Decide where the light is coming from and shade the parts facing away from it. For example, on a drawing of a person, if the light was in the top left hand corner the right side of the body would be shaded and the body's shadow would go horizontal from its right foot.
draw any polygon and shade its interior
you do not just draw lines like this : *, but rather draw it out with some white space and then shade in half of it
The show you're thinking of MAY be "The Imagination Station with Mark Kistler." It's been YEARS since I saw it last but I know Mark in person, and while I haven't seen him in years either, I remember him always telling his students to draw, draw, draw and shade, shade, shade!
Draw 6 circles 'cut' into 3 pieces and shade all of them. Draw one more circle 'cut' into 3 pieces. Shade only one diece in the last circle,
I do because its easier to shade The light and shade adds depth and expression.
Draw a 10x10 grid and shade in 57 of the cells in the grid.
Draw a circle then shade it a little on one side.
make 100 boxes and shade in 44 of them
5%
Draw your design with a carpenter's pencil.
Start off by drawing 4 whole boxes. Shade all of them in completely. Draw another box of the same size, but split it into thirds. Shade in 2 of those thirds.
Shading is actually coloring with pencil....first,make your own book and draw sectiones in it..Draw a different pencil shade in each section.You can make a pencil shade by pressing the pencil more or less. Thanks! =)