Drawing Flowers: Using iPhone Photos to Draw Roses | Elizabeth Floyd | Skillshare

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Drawing Flowers: Using iPhone Photos to Draw Roses

teacher avatar Elizabeth Floyd, Artist | Elevating Everyday Moments

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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.

      Drawing Roses: Introduction

      1:28

    • 2.

      Drawing Roses: Materials

      3:04

    • 3.

      Drawing Roses: Photo Analysis

      1:21

    • 4.

      Drawing Roses: Block in

      7:36

    • 5.

      Drawing Rose: Refining the Line Drawing

      12:08

    • 6.

      Roses: Adding Tone Part 1

      6:21

    • 7.

      Drawing Roses: Adding Tone Part 2

      9:04

    • 8.

      Drawing Roses 07 Adding Tone Part 3

      11:19

    • 9.

      Drawing Roses: Adding Tone Part 4

      11:09

    • 10.

      Drawing Roses 08 Finalizing the Drawing

      5:12

    • 11.

      Roses 10 Thank you

      1:53

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About This Class

In this rose drawing class you will learn how to take a complex subject and create a beautiful and realistic graphite drawing. It is my goal that you will learn to enjoy the process and that you will grow in your understanding of how to draw roses.  Drawing realistically is about looking at the big shapes first and then adding layers of refinement.

You start the drawing project with a simple geometric block in, then you begin refining the line drawing by adding three dimensional tone, and then finally you add beautiful texture to the drawing with hatching.

It is a pleasure to teach this class because I love drawing and sketching. And I believe its the easiest way to grow your creative skills and artistic voice.

There is so much beauty in the world and through drawing you get to love and connect with nature and flowers in a whole new way.

At the end of this class I hope you have a drawing that you are proud of and that you have connected with these peony flowers in a meaningful way.

Let’s draw!

