long story short, I had to quickly go through a synopsis of the play with my Year 9 class, to prepare for watching a broadcast by the RSC on Thursday. My class had done Romeo and Juliet.
Macbeth, when the kingdom he stole
Despite then achieving his goal
He just wasn't happy
His life became crappy,
And died with his head on a pole.
To cut a long story short, I had to quickly go through a synopsis of the play with my Year 9 class, to prepare for watching a broadcast by the RSC on Thursday. My class had done Romeo and Juliet.
Macbeth, when the kingdom he stole
Despite then achieving his goal
He just wasn't happy
His life became crappy,
And died with his head on a pole.
Tuesday, 24 April 2018
#dannygregory One Sketch 30) 7Up bottle
Last week I signed up for Sketchbook Revival. I've just watched the session with Danny Gregory, where he showed us a few of his sketchbooks, and explained his motivation to begin drawing a few years ago. Inspirational. Towards the end Danny drew his teacup, and invited us to try sketching our own. This is my problem. I don't like tea. I love coffee - but - over the last 10 days or so I've really been struggling with my sleep. For the last two days I've tried to stick to the rule 'no caffeine after 12 noon'. It seems to be working to some extent. Hence my substitution of diet 7 Up for my usual coffee or Pepsi Max.
Oh Pepsi Max
I think it's time
To forsake you
For lemon lime.
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