This drawing of a round stone tower illustrates a basic principle of light on form: in direct sunlight the appearance of greatest texture occurs at the area of the form called the darker halftone, just before the line of the terminator divides light from shadow.
In this case, the region is three quarters of the way to the right of the tower since it's lit from above and to the left. The rough texture of the stone is not very apparent within the big open shadow areas and in the areas on the left of the tower where it is directly front-lit.
The drawing is in graphite pencil and gray wash, about 6x7 inches. As with any sketchbook drawing, I had to be selective about where to put my time and effort. So with the limited time I had, I loaded the shadow edge with fine detail and summarized the other areas with flat tones.
A common mistake in rendering a textural form in sunlight is to make the texture equally prominent throughout the form. In digital images, the appearance of overall equal texture can result from mapping a bumpy two-dimensional pattern equally over a 3D form. The texture in the shadow should not just be a darker version of the texture in the light because that’s not how the eye sees it.
The reason the texture is difficult to see in the shadow region is because it is lit from a variety of directional sources, including the blue sky above and reflected sources from below. These multiple sources effectively cancel the appearance of texture.
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This topic is covered in Color and Light: A Guide for the Realist Painter (Amazon) or (signed from my web store)
i really enjoy your sketch work, i hope sometime in the future you get some spare time to film something like this. your youtube sketches are always a treat to see when some quick inspiration is needed.
ReplyDeleteAwesome post. Beautiful drawing.
ReplyDeleteYou grab with a few strokes the hardness and grandeur of the building. Awesome drawing.
ReplyDeleteJD Harding describes this - and your drawing is reminiscent of his...
ReplyDeleteYour observation skills facinates me enormously :o)
ReplyDeleteInterestingly, for the same reasons mentioned, you would also see the most local color in the halftone in a painted version of the subject.
ReplyDeleteIn contrast, Emile Gruppe, in his book Gruppe on Painting, said that when painting a strongly lit building such as a barn or house (cube not cylinder) that you should show detail in the shadows rather than the lights. His reason being that strong light washed out detail. Good post, James. Thanks.