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Contour Drawing Will Help You Learn To See? doc

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Contour Drawing Will Help You
Learn To See?




Contour drawing consists of drawing exactly what it sounds like: the contour or
outline of an object. This can be used for many different reasons. When learning to
train your eye to see, contour drawing is one of the best methods to start with, and
often it is one of the first things you learn how to do in drawing class.
Instead of drawing the object, you are forced to draw the negative space instead.
This helps train your eye to see, forcing you to follow the curves and lines of the
object as you draw it, not what you think it looks like.
A good contour drawing will be able to suggest the object by using only one
continuous line.
Drawing objects this way will help you with proportions, and you will start to look
at the negative space that creates the shape of the object instead of the other way
around. The "weight" of the line also controls how the object will look. The darker
the line, the more the object will stand out and the opposite with a lighter line.
This can be used to perceive depth, giving your drawing more punch, and make
your contour studies stand alone as art in their own right.

Contour drawing is also very effective for drawing patterns, as you are essentially
creating a stencil or cutout of the object that you are drawing. The better you get at
drawing contours, the better and cooler patterns you will be able to create. If you
study any patterns, you will easily be able to see the contour of the objects in
them.
When drawing from real life, you will want keep your head in the same spot
otherwise the perspective will change and throw the drawing off into a skewed
angle.


Drawing contours also aids your creative side as it forces you to see the outline
and line of the object.
My Own Form of Contour Drawing
I actually have my own way of contour drawing that you may find useful. I call it
Blind Drawing ©
Blind Drawing©: the process of closing your eyes and drawing what you see.
This allows you to not focus on the specifics of the drawing but rather just getting
the major shapes and ideas down on paper and out of your head.
I visualize better in the dark. This lets me "trace" the image I see with my eye, and
it stays more focused in my sights. For me, when I have an image in my head, as
soon as I open my eyes it is of course gone. Using this method, the image stays in
my "mind's eye" and I can see it more clearly. Instead of a snapshot, I get a long
exposure.
Once the major shapes of the image have been defined using your "blind
drawing," it is easier to add the details and refinements.
1: Because you have been focusing on it for a longer period of time
2: Because you aren't wasting your time worried about getting all the proportions
and details correct in the beginning.
Activity:Me and my friend used to close our
eyes and draw a crazy line and then connect it to make it one shape. We would
then give the image to each other and we would have to create a new image from
it. Once you do this a few times, you will quickly start to see other objects that you
can make out of these crazy shapes that seemingly look like nothing.
Contour drawing can be fun and very productive. Sure, maybe drawing a pot of
flowers may not seem fun. I know I never enjoyed it. I especially hated drawing
still life in art class, but you don't have to turn your art lesson into Sunday
afternoon craft hour at the old-folks home.
Draw whatever inspires you. Contours are everywhere.
If you happen to enjoy drawing plants and flowers, then draw them. If you enjoy
drawing portraits and faces and people, that is also fine. Find what you like

drawing, because if you don't enjoy it, you won't do it!

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