Light, Shade, & Value Lecture: Art 120 Drawing 1
Light, Shade, & Value Lecture: Art 120 Drawing 1
General principles
Know your light source or
sources’ strength and
direction.
Value contrast of objects in
space will become closer
in value to the
background’s value as they
recede in space.
Use different value
schemes to define different
levels of space.
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Value
Value is describing relative light and dark in order to capture
illusionary volume, mass, space, depth
Squint
your eyes to blur edges of shapes
and tones in space.
Toneswill then blend and reveal value
patterns and value schemes.
This
will allow for quicker layout and
assessment of space in terms of value.
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John Collier
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John Collier
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Understanding Light through
Shadow
There are two types of shadow: Cast and Form
Mona Lisa
Leonardo da Vinci
c. 1503–1506
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The Light Side/The Dark Side
Establishing a definite light side and dark side makes round objects appear
round and defines the form of an object accurately. Use this simple trick to
make your artwork more true to life, separate light tones avoiding figure-
ground confusion..
The lightest spot or streak is where the light strikes the subject in exactly the
middle of the light side between the shadow edge and the edge of the
object. A highlight can be shinny and crisp on a glass or metallic surface, or
fuzzy and muted on a dull or textured surface.
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Types of Shadow –
Core, Midtones, Reflected Light
“Shadow edge” or “core shadow”. The edge where the light is
blocked from the light source is the darkest value on the dark
side. The core or darkest value blends into the middle tones
from the shadow edge on round subjects.
The variable values blended form the shadow edge on the dark
side. Again, the dark middle tones are darker than any values on
the light side. The human eye can trick the brain into believing
the lightest values on the dark side are the same as the darkest
values on the light side. If the artist is confused about lights and
darks, the rendering is less understandable.
The Axis divides the light side from the dark side and
defines the angle of the light….
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Light Source and Shadow
The shape of the shadow is also affected by the light source.
When the light source is from anything but the sun, like a
light bulb, the shadow widens the further it is from the object.
The sun, meanwhile, casts a “straight” shadow in that it
remains true to the objects shape
Student Work
+ 1-Point Perspective
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2-Point Perspective
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3-Point Perspective