6 Drawing Tools — Pick the Right One for the Job

A bottle of walnut ink and a bamboo pen, four colors of Conté crayons (bistre, sanguine, black, and white), four colors of colored pencils, a graphite pencil, and a piece of vine charcoal.
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Carefully choosing the right drawing tools for a given subject gives a draftsman a tremendous advantage.

It’s true that a talented artist could make a successful drawing of virtually anything using almost any material. But carefully choosing the right drawing tools for a given subject gives any draftsman a tremendous advantage.

drawing supplies

Ask yourself some questions before you choose your drawing materials.

Are hard edges or soft edges important to this drawing?

Does the subject beg for high-contrast treatment?

Is color crucial to its depiction?

Which mark-making material best suits the proper scale for the drawing?

Do you want the image to have a spontaneous feel, or a more finished look?

A Note on Surfaces to Start

The surface you choose plays an almost equal role in determining how your completed drawing will look. Smooth surfaces, like hot-pressed paper or Bristol board, will wonderfully showcase highly detailed linework. Heavily textured paper, including pastel boards, will selectively pull off the pigment of your drawing instrument in a possibly charming, possibly distracting fashion. Toned paper should be chosen carefully to suit the overall color temperature and value of the subject.

Six Drawing Tools & What to Expect from Them

A bottle of walnut ink and a bamboo pen, four colors of Conté crayons (bistre, sanguine, black, and white), four colors of colored pencils, a graphite pencil, and a piece of vine charcoal.
A bottle of walnut ink and a bamboo pen, four colors of Conté crayons (bistre, sanguine, black, and white), four colors of colored pencils, a graphite pencil, and a piece of vine charcoal.

Graphite

Fairly reversible with most types of erasers, somewhat difficult for making high-contrast areas, excellent for creating sharp edges and fine details, exhibits a reflective sheen when applied heavily, inexpensive, very archival although slightly susceptible to smudging.

Madeleine Ingres With the Artist by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, 1830, graphite, 7 x 5¼. Ingres' portraiture epitomizes the fine lines possible with a graphite pencil.
Madeleine Ingres With the Artist by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres, 1830, graphite, 7 x 5¼. Ingres’ portraiture epitomizes the fine lines possible with a graphite pencil.

Charcoal

Very reversible, supplies rich dark tones and high contrast, encourages a spontaneous look and soft edges, extremely inexpensive, very susceptible to smudging–spray fixative is recommended.

Drawing tools: Child at Water's Edge by William Morris Hunt, ca. 1877, charcoal on buff wove paper, 9¾ x 15¾.Charcoal is excellent for both creating tone and drawing crisp lines.
Child at Water’s Edge by William Morris Hunt, ca. 1877, charcoal on buff wove paper, 9¾ x 15¾.Charcoal is excellent for both creating tone and drawing crisp lines.

 

Beggar Holding a Rosary and a Cap by Guercino (Giovanni Francesco Barbieri), ca. 1620, oiled black chalk heightened with white on brown paper, 15? x 10?. The smooth-flowing chalk allowed the artist to work quickly and capture the gesture. The neutral value of the paper let him bring out a few key highlights with some white chalk. Note the texture of the paper showing through in the shaded area on the right. Although chalk is easily smudged, this drawing has survived unscathed for nearly 400 years, which should allay any fears about the medium's archival nature.
Beggar Holding a Rosary and a Cap by Guercino (Giovanni Francesco Barbieri), ca. 1620, oiled black chalk heightened with white on brown paper, 15 x 10.

Conté, and other colored, chalklike crayons

Reversible in varying degrees depending on the wax content, offers a traditional look, excellent for both details and quick expressive marks, slightly more expensive. The black, sanguine, sepia, white, and bistre shades of Conté  crayons produced some of the most sublime images in the history of drawing.

The smooth-flowing chalk allowed Guercino to work quickly and capture the gesture of his beggar. The neutral value of the paper let him bring out a few key highlights with some white chalk. Note the texture of the paper showing through in the shaded area on the right. Although chalk is easily smudged, this drawing has survived unscathed for nearly 400 years, which should allay any fears about the medium’s archival nature.

Proportions, compositions, edges, reflections — Learn to draw them all from the top drawing guide: Drawing for the Absolute Beginner

Colored pencil

Fairly reversible, especially the water-soluble brands. Some of the waxier pigments are less erasable. Available in a wide range of hues, excellent for detailed work, relatively archival, inexpensive-but collecting all the available colors could add up. Some artists stick to one color, using it as a more controllable substitute for traditional colored or chalklike crayons.

Drawing tools: Una by Benjamin West, ca. 1771, pen-and-ink, 10¼ x 12½. Collection Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, Connecticut.There's little chance for erasure with ink, so each line must be confidently laid down. The result is an appealing, high-contrast image.
Una by Benjamin West, ca. 1771, pen-and-ink, 10¼ x 12½. Collection Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, Connecticut.There’s little chance for erasure with ink, so each line must be confidently laid down. The result is an appealing, high-contrast image.

Pen-and-ink

Not particularly reversible, encourages a free and confident hand, produces high-contrast images, allows precision linework, relatively inexpensive.

The Right Drawing Tools

Choosing the right tool for the job will likely make your drawing better in addition to making the drawing process much easier, so take a moment to consider your materials before you dive in and give yourself time to experiment and play with the drawing tools you choose on a regular basis so that you continue to discover what they can do and, most importantly, what you want to do with them.

Article contributions from Bob Bahr.

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