There are many things a skilled portrait artist can do to elevate his or her art above the
average artist's offering...... and one of these is to take time and develop the clothes in great detail.
average artist's offering...... and one of these is to take time and develop the clothes in great detail.
The clothes are generally finished last on a portrait, and as such are
often overlooked or rushed through in order to finish the job.
It may be thought that since it's a picture of a person and not of their clothes, that the clothing isn't very important.
This
is incorrect. The clothing not only helps to determine the character,
personality, and overall appearance of the person being drawn ...... but the care and skill that one shows in rendering the clothing also says a great deal about the artist.
Part of the reason for this is that drawing and shading clothing can be difficult.
Develop the clothes by first drawing the largest shapes and most prominent lines.
When
you're sure that those are correct, begin filling in smaller details
such as folds within the sleeves, the secondary collar line, hems,
buttons, lapels and so on, and finally place some of the finer details
that can be developed prior to shading.
Stitches can be indented into the white paper using a sharp pencil over tracing paper or a stylus.
Threads on buttons and buttonholes can be reserved in the same way.
Patterns or lettering can be carefully drawn using templates whenever
possible and then if necessary, protected with frisket film.
(Detail of shading on a lapel)
The
final details are what really make the clothing stand out, so take your
time and do them right. Fabric often puckers around seams and stitches.
Develop the darks of each pucker and soften the tone with a small tortillon.
Darken
lines of contrast wherever the clothing casts a shadow by putting down a
dark line with a sharp charcoal pencil, blending out into the dark area
with a tortillon, and lightening the other side of the line with a
kneaded eraser.
Blot out reflected light in the dark areas of folds and sharpen highlights with an eraser.
(Detail of shading on a shirt)
Learn how to draw portraits like a master with our latest portrait mastery drawing course.
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No more smudgy mess with black and white that looks like a first grader whipped up in art class.
"Portrait Mastery" is generously illustrated showing you step-by-step just how to create a real life portrait.
Warm Regards
Chris Elmore
Drawing Made Easy
Chris Elmore
Drawing Made Easy
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