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Pencil Portraits Artist Techniques, Tips, Advice and Information During my exhibitions with the West Gloucestershire Art Society and via commissions, a great many people have enquired about portraits in pencil techniques both colour and graphite so here are a few details, tips and pieces of information which may help when trying to find the most suitable medium of choice.Unfortunately I am not multi-medium talented as some other artists are, some can flit between oils, watercolours, pastels and a few also use pencils, although it is relatively uncommon. Some artists choose to use only one medium and find they enjoy it so stick with that. I made my choice completely by accident, I did Art at school and College and although I could paint, I did not really enjoy the looseness of it, however on using graphite pencils my eyes were opened and for 10 years I used nothing else. I produced a pet portrait for my Dad every Christmas, birthday and Father's Day for nearly every year, usually of his current working spaniel or game birds (he has a large collection now which are still hung at home covering all my Mum's walls!!!). However, one Christmas I decided to go for broke after buying some Derwent colour pencils and tried them out, of course his portrait was of his two spaniels, Brodie and Charlie, and low and behold it worked out well. Since that day I've never looked back. The Pencil Portrait Drawing Process... I begin both graphite portraits and colour portraits the same way, by sketching in the outline and basic shapes with a 2H pencil as this is a slightly hard pencil giving good clear lines but does not leave too dark a line on the portrait. I draw a rough boundary to accommodate the size of portrait a client wants to prevent the portrait becoming too small or big. I stare intently at the reference image which must suitable (see portraits in pencils photo tips), looking closely at the shading and colours. I draw my outline by shape, I do not do any shading at all during this stage. I block areas of dark and light shades and colours so my basic outline looks similar to a ‘paint by numbers’ board. I find this easier as it helps me keep everything in proportion. I work up to my boundary, as my sizes are for the portrait size, not the finished framed item (all sizes are approximate) This stage can take up to about 6 hours and although my portrait looks like a mass of squiggles and pencil lines at this stage, I can ensure everything is placed on the portrait where I want it. This to me is the most important part of my portrait process as this has to be correct before any filling in can be started. I sometimes put a mount onto the page at this point just to double check everything is in place and if so I continue onto the next stage. Filling in Portraits in Pencil... Continuing around the eye areas, pencils enable the direction of fur to be detailed as such that it looks real, this is what I find most satisfying about pencil portraits, the realistic quality they give. I then work my way across the portrait from right to left, as I have explained before, I am left handed so this is the most logical way for me to work, it prevents my arm smudging across pencils but allows me to see all completed areas so I know I am working correctly. Once I have ‘finished ‘ the main part of the portrait, I will go back to put in additional highlights, lowlights and shading to give a more 3d effect. This is when things start to look more like the reference image. If I have an animal with a particularly shiny coat I will also burnish the pencils (colour pencil portraits from photos only) which involves either using a white, light blue or burning pencil to go over the top layers in certain areas, this assists with the blending and adds a sheen to the surface and when it catches the light it almost shimmers looking very real. This is my favourite part of a portrait as I really feel as though progress has been made at this point. With a graphite pencil portrait the same basic techniques apply, sometimes I will use a blender to smooth small areas of graphite pencils, this also gives the appearance of a sheen which is good for fur that is particularly shiny. I use a retractable pencil in 2B for most works as this always gives a good point which is essential for good quality portraits, for colour pencils I always have a pencil sharpener to hand.Once I am satisfied with the subject I begin work on the background. Portraits from Photos backgrounds... |
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