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Drawing Scale: Easy ways to give
your pieces some weight
Now when I think of drawing scale I don't really think of drawing 1 ,2 & 3 point
perspectives. I think of blowing things up, to size that is. I never really was too big
on drawing perspectives because mostly they involved drawing buildings and
machines and such. The drawings just seem very mechanical. That's fine and it
certainly has it place. I'm not saying I never use perspective techniques, but what
this lesson will be about is tips and techniques for making things bigger and
smaller.
There are many different techniques you can use when transferring a drawing or
sketch to a bigger or smaller medium.
The Grid
Perhaps the easiest one for me is drawing a grid. I was introduced to this technique
while studying Chuck Close, a famous hyper-realism artist. If you haven't seen any
of his work I would defiantly suggest you check him out. It is a very straight
forward technique and it works very well for transferring drawings to a bigger
scale.
All you do is draw a grid on top of your current picture and then multiply the size
of the squares by how big you want to enlarge your picture. Then all you have to
do is draw the grid on the bigger paper.
Obviously having a bigger ruler will help transfer your grid. A yard stick is ideal
depending on how big you are going. When drawing the initial grid you don't want
to actually draw the grid on your work. Drawing the grid on tracing paper or even
better transparency paper is great for this. It takes the worry and risk of ruining