 
            attempts in hatching different shades of shadows
© 2023 Aunt Herbert
               Done as part of a practice session with poses of 1 hour in length. (took me about 30 minutes)
My current goal is: Develop my own signature drawing style (advanced)
          
        
                        
             Aunt Herbert
          
          Aunt Herbert
                        
    
    
    
      Wow, Polyvios, 7 hours of 30 second sketches would make 820 sketches? That's a lot! And only 2 10 minute breaks in between?
Polyvios, I love you. Just keep being you.
    
    
    
      Polyvios, I love you. Just keep being you.
                        
             Janhackstrom
          
          Janhackstrom
                        
    
    
    
      Bold and dramatic. On a large scale, it could be an impressive mural.
    
    
    
    
      
                        
             CDsCartoons
          
          CDsCartoons
                        
    
    
    
      Hi, this is my first critique ever on this platform! Personally, I like this! It does feel unique. What's really impressive is that it only took 30 minutes for that level of detail. My only criticism may be that there aren't a lot of midtones. Overall, great work!
    
    
    
    
      
                        
             Aunt Herbert
          
          Aunt Herbert
                        
    
    
    
      Thank you for your critique.
Well, the lack of midtones (and maybe a part of what makes it uniqueness) comes from me using an ink brush instead of graphite or coal. There ain't no midtones in ink, only deepest black or the pristine paper.
Hatching or crosshatching is the only way to emulate midtones with ink. Ideally the hatching should be very regular and controlled, to not introduce noise into what I intended to be just a single surface with a scale of shades, but that is one aspect of ink, that I am still struggling a bit with.
On the upside I really love the sharp contrasts, that the ink brush forces me into, so it is a rather joyful struggle.
    
    
    
      Well, the lack of midtones (and maybe a part of what makes it uniqueness) comes from me using an ink brush instead of graphite or coal. There ain't no midtones in ink, only deepest black or the pristine paper.
Hatching or crosshatching is the only way to emulate midtones with ink. Ideally the hatching should be very regular and controlled, to not introduce noise into what I intended to be just a single surface with a scale of shades, but that is one aspect of ink, that I am still struggling a bit with.
On the upside I really love the sharp contrasts, that the ink brush forces me into, so it is a rather joyful struggle.






 
           
           
           
           
           
          
As a result, even if it's gonna be the tallest order for you yet, then your looseness but fullest and total liveliness of the tone lines and shapes of figures, faces, and expressions will become the most fiercest, fearless, and boldest.
For most details, please look into this link right here. (This is a surprise!:))
Hope these have helped you out the most.