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Published: 2013-11-02 19:36:50 +0000 UTC; Views: 272441; Favourites: 7775; Downloads: 8295
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Description
Sixth tutorial in my "Nsio explains" series. Going with the very basics of drawing a line.
The basic idea of a line:
Most people perceive the world as if there were lines around objects. In reality, there are no lines at all.Β It's actually just an illusion our brain shows us. We just perceive the contrast or difference between two objects, materials and colors as if there were lines between them. How can you draw reality with lines, if they don't even exist in the first place? An average Joe can't do that, but an artist can.
So, since there are no lines in reality, you need to treat the drawn lines the same way. They aren't really lines as we would rationally think. A line in illustration has a lot wider meaning than just showing the borders of things. A line convoys your artistic mind on canvas. They are the very basic building elements of your drawing and their execution has big impact on the final product. The feel and atmosphere can be read from those lines. If you are drawing something aggressive, draw aggressive lines. If you are drawing something calm, draw it with calm lines. Thus, if you want to draw a dynamic drawing, you need to draw dynamic lines as well.
Very often I see people drawing their lines really slowly with wobbly results or quickly with short hasty strokes that have no meaning at all, other than giving really messy look. You can't just draw some random lines and say it's art. All lines need to contribute to the piece. One way to draw meaningful lines is to use dynamism as a basic concept (see the line of action in my "Dynamism" tutorial). Think a plane doing a bombing run. Start pressing the pen gently and then apply more pressure as the plane gains velocity. The most impacting part is where the bomb is released and hitting the target. After that, you lift your pen, leaving a nice tapering end. All this done with one quick stroke.
Laying the stroke:
When I draw a line, I hardly ever look at the pen itself (or the cursor on the screen). Instead, I'm looking at the point I want to end my line. I may also look at another line somewhere else in the drawing if I need to make it look the same, for instance. Then I start moving my pen between the starting and the ending points in air, hovering just above the paper. This allows my hand to do some "practice" runs before the real thing. I can also try different alternatives to see which way I should draw the line. Then, when I'm somewhat confident, I draw just one quick stroke. If it's good, then great! If not, then I erase it (Ctrl+Z is so convenient!) and try again. That said, I hardly never know how I need to draw the line beforehand. It's just thanks to my experience and "muscle memory" that I can draw the lines pretty much the way I want them.
It's also important to hold the pencil the right way for optimal ergonomics and results. Don't press the pen too much on the surface, it will just strain your hand. When I'm drawing with a pigment liner, technical pen or tablet pen, I hold the pen pretty much in vertical position. I support the pen with my ring finger to keep it from getting pressed too much on the surface. This isn't very natural way to hold the pen, but it allows great control over the pressure.
Some basic thing about lines:
I have compiled some things here in order to explain why my lines look like they do.
1. I always apply some sort of variety in the line thickness for more natural and dynamic feel.
2. Make it quick and simple. The line can be short or long, but it should be drawn with one dynamic stroke.
3. The way you draw the lines can spice up your style and add feeling to your pieces. I tend to draw my lines both curvy and angular, pretty much like the left one.
4. It's good to mind line hierarchy. Usually thicker lines are considered to be closer that thinner lines. Thus, it's often good to draw the characters with thick outlines and the background with thinner lines.
5. This is pretty basic way to think the line weight. The line is thinner towards the light and bulkier in shadow. You could think the line as a shadow as well.
6. This is pretty basic thing too. Thinner lines give more lighter feeling and bulky lines heavier. Thus it's pretty straightforward to draw a feather with thin lines for example.
7. Some black in line intersections makes a huge difference. Just be reasonable with it.
8. An illusion of overlapping lines add three dimensional feel. Also pay attention how the panties sink into skin
9. The line thickness can also add the contrast between two objects. For example, if you draw an arm on a surface, it's natural to draw the lines towards the surface bulkier (as if they were shadows).
10. "Lost and found" refers to a broken line that we can read as a solid line. Very often it's better to draw things with broken lines rather than solid lines. Of course it depends on the image you want to gain.
11. Number 10. principle can be applied on corners. If the surfaces are part of the same object, it's often better to draw the line between them thin or broken. If there is a gap or two separate surfaces, the line is solid. Note that curvy surfaces don't really have corners (duh!), so you need to give the impression with contrast instead or mind the surfaces later in coloring.
12. This just illustrates the fact that there are no lines in reality, but it can be still represented with lines.
13. Hatching should be drawn with quick and parallel lines, with equal thickness and gap between lines.
14. You can make quite a bunch of textures with lines.
15. You can also draw many patterns with lines. However, it's often better to draw only small patches there and there and leave the rest to the imagination. Not only you save a lot of effort, the drawing will be a lot easier to look also.
Skating practice:
Skating is a good term for this little practice. The purpose of this practice is to be able to draw the very same shape many times as accurately as possible. You can do this kind of skating practice with any kind of shape, but I find that "pringles shape" is the most natural and challenging enough. When I draw that shape very quickly, it's my hand's "muscle memory" doing the job. The moment I start thinking, I make mistake.
