Mark Kistler

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  By Allison Hamacher

  By Michele Proos

  232

  YOU CAN DRAW IN 30 DAYS

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  L E S S O N 3 0

  YOUR HAND OF

  CREATIVITY!

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  T he human hand, our most expressive appendage! In this lesson we will pull together all of the Nine Fundamental Laws of Drawing that we have learned so far and apply them to this drawing. Let’s review each of the laws and how they apply to this lesson.

  Take a look at the illustration of the hand below and notice the following: 1.

  Foreshortening: The entire hand is tilted away from your point of view.

  As the hand tilts away, it becomes more distorted from your perspective.

  2. Placement: The thumb is drawn lower on the surface of the paper than the index finger; this creates the visual illusion that the thumb is closer.

  The index finger is drawn higher on the surface of the paper so that it appears farther away from your perspective.

  3.

  Size: The thumb is drawn thicker and larger in relative size as compared to the other fingers, creating the illusion that it is closer.

  4. Overlapping: Each finger overlaps the other to create depth in the drawing.

  5. Shading: All surfaces of the hand facing away from the light position are shaded with blended value from dark to light. Blended shading creates the visual illusion of depth.

  6. Shadow: The dark shadows between each finger separate and define the object.

  7.

  Contour: The wrinkle lines on the fingers and the palm wrap around the full round shape of the hand. These contour lines give the drawing volume, shape, and depth.

  8. Horizon: This hand is drawn below your eye-level horizon. You can tell by the foreshortening; it is drawn so that you are looking down at it.

  9. Density: To further create the illusion of depth, you could draw many hands deeper and farther away in your picture. Drawing these distant hands lighter with less detail would create the illusion of distance.

  Now let’s start drawing the human hand of creativity!

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  YOU CAN DRAW IN 30 DAYS

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  1. Take a look at the drawing at left. Now hold up your left hand in this same position.

  Looking at your hand, notice how your thumb and fingers are attached to the palm of your hand. Notice how your palm is the shape of an opened foreshortened square. Draw this opened foreshortened square.

  2. Take a look at your left hand in the above position again. Notice how your arm slightly tapers to your wrist. Draw this slightly tapered wrist, using size to create depth.

  3. Looking at your left hand, see how your thumb bends away from your wrist in two distinct segments. Draw these two segments. Notice how each segment has a slight curve.

  å

  ç

  é

  4. Looking at your hand, see how

  your thumb is shaped by the round

  end and the contour wrinkle line

  inside. Draw this round end and the

  wrinkle contour line.

  è

  LESSON 30: YOUR HAND OF CREATIVITY!

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  5. Keep looking at your left hand. Are you

  getting tired of holding it up? You can always

  take a digital picture with your phone or cam-

  era and draw from the screen or from a print.

  However, it’s a really great exercise to draw

  from the real world of light, shadows, and

  true depth. Looking at your left hand, notice

  how your index finger angles away from the

  palm of your hand. Notice the three sections

  of your index finger defined by the overlap-

  ê

  ping contour wrinkles. Draw this index finger

  with these overlapping curved segments.

  6. Looking at your left hand, see how the

  middle finger bends down in two distinct

  angles. Look at how the segments are defined

  by the overlapping wrinkles. I’m hoping this

  brings to mind our practice of contour lines in Lesson 15. Remember we defined the direction of the tubes with the direction of the

  surface curves. We are doing exactly the same

  thing here; fingers are basically small 3-D

  tubes with defining curving contour lines.

  ë

  7. Look at how your ring finger is tucked

  behind the other fingers. Notice how the

  fingers are getting relatively smaller as

  they move away from your eye. Draw this

  ring finger tucked under the other fingers.

  Define where the ring finger tucks into the

  palm with an overlapping wrinkle.

  í

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  YOU CAN DRAW IN 30 DAYS

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  8. Look at your little finger. Notice

  the overlapping, the tapering, the

  segments, the wrinkled contour lines

  defining each segment. Now, draw

  the little finger.

