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HOME MATERIALS GRIDDING BLEND & SHADE THE EYES THE HAIR STEP THROUGH DEMO MAKING A TORTILLON

 
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MY PROGRESS Pencil


I bought Lee Hammond's book in September 1996.
I took it home, read the first chapters on materials, gridding, shading and blending and then, using what materials I had, drew my first portrait of John, a family friend, onto a sheet of copy paper using an ordinary wooden 2B pencil.

Okay, so it's a bit messy, and you can still see the initial gridding in places... but apart from my recent watercolour attempts I hadn't really used a pencil since my school days, 35 years earlier, so the drawing above astounded me on completion... I could actually recognise John.
At the time, I assumed that was as good as it got...


Your first attempt may be a lot better or a lot worse, it doesn't matter... believe me, you will improve.
John 1

Convinced that Lees gridding and blending technique actually worked, I drove into town the following morning, purchased the recommended bristol board, a 0.5 mechanical pencil loaded with 2B lead and a variety of erasures.
This is my second attempt, it took me about 3 evenings to complete and as you can see it was a vast improvement on the first with more detail in the clothing... hair that actually looks like hair instead of straw thatching and a little more contrast between tones
.
I even attempted the folds and shadows on the shirt using Lee's chapter on drawing clothing, quite effectively for a first attempt, I thought!
...
John 2

Until... ( impressed huh?!!)

Several weeks later and after having read and practiced most of the techniques in Lee's book I produced this drawing... it still took me about 3 evenings to complete but notice all the little extras that I've started to 'see' :

Reflected light on the jawbone beneath the ear.
Hairline blended onto forehead to eliminate toupe look.
Stronger tones giving better contrast.
Smoother blending.
More attention to detail... things that I simply never saw earlier.
And (notice the date... still '96)
From a non-drawer to portrait artist in a matter of weeks. Compare this picture to the first one...
And believe me... nobody was more surprised than I was!
John 3

Over the next eighteen months or so, I became so busy drawing portraits of relatives, friends, friends' families etc. that my skills and speed improved dramatically. I also made quite a lot of money during this period which was a bonus because I'd never actually considered that aspect of it!
The drawing of Norman Wisdom, took me between 5 - 8 hours (over a three day period) and I actually had a photographed copy of it signed by Norman himself. I now keep the photograph and a very nice letter I received from him, framed above my desk.