Related content
Comments: 233
mizzmint [2013-11-13 14:41:26 +0000 UTC]
Congratulations on having your piece featured as one of today's DD's!
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Nsio In reply to mizzmint [2013-11-13 22:00:35 +0000 UTC]
Thank you!! This was a great surprise!
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WrittenProdigy In reply to ??? [2013-11-13 14:16:57 +0000 UTC]
Oh wow i saw this a couple days ago when you posted it Gratz on the dd Nsio you're really good well deserved
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Nsio In reply to WrittenProdigy [2013-11-13 22:00:03 +0000 UTC]
Thanks! I even thought that these kind of things won't probably never get DD's not too long ago. This is a great honor!!
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WrittenProdigy In reply to Nsio [2013-11-13 22:26:34 +0000 UTC]
You have a really good style and your tuts are great its def dd worthy,ikr dds so wonderful huehue i hope someday im good enough to get one n-n congratz again looking forward to seeing more of your stuff
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dinaminzer In reply to Nsio [2015-07-14 03:21:48 +0000 UTC]
In fact, what i enjoyed more is this accurate phrase:
Β ''' How can you draw reality with lines,
if they don't even exist in the first place?
Β An average Joe can't do that, but an artist can.'''
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andbrg In reply to ??? [2013-11-13 13:23:44 +0000 UTC]
Congratulations to the well deserved DD!Β Β
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Nsio In reply to andbrg [2013-11-13 13:33:21 +0000 UTC]
Thank you!! It's a great honor! Totally out of the blue
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Hiiragi-san In reply to ??? [2013-11-13 12:52:26 +0000 UTC]
Wow, look at Cirno there, dispensing useful advice and stuff
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Nsio In reply to Hiiragi-san [2013-11-13 13:32:24 +0000 UTC]
She is the strongest after all
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Lintu47 In reply to ??? [2013-11-13 12:45:47 +0000 UTC]
Congrats on the DD!
Have a nice day!
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Nsio In reply to Lintu47 [2013-11-13 13:32:08 +0000 UTC]
Wow, that DD was a complete surprise! Thank you.
And you too, have Β a nice day!
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LucidARTDVC In reply to ??? [2013-11-13 11:39:18 +0000 UTC]
FINALLY! Someone did it.
Thank you very much
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Nsio In reply to LucidARTDVC [2013-11-13 13:31:08 +0000 UTC]
You're most welcome
I haven't really checked out, but I think there must be more tutorials out there about the same subject.
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Herebellama In reply to ??? [2013-11-13 11:10:15 +0000 UTC]
I wish I could draw dynamic lines but my computer/cintiq is against me and makes it all jaggedly.
I know, I know... blame your tools... however when I work on the computers/cintiqs in the university the lines are fine. Swoop! Nice big dynamic line whilst zoomed out. Go back home. Looks like I drew it in etch-a-sketch. -_-
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Nsio In reply to Herebellama [2013-11-13 13:29:48 +0000 UTC]
Hard to tell what's the issue. I guess it has to do with the hardware. Your university may have more powerful computers there. It could be driver issue too. :/
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Herebellama In reply to Nsio [2013-11-13 17:46:35 +0000 UTC]
They are, but my computer is also pretty decent and this happens on any size file.
Drivers is an idea...
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robson666 [2013-11-13 10:47:08 +0000 UTC]
congratulations to the well deserved Daily Deviation
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Nsio In reply to robson666 [2013-11-13 13:27:52 +0000 UTC]
Oh my! I indeed got a DD out of the blue!! Wow, thanks
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pica-ae In reply to ??? [2013-11-13 08:13:58 +0000 UTC]
I remember a lenghty discussion about point 12 with a friend. They kept insisting on lines in realityβ¦ Β
Very good tutorial! So much to learn and very well written Β
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Nsio In reply to pica-ae [2013-11-13 13:27:00 +0000 UTC]
Thank you!
Yes, it's apparently hard to believe that there are no lines at all. We are so hardwired to think in certain way that even such obvious thing can be invisible to us
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pica-ae In reply to Nsio [2013-11-14 08:48:09 +0000 UTC]
You're welcome
Yeah, it's amazing at times It's a bit like hard edges, they are more rare than you'd think at first. I think the discussion started cos I said line art is unrealistic, because of the lack of lines in reality. Which is probably a thing of semantics
Β
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Scorpion451 [2013-11-09 20:00:13 +0000 UTC]
I think a lot of people do the hairy line thing because of learning with cheap pencils or pens that don't make steady marks; it makes a cleaner mark than drawing over the same line three or four times. Doesn't look nearly as good when you eventually get decent tools, though. I finally broke the habit by practicing with the type of calligraphy pen you have to dip into an inkwell every so often. I highly recommend it to anyone struggling with this, because it forces you to pause between marks rather than frantically scratching away.
