Color Pencil Portrait Drawings

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color pencil portrait drawings

Pencil Portrait Drawing Tips on Preparing a Photograph

Once you acquired an acceptably clear subject photograph from your customer, what do you do with it? Well, you prepare that photograph to be used as a reference for your pencil portrait drawing effort. The preparation procedure I will describe works well for me and I have been using it for years. Of course, as you get better at pencil portrait drawing you may want to adapt the procedure to better suit your own working habits. So, here we go:

* First, I scan the photograph into my computer at as high a resolution as I can muster. You can always reduce the resolution if you feel that it will better suit your purpose.

* Then, I bring the scanned image into a graphics computer program such as Photoshop and adjust the brightness and the contrast so it brings out the best in the subject. This is also the time to transform your color photograph (if that is what the customer gave you) into a black and white (grayscale) image.

* Next, I adjust the size of the image. For that, I focus on the size of the head, i.e., the vertical distance from the top of the head to the bottom of the chin. The best distance to work with is between 9.5 and 10.5 inches which is about life-size.

* Keeping the size of the head fixed, I now I crop or expand the image to a size corresponding to my drawing paper. For example, if I am going to draw on a 14 by 17 sheet of paper, my image will be about 10 by 13 inches. This leaves about 2 inches of empty space all around my drawing paper. At this stage I also pay attention to the composition, i.e., the layout of the final image, the relationship between the subject and its environment, and how much of the subject, other than the head, I will represent. Make sure you do not change the already established size of the head when you manipulate the overall size of the image.

* Next, if you wish, you can draw a grid onto the image. I often use a grid consisting of 1 by 1 inch squares. So for a 10 by 13 inch image you will have 130 squares to work with. Photoshop has the option to easily draw such grid lines over an existing image.

Don't worry, using a grid is an age old tradition and does not constitute "cheating". Michelangelo, Leonardo Da Vinci, and Edgar Degas, to name only a few, all made use of grids. However, you should also keep on practicing without grids and draw directly from the real world where the sizes and proportions usually differ from the corresponding ones on your drawing paper. Later, when you get much better, you may want to increase the size of the squares and eventually dispense with them altogether. But, for now, we will rely on grids. They are, after all, just the ideal tool to use when drawing from photographs.

* Finally, it is time to print out the manipulated image in black and white (grayscale). You are now ready to start drawing your pencil portrait. Note, that after you scanned in the original photograph you do not need it anymore. Put it away carefully so you can give it back to your customer in its pristine condition. Do not loose or misplace the original photograph. Above all, do not burn it!

With this, you are now ready to create your first pencil portrait masterpiece.

About the Author

Remi Engels, Ph.D., is a pencil portrait artist and oil painter. He is also the author of a popular Pencil Portrait Drawing Course. Get Your Free copy here: Remi's Pencil Portrait Drawing Course while supplies last.

Colored Pencil Portrait of Alli Speed

Pencil Portrait Sketches

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pencil portrait sketches Sketching pencils & graphite pencils?

I'm sketching a portrait of my friend for her birthday. I went to the art store to pick up pencils with different hardnesses and found two different types: shading and graphite pencils. I was so confused.... what is the difference between these two? and if I'm doing a portrait, which one should I buy? Thanx!

The lead. Thick, soft lead will lay down heavily and dark. Thin, hard lead will come out very thin and light. B pencils work best for portraits. H pencils are for sketching.

Sketch 08 - Quick Pencil Portrait Sketch by Raison Bassig

Pencil Portrait Commissions

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pencil portrait commissions How much would you pay for a portrait done with Prismacolor Pencil?

How much would you pay for a portrait done with Prismacolor Pencil? this girl want $450 for the whole job i want a 27 x 34 1/2 portrait done this is the pic http://yfrog.com/1stheyoungvictoria07j someone who never done a paid commissioned portrait is charging me $450 $130 which is for her to buy the 132 set of Prismacolor Pencil's and $320 for her work which she says will take her 3 months to do (since she has work and school) is the price fair considering she wont use up all the pencils (this some of her work) http://yfrog.com/7dn68106822343204506619j capwest5 can you email your friends info or write it on the question

Well, I have to admit that she is a talented artist judging by the picture on the bottom link (if in fact it was her that drew that, which is difficult to verify). But my overall feeling is that $450 is too expensive and 3 months is far too long of a time frame. You shouldn't be the one buying the pencils for her either - if she is a serious artist, she should already have those materials. It's like me saying "I'll compose a song for you if you buy me a guitar." ----------------- I happen to know a very talented artist who I used to work with. (He's a very young Mexican guy, but his stuff is amazing). He would probably charge you about $200, and the work certainly wouldn't take all of 3 months to complete - more like one month. He has his own materials.

Pencil Portraits by Kat

Detailed Pencil Portrait Drawings From Photographs

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detailed pencil portrait drawings from photographs Pencil Portrait Lesson

Pencil Portrait Lesson Plans

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pencil portrait lesson plans Advanced Fashion Design Drawing Tutorial- Basic Figure For Fashion Sketch