4 Styles Drawing

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Victorio Galindo

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Aug 5, 2024, 6:34:19 AM8/5/24
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Regardingour taste in art, we all have an innate knowledge of what we love and dislike. When roaming an art gallery, we know the pieces that challenge us. These are the types of artworks or designs we tend to stare at the longest.

You also need to consider the appropriateness of certain mediums for your drawing surface. To produce detailed drawings, you need smooth paper or other smooth surfaces. A textured paper or rough surface will make it more difficult to capture minute details.


One particular style may interest you more. You'll adapt your favorite medium to work with it. It's possible to achieve hyperrealism with watercolor or to create a charcoal effect with pencil drawing.


We've listed 21 drawing styles that will expand your artistic and technical abilities. See what inspires you, from basic styles such as doodling and continuous line drawing to complex hyperrealism and 3D illusions.


Doodling is an informal drawing style, usually created absent-mindedly (for instance, to keep yourself entertained in class). This could include a rough rendition of objects, small sketches of ideas, stray marks, and other intuitive elements. What you can do with doodling is limitless.


A doodle's simple or unfinished look can be pleasing to look at and work well for certain brands. The doodle freehand drawing style is especially trendy for internet-based companies and SaaS startups.


All it takes is practice and dedication. Talent plays a role in drawing, but practice and skill-sharpening lead to results. You also need perseverance because you probably won't get it right the first time.


As a contemporary advancement of the photorealistic drawing style, hyperrealism strives to be "more real than reality." Because hyperrealistic drawings are so extremely detailed, you may struggle to discern the medium used.


This drawing style is perfect for you to indulge in if you're interested in drawing portraits, as you'll learn to capture facial features in incredible detail. This often results in stunning, emotion-stirring portraits.


What really defines the cartoon drawing style? It's usually a simplified, non-realistic way of drawing, often with exaggerated features. What we love about cartooning is that you can make characters look like and do anything.


This technique is particularly satisfying for beginners, as line drawings are quick and uncomplicated to create. It's also fun to turn a photograph or complex image into something simpler by using a line drawing to trace over it.


You can also challenge your skills by applying the technique used in this beautiful line portrait, where you create an entire image from one continuous line (known as continuous line drawing). The end result looks simple, but the technique is challenging.


You can copy photographs of beautiful buildings or draw them from real life if you can access a visually interesting view. You can also draw architectural pieces from your imagination (but this is a bit more difficult).


Fashion illustrations often depict elongated figures resembling models, with minimal focus on anatomical features. Each drawing serves to emphasize the clothing, but the drawn model also depicts attitudes and trends.


To create functional and sophisticated fashion drawings, you can study various postures and poses. Push yourself to depict attitudes and movement as accurately as possible using only a few light lines.


Using curving horizontal and vertical lines, you can easily create the illusion of three dimensions on a two-dimensional sheet of paper. Cross-contour drawing is a popular and long-established drawing exercise taught at most AP drawing art schools.


To master this drawing style and reap the benefits, it's easiest to draw the outlines of the subject first. You can choose something basic such as an apple (the most common subject used to learn the principle), a tree branch, or an animal.


Recognizing a subject's most important features is a crucial skill. It enables the artist to convey meaning through a simplified drawing. This kind of visual communication is limited only by your skill and the materials available.


Because sometimes it takes more skill to know what to leave out than to keep adding more. A minimalistic drawing approach means homing in on the subject and not being afraid to leverage white space for a big visual impact.


For some drawing subjects, a large nose will be rendered as a huge one, or slightly protruding ears will stick out prominently in the drawing. When drawing caricatures, selecting features to exaggerate can be a little difficult.


To learn the caricature drawing concept, it often helps to start with a more truthful drawing instrument of your subject in very thin lines. Then, you can enhance, reduce, or move features around as needed to produce a funny drawing.


There's so much variety under the umbrella of geometric drawing. You can create stunning portraits compiled of abstract geometric shapes and clean lines. This drawing style is always fascinating to look at.


