FAQ
Common questions
What grade pencil should I start with?
Start with HB or B for your first lines — it's roughly equivalent to a #2, dark enough to see clearly, light enough to correct. For shading, reach for 2B and 4B. For deep shadows, 6B. For light guidelines and construction, 2H or 4H. The key is developing the habit of grade selection: don't draw everything in one grade.
Should I draw from photos or real life?
Real life when possible, photos when necessary. Drawing from life trains you to observe three-dimensional space, light direction, and surface texture in ways a flat photo compresses. Photos are convenient for complex subjects you can't pose indefinitely (people, animals) and for building a reference library. Both are legitimate — real life is better for skill building.
What should I draw first?
Simple objects with interesting shapes: a crumpled piece of paper, a sneaker, a ceramic mug, your own hand. These give you real light and shadow to observe, hold still indefinitely, and are complex enough to be challenging without being overwhelming. Avoid portraits until you can draw basic forms confidently — the face is hard to draw badly without noticing.
How do I get better at shading?
Three techniques to learn in order: hatching (parallel lines that imply tone through density), cross-hatching (two directions of hatching that build richer tone), and blending (using a stump to push graphite into smooth gradients). The key is working from light to dark — always. You can add graphite; you can't easily remove it. Build your darkest shadows last.
How long before I'm any good?
Most beginners who draw daily notice significant improvement within 30-60 days. 'Good' is a moving target — you'll improve faster than you think early on, and the curve flattens as the challenges get more subtle. The honest answer: if you draw for 20 minutes a day and study deliberately, you'll be drawing things you're proud of in two to three months.
Do I need to take a class?
Not necessarily. YouTube (Proko, Ctrl+Paint, Will Kemp) provides the equivalent of first-year drawing instruction for free. A structured class — community college, atelier, or online school like Watts Atelier — accelerates learning through feedback, which YouTube can't provide. If you can get critique on your work regularly, a class is worth it. If not, the free resources cover the fundamentals.