A plain white page is an example of the white. Take a pencil and draw a line. The only reason you can see the line is because it is different from the white of the page. That is the most simplistic answer possible. But, there is a range of possibilities of tone between pure white and total black - various shades of grey, for instance. Draw a vertical black line representing a wooden post. Such a post would cast a shadow if the sun was shining. The shadow cast would be a grey between the blackness of the post and the whiteness of the page.
If you are asking why you have to know where light is coming from (say, where the sun is located in the setting of the picture), it has to do with how you will shade your subject. Knowing where your subject has the most exposure to light will help you shade it. Areas of little light exposure will have more or darker shading than those of greater exposure.
To make the picture show where the sun is positioned at and where an object blocks the sun from reaching something else.
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.
grey is a shade. It is a combination of various light reflections of white a light absorbers of black. Grey in its true form is not a color.
As with drawing anything 'real', you simply draw what you see, and not what you think it should look like. Look at it for a while, study it closely, note the shapes, light and shade, and keep making drawings of it until it looks right.
Photo means light and ography (pronounced graphe in latin) is drawing or lines. Therefore drawing with light.
A dramatic use of light and shade is a term that is often used to describe an image that has a high level of contrast. It can also be used to describe an image that uses light and shadow to evoke an emotion or pinpoint an object (i.e. a spot light that identifies the main figure/object).
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.
To figure out which side of the line to shade in a drawing you must first identify the direction of the light source. Shading the side of the line that is farthest away and opposite to the light.
Yes
Anson K. Cross has written: 'Light and shade' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Drawing
Mrs Merrifield has written: 'Handbook of light and shade, with especial reference to model drawing. 18th ed'
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.
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.
Giovanni Civardi has written: 'Drawing human anatomy' -- subject(s): Anatomy, Artistic, Artistic Anatomy 'Giovanni Civardi's Complete Guide to Drawing (Art of Drawing)' 'Drawing the female nude' -- subject(s): Female nude in art, Technique, Figure drawing 'Drawing Light and Shade'
a shade of green, i think like a bright, light shade a shade of green, i think like a bright, light shade a shade of green, i think like a bright, light shade
it is worthless in engineering drawing.
paint
Shade is the absence of light, it is just a shadow.