Again, from my sketchbook, this time using Staedtler’s Mars Lumograph Aquarelle pencils. This was so much fun to draw! It is based on an image by 👀 Mabel Amber, who will one day from Pixabay.

Again, from my sketchbook, this time using Staedtler’s Mars Lumograph Aquarelle pencils. This was so much fun to draw! It is based on an image by 👀 Mabel Amber, who will one day from Pixabay.

This sketch of a rose is based on an image by InspiredImages from Pixabay.

Just practice, a sketch in graphite, from my sketchbook.

I didn’t have time to paint today, but I did complete two figures in pencil. The sketch of a torso and legs is from a new drawing book I just bought: How to Draw People by Erik Barrett.


I’m taking an online class (more precisely, watching streaming demos online) by Peggi Kroll-Roberts who is particularly known for her beach photos of human figures. The class is about value structures to show the form of the human figure: the lights and darks.
Effectively, this is a notan. You start with 2 values and then move to 2 darks, 1 light or 2 lights, 1 dark. And then you move to color.
My next step here would be to paint in black and white, then to move to 3 values, and finally to color — using colors mapped to the values.
In fact, Laurel Hart, in her 2007 book Putting People in your Paintings (on p. 23) even suggests you even go ahead and paint over your penciled-in shadows if you prefer. You can erase the pencil later.






Here’s a few pages from my sketchbook where I was drawing gestural human figures, with the object of maintaining proportions but not focusing on detail. Getting the gist, I guess.