Meet Your Teacher

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Elizabeth Floyd

Artist | Elevating Everyday Moments

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Level: All Levels

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Transcripts

1. Drawing Roses: Introduction: Hello and welcome to this drawing flowers class, where we focus on some roses. We are working from a photo reference that I took outside on a walk and we will be drawing roses with whisk graphite. And I take you through my process of how I like to draw roses over, say, a three or four day period, where we block in the big shapes. And then we refine the drawing. And then we add tone and texture and pattern. And then we finalize the drawing. I loved drawing this way. It takes a complex subject and simplifies it, gives, it, gives it a framework to work within. And then we get to choose how complex or how simple we want to complete the drawing. At any stage of this process, you can choose to stop and your drawing will be complete. And yeah, that's that's pretty much it. So I want to thank you so much for being here. And I want to encourage you to go out and take photographs and draw from them and really use the drying process as an opportunity to explore your creativity. I just want to say thank you so much. 2. Drawing Roses: Materials: Okay, Let's talk about materials that I'm going to use for the sketchbook drawing. So I have a bound Stillman and burn Zelda series sketchbook. And I'm going to draw on this page, which is my November, November 5th to 18th sketchbooks. So like I I like to draw in my sketchbook. This is one that's, that records a lot of my my walks and what I've been out and found. And I will sometimes incorporate a little bit of watercolor today. I'm only gonna do pencil and I'm going to develop my, my drawing to be a B pencil, a little bit more developed than these daffodils, but that's this draw. This sketch book is a variation of both pencil and watercolor sketches. And so stay tuned. I'm sure I will be drawing. I will be pulling out my watercolors as well for another class coming up. But the Stillman and burn set a series sketchbook, but any sheet of paper will do. I am using my 0.3 millimeter mechanical pencil. That's the lead I'm using. Then I have to point holders that hold Tooby and for B lead. So I sharpen it with that lead holder. And then this is the lead that I'm using. And then I've got three erasers. I've got a kneaded eraser by generals. Here's an example of this is actually fabric Estelle. I have a mono Zero eraser which is square inches square. And then I've got a, another Mono Zero by Tombow eraser, but this one is a little tiny point. And then I also, I'm sure one thing I'm also doing this is another little drawing here. I always like to draw on an, on an angle. So when I'm drawing, I have also, I have my iPad and I'm using you can use the iPhone I Photos app. But I've got it in Procreate and then I've got a wooden drawing board, which I think I have a yoga block, just the plain old yoga blocks that I used to prop up my drawings. And that is my setup for today. This is my setup for today. 3. Drawing Roses: Photo Analysis: Hello. We are going to draw these beautiful pink roses that I photographed while out on a walk. Before we jump in and dive into the drawing, I want to talk a little bit about analyzing your photo reference. I like to think about how to make the flowers very expressive. So this is the center of this rose. There's a circle. I see. I look for the unifying, so there's a circle. And then I like to think about it with an orthogonal of a clock face. So this is midnight 639. So this leaf and that petal then at the 04:00 to 06:00 P.M. eight to six, there's a point right there that's halfway between the 1.2, so to speak. And that helps me. And then I think about, well, where is the center? I want to find relationships. So that's right. At the 10:00 is the center of where that goes off. And then what's my unifying shape there? I've got a circle there. And then that helps me find an organize my drawing. 4. Drawing Roses: Block in: Okay, let's get started with our drawing. I'm going to fill up this page predominantly. And then since this is for two weeks, I'm going to work on the other page next week. I'm going to I went to get my basic circling now, I'm not I'm working very lightly with my hands far out. I'm holding my pencil very far back, so I can have a nice soft edge and the center of my right there. So that helps me come down a little bit of stuff going on. Just kind of block those in but not do it thoroughly and with lots of detail on. But instead I'm going to just kinda wanna get those in my circle. A little bit of something going on there. Then I've got another petal right here that's coming out, kinda like that. Here we go. And so with that now I can start working on getting in my, the shape of the second rows. And sometimes I look for the spaces between. I use the negative space to help me measure instead of positive. And it's always amazing Like when I get to a really triggering the particular spot, if I slow down and investigate the the negative shapes that I'm seeing, more often than not, it becomes easy and then I can just move on and start continued to work. Okay. Okay. So I'm just kind of getting the big shapes in. Okay. I think that's good enough spot. Okay, Now I'm going to get a little, some of them. I'll start looking at the leaves. This leaf right here comes out very thinly. Gosh, I love roses for their elegance. It's like a ballet dancer almost. Okay, There's a lot going on in these stems, but I'm not going to draw everything. What I'm going to focus on is probably this stem, which is for the rows that's up here. And then this stem right here, but this one right here that really dark when it's in the back that come off of the same stem that these other two roses are on. And then there's a leaf caught. I'm gonna ignore those. I might put this piece in that dead piece of rose stem rows cane and come forward. But this leaf I might, that comes off of that little one, might again simplify. So we'll see how everything fits up or may not be able to get it fit in. It looks like I may not. So I will leave that to the last figure out. Oh, and I just noticed I loved that. I loved the thin leaf so much that I over-exaggerate it, it, which I'm very prone to doing. So what I've noticed is like I tried to reel myself and when I start, when I see myself, Oh, I'm in an