Complete Artist’s Manual: The Definitive Guide to Materials and Techniques for Painting and Drawing. Simon Jennings
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Chinese brushes
Chinese bamboo-handle brushes, which were originally designed as a writing tool, are versatile, inexpensive and extremely expressive. The belly holds a lot of ink, and comes to a fine point for drawing rhythmic, flowing lines.
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MARKERS AND FIBRE-TIP PENS | Though normally associated with the graphic designer’s studio, pens with felt, fibre or plastic tips are now widely used by fine artists as well. |
Versatility
Markers are ideal for on-the-spot sketching, giving a rapid impression of form, colour and atmosphere.
The large range of markers and fibre-tip pens available makes them extremely useful for rendering both free, spontaneous sketches and sophisticated, detailed drawings. Coloured markers are especially convenient for outdoor sketching, because the colours are consistent and ready to use, and dry almost instantly.
Colour permanence
Markers come in many colours, with intensity and permanence varying according to brand. Since marker colours consist of dyes and not pigments, they tend to fade in time or when exposed to strong sunlight. This doesn’t matter for rough sketches, but for permanent artwork, make sure you buy a lightfast brand.
Gigol Atler
Sketchbooks
Various markers on paper
15 × 10cm (6 × 4in)
Water, spirits and alcohol
Solvent-based waterproof markers
Water-based soluble markers
Ordinary paper
Bleed-proof paper
Some markers contain water-based ink and are water-soluble; others contain spirit- or alcohol-based inks and are waterproof when dry. If you want to overlay colours, choose solvent-based markers, which are easily distinguished from water-based markers by their smell (alcohol-based ink has less odour than spirits). On a sketch pad, the colours may bleed through onto the next page, but you can buy marker pads in which the paper is formulated to resist colour bleeding.
Marker tips
Fibre-tip markers are fairly firm and smooth-flowing, and come with tips of all shapes and in most sizes.
Plastic-tip markers are hard and durable. Their tips make the finest lines.
Brush pens have resin tips. They are quite flexible and ideal for sketches and colour washes.
Roller pens are extremely tough, keeping their shape well. They produce a smooth, fine line.
These range from soft felt to hard tung sten car bide. Softer tips make smoother lines; hard ones keep their shape longer.
Tip shapes
Wedge-shape tips cover solid areas well. Drawing with the thin edge will produce fairly fine lines.
Bullet-shape tips are appropriate for bold strokes and solid areas, as well as dots suitable for stippling.
Fine-point tips are similar to technical pens, in that they produce even, fine lines.
Coloured-marker tips vary from broad wedges to fine points.
ACCESSORIES | One of the best things about drawing media is that you will require very few accessories. The drawing aids described here are all inexpensive and easily purchased in specialist art shops. |
Erasers
Plastic or putty erasers are best, as India rubber tends to smear and can damage the paper surface. Putty erasers are very malleable; they can be broken off into smaller pieces and rolled to a point to reach details. You can also press the putty eraser onto the paper and lift off unwanted marks by pulling it away. Use it on soft graphite, charcoal or pastel drawings, both to erase and to create highlights.
Paper stumps
Paper stumps, also called torchons, are used for blending or shading charcoal, pastel or soft-graphite drawings. They are made of tightly rolled paper, with tapered ends for working on large areas, or a sharp point for small details.
Knives and sharpeners
You will need a sharp craft knife or penknife for sharpening pencils and cutting paper. Knives or other