Skip to main content

New Pencils

I recently purchased a package of new pencils with a range of 'leads' and am learning about them and pencil history.  

Pencil 'leads' come in a range.  They are typically categorized as H (hard), B (soft; darkness), F (sharpens to fine point) or HB (hard and black).  For the H and B pencils, there can be a number, added to the letter, that distinguishes the hardness of that 'lead'.  H (hard) leads make lighter lines while B (soft) leads make darker ones.  In addition, the higher the number for the H lead, the harder the lead and the lighter the line.  For the B lead, the higher the number, the softer the lead and darker the line. 

In terms of the history of graphite used in the core of pencils, here are some key points:

  • A major graphite deposit was discovered in England in 1565
  • Graphite is a crystalline form of carbon
  • Pencil graphite has no lead 
  • Pencil cores are made of purified graphite power + kaolin (a clay binder)
  • Hard pencils have about 20% graphite; soft ones have up to 90% graphite

As part of adding these pencils to my smorgasbord of tools, I did a line and shading test.  My favorites were the 4B and 7B, because of how they glided across the surface of the paper and the marks they made.  That said, I can see that the range of pencils, though, will be able to serve different needs. 

Comments

  1. This really cool! Thank you for sharing what you learned. I look forward to seeing how this will affect your future works.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Introducing 'Kaleidoclown'

For fun, I've drawn one of my own photos (yes, I was dressed in a clown outfit) and added a wild and crazy background to accompany it for today's practice effort. As part of sketching the piece, it was split into four sections with two opposing diagonal lines.  In terms of color choices, I've worked with color gradations for some shape sections.  Can you believe, there are five major shapes in this effort?  There really are -- circles, squares, trapezoids, triangles and spirals. I think the substrate is Biengfang Watercolor Paper (140 lb.).  The materials used were Ohuhu markers, Micron 01 pigment ink pen, some red Stickles glitter glue for the nose, and a white Posca pen (for white dots on the face and to highlight eyes) and a yellow one (for yellow dots in the center of the flowers on the hat). There was no intention in working on this piece other than to have fun...and based on how it looks, I'd say well done!.   One thing I learned is that blending with the Ohuhus i

New Project in Progress

I'm working on a new project with multiple layers and shapes of different colored organzas.  It is an interpretation of lighting on an ice rink...from a show I recently saw.  There is a lot more stitching to do, but I like how its coming along.  I'm learning organzas are not easy to work with especially when you layer them and have overlaid edges.  The fabric also tends to ravel easily. This post also linked to  http://ninamariesayre.blogspot.com .

Announcing new book - The Soliloquies of A Wayfaring Trio!

I'm so delighted with my new book -- that I designed, wrote and illustrated, and is now in print thanks to Blurb!   'The Soliloquies of A Wayfaring Trio' was a months-long effort this year.  I had no plan to create a book when I started reading unpacked journals from years ago. Those journals -- started in 1979 -- was at a time when life was about to serve-up some dramatic changes including a solo move from the Midwest to the Pacific Coast.  I wasn't writing poetry then.  In fact, I had never written poetry before, and it was only through those journals that I started writing creatively.   In 1981, that creative writing began with prose (one to four sentences in length).  While taking a 10-month journey to Europe (1982-3), poetry in free verse form started showing up.  An edited version of one of the poems written during that trip appears in the latest book and is titled 'A Day at Nea Kameni' (a location in Greece).   Thereafter, and in looking back, new poems s