exaggerating mode. I really want to exaggerate that. I think about it, I noticed it. I don't think anything bad about it. I just know, oh, I really loved that. And then I then I move on and I'll correct it if I'll keep it. So sometimes that, that that exaggeration is it makes a painting, makes a drawing. So sometimes I'll keep it and sometimes they won't. So we'll see comes down and then it comes over and then there's a leaf that comes off. I'm just going to kind of get it in. I'm not going to go all crazy. And there's another leaf comes off and goes over. Ms. Originated from this stem right here. We have a leaf that comes up over here. The stem comes up. A ruse. Leaf comes here. And when sometimes you can get rid of leaves, by coincidence, I really am drawn to the complexity of the way the leaves are foreshortened, the way the stems move around and everything. So instead of getting rid of them, I'm actually going to really draw them and celebrate them. But it's up to you, you as the artist get to choose. And that's, you know, that's the wonderful thing about being an artist or being artistic. Exploring something creatively with your drawings is that even when you're working from a photograph, don't be fooled. You don't have to draw and capture the whole thing as is, you get two, you get to be innovative and really explore. And you know, yeah, okay, So I want, I want this leaf to fall off the edge. So that makes for a really beautiful negative space on this page. I love that. Never mind. I think I think that's my drawing actually, I don't know if I will go and develop. Oh, I don't know. I'm still deciding. But essentially this is the, you know, I'm just blocking in the drawing, figuring out what I wanna do. I knew what I was like. I knew what I was drawn To with this with this photograph and then I wanted to capture it in a sketch. But sometimes you don't know until you actually are in the midst of the drawing. Do you realize, oh, this is what I want to express. This is it's just an idea or a hint, and that's okay. That's okay. So my blogging is pretty much established. So this is what I liked. This is when I'm drawing and I'm, no, I'm gonna be, I want to complete a nice drawing. And I know it's going to, I wanted to develop it thoughtfully and thoroughly. Oftentimes, I plan on drawing in it over a number of days. So if I was working in my setup, my drawing setup. Oftentimes this is where I would stop and pause for the night because I love drawing at night today. This is we're going to stop here for a moment and then we'll come back to it. And I'll show you how I like to refine a drawing. And you can see in some places where I have already begun to refine, but now let's dig into that rose a little bit more. 5. Drawing Rose: Refining the Line Drawing: Okay, Let's go in and refine this. These roses. More, lets, you know more than just the blocked in basic shapes. And I really want to work on that rows right there, but I think what will behoove the drawing is to work on this back rows first and then move, move forward. And one of the things I like to do when I'm drawing is I like to have a sheet of paper that my hand rests on. There are oils in our hands and that way we don't damage our paper. Okay, so I'm gonna work with negatives. The negative space between this rose, this rose in the background rows, the upper rows, and the way it reacts to the leaf. So what I see is that I'm still using my 0.3 HB mechanical pencil. And I absolutely loved drawing with mechanical pencil. I love that. My point stays, stays consistent. I love that. I can take this pencil with me anywhere and it will keep a uniform point even if I've traveled with it in my backpack. So I'm always drawing, I'm always sketching with a mechanical pencil. And of course you can use a regular pencil. I, that is a okay. Okay. I'm even going to draw in the shadow shapes that helps me find my space. Sometimes, there we go. Because this shadow line, and I want to get that line in. And then there's some wrinkles. And then, Oh, right there. Then we've got a pedal back here. Okay. So that petal is a little bit bigger than what I had it drawn. I'm always also making corrections as I go. And guys, there is no harm in correcting your drawings. That's what erasers, especially when you're working in pencil. That's what erasers are for. So I'm going to actually go in there and erase some of my lines that were a little bit wrong. That's my shadow shape line. There's a shadow shape. There's a shadow shape right here. But I'm not certain that it does anything for the composition of my roses. So that means I get to choose do I want to keep it or do I want to get rid of it? And I'm choosing to get rid of it right now. I don't see the value in it. There we go. Comes out. Then there's, That's beautiful. Just beautiful. Okay, we got another petal right here. Becomes, so I'm just working up the, the different petals. I'm going to get rid of these lines. Okay, inside that shadow is a petal that comes like that. One of the beautiful things about doing a drawing of a flower like this is oftentimes I use drawing as a precursor to my, my oil painting. I love having that opportunity to get very like almost intimate with like the flower subjects that I know I'm gonna be painting. And even if I'm not going to paint this drawing or this photo reference, I it it informs me enough that I can, the next time I work on a, on a, on a rose painting. I can think of this drawing experience has has entered into my memory, into my long-term memory. And because guys, I have a belief that like drawing is learning. And when you take the time to learn, when you take the time to draw, you're also learning. You're enabling your brain to remember. And now I understand this structure of this rose, the structure of roses in general, and how they. They, they unfurl specifically this type arose. And so then that gives, that informs me and gives me an opportunity to understand more. And then therefore it also lets me create with more facility, with more ease. And that's, that's the goal, is to do this, to make to improve your understanding of the flowers and everything, but also to make your, your, your painting experience easier and more fun too. I think that is, That's where I, that the true joy of art is about. It's that the deepening of your understanding, that the deepening of your awareness give me something to draw and I m happy as a clam. Now, you might notice that as a whole I've had to erase