  ì

  9. For this step, take a very close,

  careful look at your left hand. Take

  some time to really see how the room

  light hits the top of your hand, caus-

  ing the shading to blend up from the

  bottom. Notice the dark nook and

  cranny shadows between each finger

  and how these shadows really define

  the edges of each finger. Look at how

  the wrinkles on the palm wrap around

  your hand to give it shape and vol-

  ume. Now, from these observations

  and with application of the Nine Fun-

  î

  damental Laws of Drawing, complete

  this sketch of your hand.

  LESSON 30: YOUR HAND OF CREATIVITY!

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  Lesson 30: Bonus Challenge

  In your sketchbook, practice drawing your hand in three different positions. To inspire you, take a look at these student sketches of three hands. This is a perfect visual icon to bring our thirty-lesson journey to an end. Your hand of creativity! Your hand, your imagination, your sketchbook . . . enjoy your continuing expedition into this inspired world of drawing in 3-D!

  Student samples

  By Ann Nelson

  By Michele Proos

  238

  YOU CAN DRAW IN 30 DAYS

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  Iwant to thank you for sharing this time with me during these thirty lessons.

  What an accomplishment you have achieved! For three years, writing this book was an intense labor of creativity. At times thrilling, at times (during the 17th edit phase) similar to a root canal procedure, but as my friend McNair Wilson (www.mcnairwilson.com) says, “It’s supposed to be hard. IT’S ART!”

  I trust you have found this journey to be as rewarding as I have. Please take a few minutes to e-mail me at www.markkistler.com, and let me know your thoughts and experiences with this book. Please e-mail me scans of some of your favorite drawings (300 DPI or less). I look forward to seeing your creative work!

  This is just the beginning of an amazing life-enriching journey of creative discov-ery and visual expression! I am honored that you chose to ignite your passion for drawing with me. Keep drawing every day, twenty or thirty minutes; doing so will continue to nourish your heart, mind, and soul.

  Dream it! Draw it! Do it!

  Mark Kistler

 
Houston, Texas

  Kistler 05_Kistler You Can Draw 10/21/10 1:21 PM Page 240

  Please use the following pages to practice your drawing lessons.

  √√√√√√√√√√√√√√

  Lesson: __________________________ Date: ________________

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  Lesson: __________________________ Date: ________________

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  Lesson: __________________________ Date: ________________

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  Lesson: __________________________ Date: ________________

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  Lesson: __________________________ Date: ________________

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  Lesson: __________________________ Date: ________________

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  Lesson: __________________________ Date: ________________

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  Lesson: __________________________ Date: ________________

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  Lesson: __________________________ Date: ________________

  Document Outline

  Contents

  Introduction

  Lesson 1 The Sphere

  Lesson 2 Overlapping Sphere

  Lesson 3 Advanced-Level Spheres

  Lesson 4 The Cube

  Lesson 5 Hollow Cubes

  Lesson 6 Stacking Tables

  Lesson 7 Advanced-Level Cubes

  Lesson 8 Cool Koalas

  Lesson 9 The Rose

  Lesson 10 The Cylinder

  Lesson 11 Advanced-Level Cylinders

  Lesson 12 Constructing With Cubes

  Lesson 13 Advanced-Level Houses

  Lesson 14 The Lily

  Lesson 15 Contour Tubes

  Lesson 16 The Wave

  Lesson 17 Rippling Flags

  Lesson 18 The Scroll

  Lesson 19 Pyramids

  Lesson 20 Volcanoes, Craters, and a Cup of Coffee

  Lesson 21 Trees

  Lesson 22 A Room in One-Point Perspective

  Lesson 23 A City in One-Point Perspective

  Lesson 24 A Tower in Two-Point Perspective

  Lesson 25 A Castle in Two-Point Perspective

  Lesson 26 A City in Two-Point Perspective

  Lesson 27 Lettering in Two-Point Perspective

  Lesson 28 The Human Face

  Lesson 29 The Human Eye of Inspiration

  Lesson 30 Your Hand of Creativity!

 

 

 


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