Sketch Book for the Artist

(singke) #1

INTRODUCTION


Drawing Books and Papers


DRAWING BOOKS
Select drawing books to suit your aims. For evening classes, choose larger formats
to give you scope for experiment. For traveling, choose smaller hard-bound books
that fit in your pocket or bag; their jackets will act like drawing boards and protect
your work. Many artists invent ways of binding their own books. Dissecting a
discarded hard-bound book will soon show you how it is made; this is how I learned.

To BEGIN YOUR EXPLORATION of drawing, you need a

drawing book. There are dozens to choose from. Gleaming

store purchases vary greatly in format, binding, color,

texture, thickness, quality, and cost. Homemade books can

be assembled easily from found materials or selections of

loose sheet papers, which are also sold in an enormous

range. Art students often make use of printed books picked

up from secondhand stores into

which they draw, cut, and

collage their ideas. It is also

useful to own a portfolio. A

high-quality one will last a

lifetime; cheap corrugated plastic ones fall apart in days.

Alternatively, study the structure of a good portfolio and

make your own. You simply need two strong boards hinged

together well, ties on either side to keep your papers in

place, and handles to lift the weight of your artworks.

Drawing boards are invaluable. They can be very expensive

in art stores; it is better to have them made at a lumber

yard or home improvement store. Calculate a range of

useful dimensions and have several cut at once. Smooth

plywood, thick enough not to flex, is perfect. Sand the

edges to avoid splinters. If you intend to carry your boards

for a distance, be sure they fit comfortably under your arm.


  1. CANVAS-COVERED HARD-
    BOUND: Ideal for carrying
    around; a length of black elastic
    tied around the middle will hold
    the contents together when you
    fold in collected items. Note the
    widely differing choice of papers
    with which these are made.

  2. BLACK POCKET BOOKS:
    Hand-sized with ready-made elastic
    binder and a marker ribbon. Most
    contain thin paper and are perfect
    for use with disposable pens.

  3. COLORED PAPERS: Large
    art supply stores often sell thick
    books full of colored papers.
    These are perfect for working in


color If planning to use pencils,
pastels, and crayons, be aware
that paper texture effects and
changes their marks.


  1. RING-BOUND PADS:
    These are the least expensive
    and useful for opening flat.
    However ring bindings often
    break. Purchase a high-quality
    ring-bound pad if you wish to
    keep your drawings together
    long-term.

  2. FOUND BOOKS: Old printed
    novels, catalogs, and reference
    books found in second-hand
    stores make unique subjects
    for experiments and collage.

  3. HOMEMADE: I made this
    book from drawing paper that
    I folded, stitched, and glued to
    a strip of bias binding. The hard-
    board jacket is stretched with
    canvas beneath the paper sleeve.


Tantalus or The Future of Man
2002
81 / 2 x 61 / 4 in (215 x 158 mm)
ROSE MILLER
Free download pdf