swee'pea99
Squire
More specifically, artists who draw? I'd appreciate any advice you can offer on buying pens and ink. I'd like to get some for my daughter for Christmas, but I haven't the first idea where to start. Thanks.
Interesting...thanks for that. I'll definitely bear that in mind.my design teacher warned us against the rotring isographs as, according to her, they tend to block up... better performance can be achieved via a much less expensive fine nibbed pen type thing.
I expect @threebikesmcginty has awful draws sometimes.Does @threebikesmcginty pen and ink?
A nice present would be one of the little wooden figures with moveable joints so she can set up poses to draw realistic people in proportion.
Cheers for the nudge, @Aperitif.
I can only really answer from my own experience, but will give it a go.
Firstly, has your daughter expressed a particular interest in pen + ink?
I wouldn't say so. She is, in my view, a highly talented artist who hasn't settled on any one medium yet. She draws, she paints, she models. My instinct (as someone with zero artistic talent) is that a well-honed skill at drawing will give her a good foundation for whatever art she progresses to. I've bought her a copy of a book called How to Draw in Pen & Ink by a bloke called Harry Furniss (highly recommended in a novel by one of my favourite writers) and was looking to give her it this Christmas, along with the necessary tools.
Pens can be pretty unforgiving (hard to erase without a scalpel, easy to smudge). A nice pen is a joy forever, but one that becomes 'too precious' to use is as good as useless. If she’s at the point where she’s scratching around with biros and every sheet of photocopy paper in your house is blackened, a nice pen set might well be a good move. Worth grabbing some quality paper too, as its all about how one flows over the other.
I wouldn't plan to get her anything 'too precious to use' - as you say, that would kind of defeat the object. But I would like to get her 'a joy forever' - and I think she's of an age and temperament to value and care for one appropriately.
Are there particular artists she is looking at? What medium do they use? Is she looking towards technical illustration (scales and straight edges), scratchy freeform spontaneous sketches, detailed cross-hatching (etch style)? Each will have its own set, but you can get surprisingly far with a bottle of ink, a good wash brush, and a decent black pen.
Alternatively, she may be looking towards a colouring set. I don’t know her age or her interests, sorry. She's 14, and like I say, generally reckoned to be pretty talented (she got into The Prince's School, eg, with no problem, and also special days at the national Portrait Gallery.) I don't think she's particularly hung up on any specific artist or style...like I say, this is at least partly an exercise in helping her find one.
Whatever you settle for, try to buy at least 10 of them. That way, they don't seem precious, and she can experiment more. Whatever age she is, she’s likely to improve best when she can take a chance. I still have untouched paint sets that were too costly to toy with. As a result, they’ve been the least effective purchase I’ve made. Sounds good advice. I'd like to buy her a set of pens that she can experiment with/play around with.
With my niece of 10 years, I’ve discovered the best approach is to buy her a “proper” art pad, then buy another and give her the pages loose as a “oh, I also had these odd bits of paper. They’re roughly the same size.” Go and see her 6 months later, and every loose sheet has been drawn all over, whilst the pad has only a beautiful (but stalled) drawing on the first page.
Sorry. Making any sense at all? Loads. Many thanks.
Edit: Ah.. Now I remember: http://fc07.deviantart.net/fs29/i/2009/254/b/e/still_going_by_arallsopp.jpg