You can also try experimenting with geometric patterns to create seamless backgrounds. The possibilities for the art you can create with this style are endless because everything we see can be boiled down to geometry.


Designers need to be able to break things down into geometric shapes to capture and build both the real and the imaginary. Logo design also often relies on geometry to produce elegant, impactful branding.


There are many different tattoo styles. If you're interested in becoming a tattoo artist or just enjoy drawing in this style, start following tattoo artists that inspire you and draw the types of tattoos you love.


Typography drawing could involve anything from drawing scenes inside letters, such as the example above, or creating an image out of wording, as shown in the image below. It's up to you to get creative and have fun playing with lettering.


Stippling was first created during the Renaissance era by an artist named Giulio Campangola. He used it for printmaking to give prints of one color more depth. Stippling involves creating a drawing from many small dots.


The dots are grouped together to create images. Shading and gradients are created by placing the dots closer together or spreading them out. You can get incredibly detailed with stippling, which also teaches you to be conscious of shading.


Stippling might get confused with Pointillism. The difference is that stippling is a drawing style, usually done in one color, whereas Pointillism is a post-Impressionist movement in painting. It involves dotting a variety of hues that combine optically to give the appearance of colors, shades, and tints.


This popular drawing technique is used to create depth, gradient, and texture without blending. Hatching involves filling in an image with closely-drawn parallel lines. Unlike the curved lines used in cross-contour drawing, these lines are usually linear.


Like stippling and hatching, scumbling is a freehand drawing technique used to cover large surface areas with marks. Scumbling is often used for areas where you want to suggest detail rather than explicitly outline every detail.


You can also achieve scumbling by rubbing, smudging, or lightly dragging your pencil across the drawing surface rather than using solid lines. This can be used to create gradient effects, textures, or soft shadows.


Scribble art is a deliberate technique used to create a specific artistic result. Scribbles are used to form shapes, textures, and shading that build up to create a recognizable image or abstract design.


This drawing style is defined using free-form lines, often rapidly or randomly applied, to build texture, shape, and form. Though it may seem haphazard, scribble art can be quite detailed and precise.


Some well-known artists who used scribbling in their work include Post-Impressionist Vincent Van Gogh, Abstract Expressionist Cy Twombly, mid-century Conceptual Artist Sol LeWitt, and Street Artist Jean-Michel Basquiat.


Diagrammatic drawing is good practice for developing your observational skills. It also helps you plot ideas from your imagination, for instance, when creating imaginary worlds or designing new products.


This drawing style teaches you how to create depth by drawing a 3D illusion with a 2D drawing. Anamorphic drawing varies from simple shapes that create the 3D illusion to complex drawings that look like they protrude from the drawing surface.


Most creatives and designers, whether just starting out or seasoned experts, want to know how to draw better. You have good drawing ideas, but you also need technical skills to help you improve long-term.


Whether you use your daily practice as a therapeutic measure or an outlet for your creative energy, you'll find that your drawing skills and idea generation will improve when you put pen (or pencil) to paper.


For example, if you're sitting on a park bench across from a fountain, your drawing will illustrate it from that angle: with a large fountain front and center, and the people and objects behind it much smaller.


Once your grid is established, label the rows and columns with numbers (horizontally) and letters (vertically). Next, replicate the grid pattern on a piece of blank drawing paper, which becomes your drawing grid.


Shapes are important to practice drawing because they can help you communicate designs better. Shapes also help you develop intricate patterns and fill space within abstract pieces. But first, you need to master them.


Shape exercises are simple yet effective techniques that can improve your drawing abilities. Shape exercises challenge you to examine photographs and drawings and identify the basic shapes that make up their foundations.


Go back every few months and review your catalog and work. Take notes in your notebook and evaluate your strengths, areas of improvement, and overall progress. Your catalog and drawing board will allow you to be closely connected to your art, which will help evolve your drawing skills.


Start by observing objects in different lighting conditions and note where the light hits the object (highlight), where the object blocks the light (shadow), and the transition between light and shadow (mid-tones).

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