As a professional artist, it is important to keep my work consistent and to meet deadlines. This doesn’t leave much room for experimenting, something that I view as a luxury for hobbyists. Hobbyists can do anything they choose, whatever inspires them, no deadlines, no need for a signature look (called a “voice” in Art Speak).
A number of years ago, a drawing student/friend gave me a super generous gift of some pencils that I had never heard of. “Graphitint” by Derwent are water soluble pencils, described as having “a hint of earthy color”, but are neither graphite nor colored pencils. After making a chart to see what this “hint of earthy color” looked like, I tried a bit of water on the swatches, drew a small picture, decided it was hideous, and just put it all away.
Recently my friend Carrie Lewis asked me to write another article for her digital magazine, Colored Pencil Magic. At first I told her that I had already written everything I knew about colored pencils. Then I remembered my Graphitints, right there in my stack of colored pencil boxes and tins.
I couldn’t very well write an article stating I had tried them ten years ago and then shoved them aside.
So, I decided to learn more about these alien pencils. I chose a photo to work from and started another chart to pick the right colors and get a feel for them.
What alien creatures – soft like 6B graphite, but still different than colored pencils. I thought back to a great drawing teacher I’d had who only let us use 6B pencils, keeping a super sharp point. That gave me the confidence to dive in here. After all, it’s only paper, and I do know how to draw.
It was enjoyable, because I listened to Peggy Rowe read from her book Vacuuming in the Nude and Other Ways to Get Attention, (on her son’s blog “The Way I Heard It”). And it was enjoyable because I love to draw, even with alien pencils.
Enough. Many layers, like colored pencils. Lots of ad libbing, along with severe editing, and this little 5×7″ drawing with alien pencils was finished.
4 Comments
I like the subtle, earthen quality of the colors! They give a more realistic dimensional quality to the landscape than the sharp delineations of brighter hued pencils, without resorting to blurring the lines.
Louise, an insightful and honest evaluation from you, as always. Thank you!
Not being a pencilphile, I didn’t understand much of what you described, but I do love the “Sequoia in the Snow” drawing that resulted from your experimentation!
P.S. I read Peggy’s first book, “About My Mother” and enjoyed it very much. I would imagine her second book with the Most Provocative Title is just as amusing!
Sharon, that is her third book. The second is also excellent: “About Your Father”.
Thank you for loving my alien pencil drawing.
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