It is time to make your mark in life-or at least on a piece of paper.

In this lesson you will:

Things to concentrate on:

There is a lot of information on selecting materials and there are a lot of materials to select from. It is enough to make one quit before even starting. Do not worry about it now. I will cover materials as needed, later in the course.

Selecting a pen:

The object is to get the blackest ink on the paper with the cleanest distinction between thick and thin strokes.

Felt tip pens:

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Fountain Pens:

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Dip Pens (Metal Nibs):

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

Dip Pens (Natural Nibs: Quills and Reeds):

Advantages:

Disadvantages:

For the beginner:

Select a Pen:

I recommend the felt pen with a wide tip. They sell some with 5.0-mm tips. The wider the tip, the better it is for practice. Small pens hide mistakes. The felt tip is more forgiving of not quite getting good placement. About the time the nib begins to wear out, the student will find that they want a sharper, cleaner line and will move to a fountain pen. Purists prefer dip pens. However, I feel that it is important to only fight one battle at a time. Use the more complex pens when you have advanced enough to tolerate the hassle for the look.

Select Paper:

You are just starting; you do not need fancy paper!

Exercise 1:

Obtain samples of the following paper types (They can be used, you really are not going to write on them):

Feel them gently between thumb and fingers.

Experiment with other papers. You will begin to feel the differences in hardness. The hard papers have clay (or other filler) added to make them smother and to prevent inks from bleeding. This makes them better for printing and writing and poorer for absorbing liquids. The more clay, the smoother and glossier the paper will become.

You want a hard paper that is no rougher than the newsprint. Get a pad of paper you can carry around with you, to doodle and play. As a beginner, you do not want to spend you time drawing guide lines.

This is practice, so I recommend a good quality, inexpensive, graph paper, for the complete novice and lined paper for the more advanced novice. Quarter inch square graph paper is big enough. The 5 square to the inch is OK.

When buying the lined paper, look at the blue lines on the page. They should appear faint and crisp. If they are dark and fuzzy, then the paper is probably of poorer quality and while you are a novice, you should consider your time worth some expense. Get the better paper.

Purists may have apoplectic fits when they see you using a felt pen on graph paper. Enjoy the show and do not worry about it.

We are doing this for fun, remember!


Copyright © 2015 by Robert W. Dills