How to sharpen a pencil
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- LAGtheNoggin
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Listen to Jen, for she knoooooows!
It's easier and quicker to repoint again and again if there's lots of lead exposed. And repointing is awesome.
Uhh... Oh yeah, I had a question. Jen, when did you learn to carve a pencil like that? I'm disappointed I was never taught it at school (to be honest, despite the teachers' insistence on sharp pencils, I'm pretty sure none of them knew this method) and none of my art associates knew either, they all used mechanicals. Plus it's not taught in any modern drawing book I've seen. Where hath the knowledge gone I wonder...
It's easier and quicker to repoint again and again if there's lots of lead exposed. And repointing is awesome.
Uhh... Oh yeah, I had a question. Jen, when did you learn to carve a pencil like that? I'm disappointed I was never taught it at school (to be honest, despite the teachers' insistence on sharp pencils, I'm pretty sure none of them knew this method) and none of my art associates knew either, they all used mechanicals. Plus it's not taught in any modern drawing book I've seen. Where hath the knowledge gone I wonder...
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To sharpen a mechanical pencil: Get a piece of scrap paper, and scribble on it at an angle. Turn pencil, do again. Turn pencil do again.
To shade with a mechanical pencil: get a piece of scrap paper, and scribble on it at an angle. Then shade using the flat graphite you now have.
... Ok, I'm no expert artist, so maybe I'm wrong, but I thought these two solutions were pretty obvious? I've made a MEAN sharp tip on a mechanical pencil and a broad flat shading edge on a mechanical pencil in these ways.
To shade with a mechanical pencil: get a piece of scrap paper, and scribble on it at an angle. Then shade using the flat graphite you now have.
... Ok, I'm no expert artist, so maybe I'm wrong, but I thought these two solutions were pretty obvious? I've made a MEAN sharp tip on a mechanical pencil and a broad flat shading edge on a mechanical pencil in these ways.
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I learned when I took this art class at some community college one summer. My teacher was really good, and did illustration on the side. He was schooled at Art Center in Pasadena CA, and teached at Otis School of Design in addition to the community college.LAGtheNoggin wrote:Listen to Jen, for she knoooooows!
It's easier and quicker to repoint again and again if there's lots of lead exposed. And repointing is awesome.
Uhh... Oh yeah, I had a question. Jen, when did you learn to carve a pencil like that? I'm disappointed I was never taught it at school (to be honest, despite the teachers' insistence on sharp pencils, I'm pretty sure none of them knew this method) and none of my art associates knew either, they all used mechanicals. Plus it's not taught in any modern drawing book I've seen. Where hath the knowledge gone I wonder...
You have to get used to this sharpening technique (esp if you're sharpening a charcoal pencil), b/c it's really easy to slip and break the lead.
If you're doing a nice sketch that requires realistic shading, I'm against using mechanical pencils. When I was taking that art class (the only one I've ever enrolled in unfortunately), I learned that sketching is a lot like painting in that you have to work in layers. Start with the hardest leads and move on to the lightest, and thus darker, leads. Whenever I did a full blown sketch, I always had 4-5 different pencils of varying weight ready.
- LAGtheNoggin
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Thanks! I though that might be the case...
>.>
<.<
No doubt your tutorial will draw quite a crowd. I'm sure you'll have people lead in the right direction.
*hangs self*
Agh! AGH! TO THE GALLOWS WITH YOU!mcDuffies wrote:Hey. One more point for my incoming "tips" tutorial.
>.>
<.<
No doubt your tutorial will draw quite a crowd. I'm sure you'll have people lead in the right direction.
*hangs self*
Last edited by LAGtheNoggin on Fri May 20, 2005 6:34 am, edited 1 time in total.
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I've done that with wood pencils too, when I was too lazy to go to the pencil sharpener/too lazy to clean out the pencil sharpener/didn't want to get yelled at for sharpening my pencil during a teacher's lecture. Of course, it only works a little bit on those bigger leads, but it's better than having a tip that's nearly two millimeters wide.rkolter wrote:To sharpen a mechanical pencil: Get a piece of scrap paper, and scribble on it at an angle. Turn pencil, do again. Turn pencil do again.
And as far as lead breakage, sometimes my lead is broken before I even draw anything. But, then again, I've also got a fairly nasty pencil-chewing habit.
