10 Minute Art School - How to Draw Circles and Eggs | Jessica Wesolek | Skillshare

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10 Minute Art School - How to Draw Circles and Eggs

teacher avatar Jessica Wesolek, Artist/Teacher

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Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Watch this class and thousands more

Get unlimited access to every class
Taught by industry leaders & working professionals
Topics include illustration, design, photography, and more

Lessons in This Class

    • 1.

      A Couple of Good Eggs Intro

      0:39

    • 2.

      How to Draw a Circle

      3:36

    • 3.

      How to Draw an Egg

      3:55

    • 4.

      Egg Sketch Gallery

      1:58

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About This Class

This is my second 10 Minute Art School class, and it will teach you how to draw nice, round circles and perfectly shaped eggs. Knowing how to draw a circle is critical to any art practice, and eggs are an icon that can be used in many scenarios, from recipes to bird nests or Easter cards. The final lesson also gives you some ideas and inspiration for drawing eggs.

Meet Your Teacher

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Jessica Wesolek

Artist/Teacher

Teacher

My name is Jessica Wesolek and I am an artist, teacher, sketchbooker, fine art photographer, and retired gallery owner living in the fabulous art town of Santa Fe, New Mexico.

My classes are about the art of sketchbooking, watercolor painting and drawing - in real life and digitally. They are for all levels because beginners will be able to do the projects with ease, and accomplished artists will learn new ideas and some very advanced tips and techniques with water media.

I teach complex ideas in a simple way that makes sense, and is easy to understand.

My career in the arts has been long, varied, and eventful. My educational credentials are from the University of Michigan, UC Berkeley and Parsons School of Design. When I got out of school, I promised myself... See full profile

Level: Beginner

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Transcripts

1. A Couple of Good Eggs Intro: Allow me to introduce you to a couple of good eggs. If we look directly at the end of an egg, we see it's a circle. From either end, a bigger or larger circle. If we look at an egg from any other angle, the really nice thing is that we've got the same shape going on. The not so nice thing is that it's not a shape that's that easy to draw right off the bat. My name is Jessica, and I'm here to teach you how to draw circles and to draw eggs. Your project, obviously, will be to draw a couple of eggs. 2. How to Draw a Circle: In order to draw an egg, you're going to have to be able to draw a circle and a circle is not that easy to draw perfectly. If you just reach down and try to draw a circle, it's very likely to have flat sides and fat sides, as I call them. We'll talk about that in a minute. The best way to draw a circle is to have a very loose hand in a very small sketchy stroke. I'll show you what I mean, and also to understand that your sketchbook is not glued to the table. And so you can turn it, and when you turn it, you're going to get the best circle. I'll show you what I mean right here. So this is the tiny little stroke I'm talking about. What you're doing here is you're hunting for the correct line that makes the circle nice and round and even. Your brain and your eyes, know what a circle is supposed to look like. And so when you do this and allow your brain and your eye to find that line for you, you're going to have the best luck at having a symmetrical circle. You'll see as I'm coming around here, I am going to be Of. See, where I was going there. And I know it. I know that this circle has to be coming back this way. You can make your little marks in either direction. And when you get done, you get rid of anything extraneous, like that. And you look at it, and you say is there a fat place or a flat place. And yes, here is most of a really wonderful circle. But right here is a fat place because that wonderful circle would finish itself out right there and not all the way out here. Okay. So that is how to freehand a really good circle. And once you have the line and you can see that it's a correct line, you can strengthen that, even with by darkening your pencil and erase the other lines. Okay. Now, I do not look down on drawing tools. And so I have a circle template here. And you can use it anytime that you want to if you're in a hurry or whatever, but I encourage my students to use it as a checking point for their circle. Now, I'll show you what I mean. I'm choosing something Yeah, that is like that first circle. And when you put a template over it, it's going to be really obvious where it is flat. And this one doesn't have a fat, but it's going to be obvious for you to see where that went wrong with flatness. Here's another little flat space up here. And then these, now that we have the good line, that's a little fat space. But you can make a judgment call. And every time you are doing this, you're teaching your brain more about what a circle is supposed to look like, so it can help you free hand circles at any time. 3. How to Draw an Egg: I encourage you to draw a number of circles until you're pretty comfortable that your circle is a nice round, not perfect, but almost perfect circle. Then we can be ready to draw an egg. I'm going to give you a formula for drawing a great egg, and I want you to know that you're going to go through all this architecture every time you draw an egg. But when you do it and think about it, do it again, think about it. What happens is that you get it in your head, what an egg shape looks like. You can use a ruler, and to do this, or you can just draw a line and measure it. But I want you to start with a line that's 2 " long. Then find the spot and mark it that is at three quarters of an inch from the top. And you're going to make a line that is three quarters in both directions. So I'm going three quarters from here, three quarters from here. And we have this little cross. Then I'm going to turn the book, and I'm going to mark three quarters this direction. What that's done has given us the starting point for drawing a lovely circle that it totals 1.5 " in diameter. Now, this circle certainly has a fat problem and a flat problem. So I'm going to fix the fat problem first that makes those three sides look good and come over here and round out my flat. And I end up with a pretty good circle, and it is diameter of one and one half inches. Here is a measurement of one half inch, and I am going to draw a circle that big. And again, using the sketchy method to get the roundest circle I can. This is our architecture, and I want you to notice that this is a three to one ratio. So whatever the diameter of the top circle you make. The second circle you make will be one third of that. So this is an inch and a half in here, and this is one half inch down here. And now, all we have to do is go from this spot with a little sketchy line so we can get a nice curve going on and come down and meet the bottom of that circle and do exactly the same thing from the other side. Okay, that's your plan to draw an egg. No, you're not going to go through all this every time. But after you do this, a few times, you're going to get it about how an egg is constructed. Now, the beauty of it is if this line is not straight up and down doesn't matter, like if you wanted to draw an egg laying on side, that is cool. The only two things that matter in this exercise are that you have a line that is at right angles with your originating line. That has to be true, and then that your large circle is three times the size of your small circle. Now we're going to just erase what doesn't belong to show you that what you end up with here is a very nice little egg. There you have an egg shape that nobody could really complain about. 4. Egg Sketch Gallery: I thought I would close this lesson by showing you some sketches that I've done of eggs. Maybe you'll be inspired about going out and drawing some eggs. When I encountered farm fresh eggs, I was delighted to see the colors. And some of them are so subtle, and I wanted to find out if I could actually get those colors to happen. I just decided to do a sketch of eggs cooked every which way. I had farm fresh eggs in there, too. And boiled eggs, you just draw your egg and then circle right in the middle of it. And over here about how to tell whether an egg is fresh or not. You put it in a glass of water, and if it floats, you throw it away. Eggs are great for when you're drawing recipes. And here's a quick pan for tata that I love that is, you know, very low calorie and pretty healthy. And we've got our eggs drawn here. And then notice that grape tomatoes also have that same shape. So if you can draw an egg, you can draw some little tomatoes, too. Avocados. Share a very similar shape. This is only partial avocado, but you can see right here that an avocado from the outside is also an egg shape. So if you cut an avocado right in half and try to draw the inside, you'd be doing the same thing as a hard boiled egg. So go forth and draw eggs. And if you'd like to go a little further and learning how to draw, look for my drawing from the ground up workshop on skill share. And there's a lot that you can learn to take these things further from your ten minute art school. See you next time.