Wednesday, August 8, 2007

More Doodling






More exercises from Bert Dodson Keys to Creative Drawing. I'm addicted. My Micron pen ran out of ink last night.

I've printed copies of these to color. Stay tuned.

Sunday, August 5, 2007

EDM #117 - Something Round (ish)


One of the exercises in The Creative License (by Danny Gregory) is to draw a bagel. Not just the way you think it is, but really look at it and pretend your pen is following the surface of the bagel. Include onion flecks and seeds and whatever else is there. He said not to just start dotting randomly all over, but to really draw the things they way they are and where they are. I had to laugh because I would have just dotted all over the place if he hadn't said not to.
It's not a perfectly round bagel, but it does have rounded edges so here it is.
In spite of the fact that a micron pen doesn't really do light lines, I'm pretty pleased with it. And I get to have a bagel for breakfast tomorrow to boot.

EDM #26 Draw whatever you want (or a veggie)







I got several books for my birthday and decided to read 2 of them at once: The Creative License by Danny Gregory and Keys to Drawing with Imagination by Bert Dodson. Both books have exercises in them so I'm alternating between the two.
These are from the Bert Dodson book: Make 6 random doodles then noodle the interiors any way you want.
All these were done with a micron pen. They took forever but I love doodling and so I didn't mind. My hand sure is tired though.




Sunday, June 3, 2007

EDM 17 & 36 Part 2 - drawing in public and instruments



Piano lid prop, sax mouthpiece cover, cymbals. Two versions.



An alto sax and a tenor sax.

Saxophones are hard to draw.

Black Micron .01 pen in itty bitty book.

EDM 36 & 17 Drawing instruments in public

Back of folding chair.


Side of bass and papier mache cheshire cat. Never finished the cat - the trumpet player kept standing in front of it. I love that cat.

Bass (with hole from falling sculpture).

Bottom of bass.

Side of bass.

Done with a micron .01 black pen in a 2-1/2" x 4" travel sketchbook at a jazz jam session.

It seems as though small paper is more inspiring than large paper. Large being 9" x 12".