I have always loved tonal drawings. Leonardo's sfumato is something that I hope, one day, to be able to achieve in my own drawings. With this in mind, I picked up a block of olive green Derwent XL graphite to see what it could do. I liked it so much with the pear subject that I think I will go back and get the rest of the colors!
It is hard to show in a reduced size picture what this looks like in person. It's very moody, very smoky. I like it a lot!
Here is another set of testing. Quite a boring page, but I'm including it because it shows some of the playing around with materials that I do before I settle on a way of working. On the left, I drew a block of green, and sprayed it with water. It didn't budge, so I then dropped water on in large droplets. Nah. Didn't work. Then, I tried a color block with drops of isopropyl alcohol- something I use frequently in my watercolor and acrylic paintings. Still no movement, so that was abandoned. Then, I dipped a brush in water and dragged it over the block and attempted to paint with it. It was hard to get anything to show up- quite unlike my watersoluble graphite pencils. I abandoned this idea, too.
I think I liked the graphite block best for the still life of the pear. But I really, really liked it for that!!! I am going to try a few more experiments with different papers. I think I also preferred the sketch paper I used for the pear to the drawing paper used for the landscape.
I'll be posting more testing throughout the month of January. Thank you for reading, and stay warm!
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