Working on a new ink drawing, A3 size!

I really enjoyed doing the (now sold) ink drawing I called ‘House by the Lake’. I’ve now started a v2.0 of said drawing using A3 watercolour paper and a 0.1 Liner pen. It’s going slowly, but surely:

Although I have to admit, I’m dreading that big tree on the left and the dark background. It’s taken about 3hrs of drawing to do what you see above! I love ink sketches like this, but sometimes I just don’t have the patience for it!  :D

Watercolour pencils – the best of both worlds

Aquatone watercolour pencils

Derwent Aquatone watercolour pencils

Yes, I know ‘watercolour pencils’ seems impossible, but so did ‘drawing with an eraser‘ and it worked!

If you use watercolour, you’ll know that when it comes from a tube it will harden to a solid state but still be reusable when made wet. Watercolour pencils work in the same way, instead of using graphite, they use a solid core of watercolour which can be used, in this case, like you would with a normal coloured pencil. The main difference here is that when you wet the pencil drawing, the ‘graphite’ will dissolve leaving you with watercolour.

Here’s a quick example I sketched this up just last night using my Aquatone pencils (click here for a quick report on them and the Derwent Inktense pencils), it’s part landscape, part abstract (hence the odd colours):

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Drawing… with an eraser?

a Kneadable/Putty Eraser

a Kneadable/Putty Eraser

Drawing with an eraser may sound like an oxymoron, but it is possible.

In the drawing below, Allosaurus, I’ve used smeared graphite for a background then added more smeared graphite to the subject to create the shadow areas, the residue graphite that is still on the cloth is then rubbed in to the mid-tone areas. Any areas that need to be highlights are ‘drawn’ with the putty eraser (more on kneadable/putty erasers here), effetively removing the mid/dark-tone graphite.

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Kneadable (putty) eraser, or plastic eraser. Is there a difference?

An ordinary plastic eraser

An ordinary plastic eraser

I’m sure there are many times when you’ve been drawing/sketching and had to erase a large area, or even redo an piece several times. All that rubbing and blowing off the pieces of eraser that are in your way… not the most pleasant of tasks.

Plastic erasers, while they do the job, can seriously damage the surface you’re drawing on as they are quite stiff. They also disintegrate as you use them leaving all those tiny bits of eraser on the page.

There has to be a better way… and there is!

a Kneadable/Putty Eraser

a Kneadable/Putty Eraser

A kneadable (or putty) eraser is the exact opposite of a plastic eraser – it’s flexible and doesn’t disintegrate, nor does it damage your drawing surface.

The idea behind the putty rubber is quite simple, think of it as being a soft, pliable, eraser, similar in texture to Blu-Tac, that you can shape. This means that not only can you erase large areas, and nothing will break off, but you can shape the putty to be more precise in what you’re erasing.

You can even ‘draw’ with the putty eraser by removing pencil to create negative shapes, but I’ll write a separate article on that.

To continue using the putty rubber, you simply stretch and manipulate it until you have a clean piece to work with, which won’t last forever as eventually you’ll have a black putty eraser with no clean parts!

At that point you have to erase it, and buy a new one…

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