That said, I would also chime in that fuzzy lines can be quite useful when used sparingly. I use this method with a very thin pen or brush on things where you want an indistinct, textured line, like fur or the internal wrinkles of wrinkled cloth, or an energetic and chaotic line, like for lightning bolts. They pair very well with hatching, too, for creating rough texture. But it only works if you have clean, dynamic, lines for them to contrast with- otherwise its just noise.
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Nsio In reply to Scorpion451 [2013-11-09 20:48:07 +0000 UTC]
It's good to note that I usually draw on tablet, which is pretty similar to inking. Usually fine ink lines are drawn with confident lines rather than with wobbly or hairy lines. Of course, it's all up to the intended atmosphere the artist is pursuing. One can question whether beginner's hairy line is really the desired look or just lack of experience. Using a calligraphy pen like yours is definitely very useful.
It just have to be justified. Hairy line, or many lines on top of each other is fine as long as the lines contribute to the piece. Still, I find that even those lines should be drawn with dynamism in mind. There is a big difference between beginner's unintentional and artist's intentional hairy line.Β For example, there is reason why fur looks like it does. You can't simply draw random lines and call it fur. The lines need to follow the dynamics of the fur in order to look like fur.
Be it one or multiple lines on top of each other, my point is that the lines should be drawn with quick, confident strokes for most optimal results
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Bostonology In reply to ??? [2013-11-06 22:16:13 +0000 UTC]
Again, great one. And I had to try the skating practice thing. lol. My lines tend to be kinda sketchy but clean enough to pass. I am curious as to whether I can change that.
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Nsio In reply to Bostonology [2013-11-07 18:16:16 +0000 UTC]
Thanks. I'm not sure, but it looks like you didn't draw the lines very fast, so that may add to the feel of sketchy lines. It may also be due to low stabilizer setting.
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Bostonology In reply to Nsio [2013-11-07 19:50:58 +0000 UTC]
my stabilizer is always at about 5. And how fast is fast? lol
it was about a little less if not a second for each pass
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Shay-Fae In reply to ??? [2013-11-04 15:58:55 +0000 UTC]
Oh my gosh this is great! Thank you!
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danketsujin [2013-11-03 21:27:38 +0000 UTC]
Heeey!
This is awesome! Very useful!!!
Thank you very very much for this tutorial! It helped a lot! =]
I really admire your work and your effort to share you knowledge!
Thank You!
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grandcross In reply to ??? [2013-11-03 18:13:41 +0000 UTC]
I always warm up with line exercises similar to some of the ones in this tutorial before doing anything, working traditionally or digitally.Β Peter Han (pro concept artist) has exercises like these that involve drawing straight lines, arcs, waves, and ellipsis over and over for precision and confidence building. It's pretty shocking just how tough it is to get a really smooth, natural and consistent line D: His vids are on Youtube.
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Nsio In reply to grandcross [2013-11-03 18:44:10 +0000 UTC]
Yeah, those exercises are really useful. I usually do those when I'm really rusty to regain the precision.
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sandfruit In reply to ??? [2013-11-03 16:11:38 +0000 UTC]
This is very helpful! Thanks!!
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ak399 In reply to ??? [2013-11-03 16:05:00 +0000 UTC]
Okay, this is actually really great.
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Wish-Academy In reply to ??? [2013-11-03 13:23:09 +0000 UTC]
Hai,Hai ~! i will try to beat her top Loop Score !
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AliceSacco In reply to ??? [2013-11-03 12:47:46 +0000 UTC]
I need to practice on this.
My main problem is that with a single stroke, the line means nothing to me, for this I use a pen on paper and a stronger line on tablet.
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cowoknakal In reply to ??? [2013-11-03 11:21:58 +0000 UTC]
Very useful as usual. Thank you
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TreeSamurai In reply to ??? [2013-11-03 08:30:49 +0000 UTC]
another amazing tutorial. keep up the good work!
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RainSong777 In reply to ??? [2013-11-03 05:06:49 +0000 UTC]
this is really helpful thank you!
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aadisart In reply to ??? [2013-11-03 04:03:45 +0000 UTC]
although i already have a fair understanding of all your Nsio Explains lessons, I still add them to my Manga Lessons collection and thoroughly read them since they are so well writen, drawn and though-out. Great job. What next, Β perspective?
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Nsio In reply to aadisart [2013-11-03 09:23:01 +0000 UTC]
Thank you! It's great to hear that even a veteran like you find them useful
Yeah, perspective is very likely. Although I do have the understanding, I'm not very proficient at drawing perspectives yet (since I tend to focus on characters), so it may take a while to compile a perspective tutorial. Definitely a good practice for me too!
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aadisart In reply to Nsio [2013-11-03 12:24:27 +0000 UTC]
oh come on, im no veteran
im still at it with perspective too, hence i was looking forward to what you had to draw about it its not an easy business, perspective
Especially when it forms the base to many branches in art like foreshortening and even 3D drawings!
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