Professor Sara Gómez Woolley | Section D076 | Spring 2025

Tag: WEEK 5 (Page 1 of 2)

Week 5

Class Info

  • Date: February 28th

To-Do Before Class

  • Assignment 1 – Beverage Label, Part 4 of 5 due, INKED LINE ART
  • Sketchbook Exercise Week 4
  • Reading Week 4
  • Discussion Week 4

Topic:

Value in Illustration

Activities

Warm Up

  • Ice Breaker Activity

Sketchbook

  • Small group sketchbook share

Critique

Assignment 1 Beverage Label Illustration

INKED LINE ART

Lecture

Lecture: INTRODUCTION TO VALUE

    • Pencil Techniques
    • Establishing Value key
    • Mood
    • Lighting
    • Object hierarchy
    • Focal point

In Class Demo 

LAB: Begin Value Studies (complete for homework)

*In each Value Study use a different value key to establish object hierarchy and focal point.

Review Assignments and Expectations for Next Week’s Class

Due Next Week

  • Assignment 1 – Beverage Label Illustration Part 5 of 5: INKED FINAL ART & 3 Value Studies

REMINDER: Projects are graded 50% PROCESS WORK, 50% FINAL ART.

**WEEK 8 PROCESS PRESENTATIONS ARE DUE**

Inked Textures

This week in your sketchbook, we will practice rendering texture and line in ink.

Begin by finding photo references for two objects.

Choose objects that are very different from one another. They do not need to relate, thematically.

Looking at your references, ink the surfaces and details as realistically as you can with various pens. Try all the tools you have!  Rendering different textures is a good way to explore different ways of inking and becoming familiar with your pens.

You must have a minimum of five different textures total for the two objects.

Detailed Directions:

PART 1 – Use Pencil to sketch.

  1. Find a photo reference for two objects of varying texture, such as a wood-grain surface, basket, mammal, reptile, grass, flower, tree, metal surface, etc. The objects must have very dissimilar surface textures.
  2. Draw two 3×3 Squares in your sketchbook. (Hint: you can also sketch FIRST and draw the box later to crop the drawing in a way you find interesting.)
  3. Position and scale your sketches to create interesting positive and negative shapes with the 3-inch square.
  4. Using pencil and paper, sketch from the reference, focusing on its contours. Draw the majority or entirety of the object.

PART 2 – INK

  1. Before you begin to ink, preplan the strokes. Mentally organize the shapes that are to be a pattern, texture, or local color/value. You need to decide whether the stroke has a specific function, such as defining a form or creating a surface like fur or scales. No strokes should be random.
  2. Ink the two 3-inch x 3-inch squares.

Assignment 1, Part 4 FINAL ART

Final Art

First: Using pencil and digital tools, refine your design. Finalize your design based on the feedback and suggestions you have received. This is the last chance for easy changes. Using a lightbox or graphite paper, transfer your design onto the final working surface (Bristol Board). Below is an example of a final drawing that is ready for ink.

Dana Moreno Final Pencil Drawing

Next: Photocopy the drawing. Use the photocopy to test out a few inking techniques, before you begin working on the final art.

Finish your design in INK

  • Do not shade your drawing. Focus on drawing clean line art only.
  • Do tape off the edges of your composition.
  • Do consider line weight and variation to build interest and to describe form.
  • Do not RUSH. Allow areas to dry to reduce smudging.
  • DO practice on photocopies a few times before moving on to your final work.
    • Scan final art.
    • Adjust Brightness and Contrast
    • Carefully Crop Art
    • Save your Artwork as a HighRez file 300 DPI
    • UPLOAD to DROPBOX
  • PHOTOCOPY: 3 copies at 25% scale (teeny tiny!) for use in next week’s class

DUE NEXT WEEK:

UPLOAD to DROPBOX:

  • Final Art as a 300 DPI Jpeg using the following naming convention:

LASTNAME_COMD3313_Assignment1.jpg

  • A PDF PROCESS BOOK documenting all stages of the project. Include important reference images and places where decisions were made. MAX 10 Pages.

« Older posts