His method of holding the pencil (perpendicular to the stroke) seems would create a bold line without control of line strength. Other methods that teach holding a pencil parallel to the stroke for a thin line, perpendicular for a thick line, allows for greater variety while holding wrist static, unless Barnstone varies the angle of the pencil to the surface, necessitating wrist movement. But Barnstone's method uses the shoulder in and out (middle deltoid), while the other method uses the shoulder back and forth (rear deltoid for a thin line). Barnstone's method seems to give greater control for a smoother line.
This is the first time I’ve heard anyone mention how a pencil should be held while drawing. I don’t fully understand why the pencil should be held this way. Can anyone explain why? Thanks.
A writing hand has limited mobility, a drawing hand incorporates the use of the wrist. Lines can appear constricted or flowing, flowing is more appealing.
His method of holding the pencil (perpendicular to the stroke) seems would create a bold line without control of line strength. Other methods that teach holding a pencil parallel to the stroke for a thin line, perpendicular for a thick line, allows for greater variety while holding wrist static, unless Barnstone varies the angle of the pencil to the surface, necessitating wrist movement. But Barnstone's method uses the shoulder in and out (middle deltoid), while the other method uses the shoulder back and forth (rear deltoid for a thin line). Barnstone's method seems to give greater control for a smoother line.
does anyone have access to the whole thing?
What is it about bottles that makes them ideal drawing subjects for the drawing systems he's teaching?
Curves, aspect ratio, and they are a tool so they are not just a random shape
Francis D.K. Ching
This is the first time I’ve heard anyone mention how a pencil should be held while drawing.
I don’t fully understand why the pencil should be held this way. Can anyone explain why? Thanks.
Because like that you dont rotate your wrist to make a line. You cant make straight lines consistently with a rotation motion.
A writing hand has limited mobility, a drawing hand incorporates the use of the wrist. Lines can appear constricted or flowing, flowing is more appealing.
It gives you better articulation of the entire arm which gives you smoother gestures and straighter lines better ellipses
@@punkisinthedetails1470 Is use of the entire arm necessary?
@@anpdm1 kinda. it's gross motor vs fine with fine being the hand
My biggest obstacle is shadow and light:(
I wanna make something like that but in my country price is sick if u work and keep all family 😐