Thursday, September 20, 2012

Values Portrait


1. Explain the process you went through to develop your drawing.

First off our class printed pictures of ourselves in black and white, and everyone got to choose at random who they were going to draw.  Next we used tracing paper to outline everyone of the different values and transfer the shapes onto our sketchbook. Then was the hard part, we had to use the original picture, and shade in all the values, then blend them together.


2. Explain how you found the different values in the portrait?

There were many different values, in the hair and the face.  I traced what I could at my desk, there were some pretty obvious ones at first, like the highlights on the nose and the white of the eyes, for the values in the hair I had to tape the picture to a window.

3.  Did you achieve a full range of the different values within your portrait?  How?

Yes, I did.  The picture had all the values inside, and I was able to shade them into the shapes.  I did this by comparing the picture to the one in my sketchbook. It was really confusing at first because it just didn't look right.  Just blotches of color, like a Picasso painting. but when I blended the colors together, they took shape and didn't look so bad.  I had to fix some of the values at the end, since they were too dark or too light.

4. Describe your craftsmanship.  Is the artwork executed and crafted neatly?

I think I did very well.  The values don't look blocky and blends together easily.  The shape of the face and the hair aren't contorted. (Very much)  The only problem is that it took a bit longer to shade in than the rest of the class.  Probably because I kept erasing half the face. I couldn't get the color to go together. Also, there were a lot of pencil smears that I had to get rid of when i was done.

5. List any obstacles you had to overcome and how you dealt with them.

Because i had never worked with values before, it was hard for me at first to get the shading right.  I felt like my portrait wasn't turning out right.  Also, the face looked disfigured when I added the values, so I had to erase the whole thing and retrace it. but otherwise, it wasn't that hard, it just took a lot of time to color.

1 comment:

  1. Great job with the values in this potrait. You show the range with 9 steps and found the shapes. You also answered the critiques questions thoroughly. You reflected and I can evaluate what you have learned.

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