6.3.1 Mark making with pens
Pens used:
- fountain pens and a sketching pen (Rotring Art Pen F)
- dip pens with a metal nib and a glass nib
- markers: Pitt Artist Pen, Stabilo point 88, a ballpoint pen (blue)
- Rotring rapidograph
- biro
Inks and colours:
- water soluble inks in the fountain pens
- Schmincke acrylic ink in primary colours
- walnut stain
- shellac ink, black and bistre
- watercolour
Marks:
First I used my pens and inks on universal cartridge paper, 160 g/square meter, in boxes made with the template from Module 4.
The scans with the drawings are on the left, the washes on the right.
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P 1: The Art Pen leaves a very strong line (below left). | Washing over it gives a dramatic effect. The washes are done with walnut stain (brownish) and acrylic ink in yellow and red, partly layered.
The water washes are in the middle.
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P 2: Usually I find felt tips too scratchy, but the Pitt Artist Pen is very smooth and lovely to draw with.
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| P 3a: I like the muted, even dirty shades here. The shellac ink is not entirely waterproof.
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P 4: The stippling below right reminds of signs on maps for wood and moorland.
| P 4a: Bistre and walnut stain give a very similar colour. The orange wash is watercolour. |
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P 7: Upper row right: the grid is also a kind of cross hatch – a very regular one.
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In between I scribbled on thick cartridge paper I had used as a desk cover.
P 9 is Pitt Artist Pen over thick blobs of acrylic.
P 11 is Rapidograph over a wash, P 10 is shellac ink drawn with a metal nib. |
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P 17: In the left box I used the walnut stain as ink with the metal nib and the newly bought black Pitt Artist pen on the right. | The lower boxes are waiting to be filled. |
P 14 and 15, below: Samples on brown Kraft paper. | The colours turn out even more muted and warmer than on the white paper. |
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P 16 and 16a: This sample is done on pages from an engineer’s sketchbook, from around 1910. The paper is a little stronger than ordinary copy paper. | It is slightly discoloured but has kept well. I like it a lot for its aged quality, and I love the old writing and the swirls the engineer put in between his numbers. The paper is not too thick, so I have to go easy on the washes. |
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This was fun! I feel I started a collection of reference material. This activity also seems to loosen the hand as a warm up for drawing. So I hope the weather improves enough for me to be able to draw outside around the garden shed.