Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Inked Up

Today’s sketch is my recent fountain pen ink bottle and box. I wanted a subject to work on perspective and depth with both the square and round shapes. Still working on that bottle top shape – still too round.

The good news is that my images are not leaning as much as earlier as I focus on the landmarks and perspective. Making progress.

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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Self Portrait

So I have some work to do on my realistic sketching skills.  Interesting how this benchmark sketch, along with my hand and person from memory, indicates where my drawing skills currently are.

This self-portrait is a data point, not a criticism of where my skills are currently.  I am only concerned with improving against myself, not comparing myself to others.

I’m the only one on my journey.

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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Woman’s Face

I am starting the lessons and sketches in Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain by Betty Edwards. I have the cooresponding workbook on order.

This book goes well beyond drawing skills.  It shows how building your drawing skills bleeds over into many other areas of your life.

 The three baseline sketches are a person from memory, your hand, and a self-portrait.  Those to come the next two days.

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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

The Bike

Interesting how difficult it is to describe or draw something from memory.  We have seen thousands of bikes, but sketching a bike from memory is complex.  Remembering all the essential details is hard.  This is true for many things we try and do from memory. 

Today’s sketch is a simple bike – from memory.  I really had a hard time getting the details – how does the down tube look, do I have brakes, how about the derailleurs….  And I raced bikes. 

Another good exercise in slowing down and working through the details, something we can all do; sketching or not.

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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Star Wars

I am working on using my pen and thumb to measure perspective. Use your pen or thumb to help sketch a 3-dimensional image onto a 2-dimensional media. Holding your arm against your body, you can see down your pen or thumb to gauge how key landmarks line up together—another skill to learn on my sketching journey.

The simplicity of one pen on a sheet of paper has been great. No decisions or angst over pens, colors, paper vs. sketchbooks; pull out my pen and pad and draw.

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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

College Bound

 Today’s drawing was a bit of a final.  I use all the ideas, skills, and techniques I have learned over the past thirty videos to sketch a complex scene.  Not perfect, but I’m improving and enjoying the process. 

 

Focus on the process, not the outcome, is vital for any skill like drawing.  I am enjoying the process, and that builds on the craft.  I am always happier when I focus on process over outcome.  It stops me from comparing myself unnecessarily with others.

 

As I continue this Art 365 project, I will move into the drills and learnings from Betty Edwards’ book Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain. 

 

It is a journey!

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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Squares

Another way to trick your left brain to stop telling you, you can’t create art is to draw in squares. Today’s exercise broke sketching down into bite-size chunks. I drew twelve drawings. Even though they are small, I practiced observing, looking for contours, and determining what could fit in the box. Finally, I went through twelve drawings. 

 And the exciting part is that they look good when they are all on one page. Another tip to break down sketching. 

 Thanks to the Sketchbook Skool art class

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Art John Hayes Art John Hayes

Shoe Map

This exercise focused on breaking down you’re drawing into seeing your subject’s contour. I just focused on the edges. By ONLY looking at your subject (the shoe), you let your eyes slowly observe, focus, and follow the contours. While your eyes concentrate on the outline, your hand is mapping your journey. It is genuinely following your eyes. No looking at the page, just focused on the subject’s contour.

Interesting how closely the sketch map resembles the shoe.

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