some things and correct some things, but as a whole, my my block in was pretty close. It's a little bit it grew a little bit. And that's one of the reasons why you do a block in is that it makes it easier. It just simplifies the whole, the whole experience. Okay, So that Rose is done. Now it's time to move to this one. And I wonder if I end up enlarging. If this row starts to enlarge to, but we'll see it may not. I may have just undersized the the one in the back. And now I'm just seeing, so I am working on thinking about my edges. And let's point out something. I want to point out something real quick. Okay. So in this drawing, are in this photograph that I'm going to draw. I also like to look, this one's got so many petals. I'm not going to draw in every single petal, but I am going to draw in the big shapes. So there's a big shape right there. That, and then that shadow shape right there. That is important because then it also interacts with what's going on in the center. And so I like to, when I'm drawing from a photo reference or even from life, I'm always trying to think about the geometry and see if I can take a complex subject with a lot of pieces, a lot of details, and see if I can simplify it more. I often do that by squinting at it. If you don't want to squint at your photograph, which it works. So squinting at photographs makes total sense, is just kinda like get your eyes a little bit out of focus. If you're wearing glasses, you can raise your glasses up. And what that does is it, Sometimes it helps you see shapes more and that's at this phase when you're still refining, but we still want to be seen shapes, the bigger shapes. So I'm trying to, and I want to echo what I noticed is that my line right there is in the wrong location for the second petal. This petal is more like right here. So this line is like the third petal in which is cool. Then once I know that there's a dark curve, which is right where the center of roses. Okay. And then I've got like a wrinkle. It's not a wrinkle. Well, I can call it a wrinkle. It's a, its petals that allows me to see and simplify a little bit. One right here. Let's see. It's about right there on edge. I'm going to get that in. Now when you're working from photographs guys, if you are having a hard time seeing your value, you can always switch your photograph to a black and white, and that will help you see your value more. I tend to continue to draw in color from the color reference because I like the, I like the challenge. I like the fact that it's forcing me to to get and get a little bit more involved. I think, just a little bit more, um, and I think that helps me become a better artist, which lets me make color decisions better when I am painting. And I love to paint. I also love to draw. And that's, um, they, they go hand in hand. And I really try to make sure that I'm always making decisions that enable and make for a better experience. Hurry go. So nice. Okay. Okay, and I often will make curves by first going to add them with a line. Here we go. Right there. So pretty right there. Right there. Alright, there's petal and then there's another petal right here. Yeah. Okay. I'm almost finished with the refining, drawing of this, of this flower. Okay, and there's a whole bunch going on in here and here, but those are details. My big shapes of kind of already laden. So yeah, I think the refining drawing is complete. 6. Roses: Adding Tone Part 1: Hello. We're gonna be slowly adding values. The tools that we're going to use for this are the mechanical pencils, the 0.3 millimeter. And I probably will start moving into using my Tooby lead as well. I also will use a sheet of paper to protect my hand while I'm drawing. I'm going to work back to front. First, putting in the basic tonal shapes of light and dark value. And well, and as I find if I see something that needs to be majorly refined, I will also refine it to, because this is a great stage to do that. Right now I'm thinking about like, Okay, my value shape on this petal right here is just kind of get a small outline, which just helps me out. A little bit of shadowing on the underside here. So I'll put that in. Everything except for right here. Catches light. That's kitchen might, but everything else is in shapes. I'm going to add some tone. The backside of this petal is getting tone. See, I'm drawing all in one direction. Lightly. I just noticed that there's a pedal in here that I never saw before until I started thinking about the tone. A little bit darker. I'm holding it at the end. So that way I'm not putting too much pressure. And the goal is one of the reasons why you do not want to always put down a lot of pressure is paper is delicate. And it's got a little bit lighter tone. I'm holding my pencil far back because paper is sensitive and delicate. And I want my pressure to go down. I want the pencil to go down softly enough. I'm not damaging like putting deep end into grooves into the paper from my from the pencil. There's some I squint my eyes and I see, Okay, So it's really dark here. And I have, while I'm working on an adding this tone, I have two choices available to me. I can take Kleenex or a papers stump and unify and smooth everything out. Or I can kinda keep it as is where you can kinda see a little bit of the linearity of the, of my marks. And for today, I'm gonna kinda, I don't think I want to do much like blending, smudging that stump will provide. So I'm going to just plan on just leaving the texture in place. I, I like that. Sometimes I want to blend my peony works, my peony drawing class, I did a lot of blending. But for this, I'm going to keep that texture because I want that feeling of texture and to be present, I think this drawing more. Now every drawing has its own like emotive feeling to it and gives me an opportunity to decide, like, what do I want it? How do I want to present? And I think I want to present where all of my pencil strokes read. I have a shadow shape there. I tried to draw a back-and-forth as parallel as I can. I am zigzagging essentially in back-and-forth that panel. Then there's pedal right here. The petal and then shadow shape goes like that. This is a back edge, shows it's deeper in value over here. It's deeper and value in here too. So I have that opportunity to immediately going back over it. And if you apply just a little bit more pressure, you just want to be careful not to apply so much pressure that you're damaging the surface of the paper. Because if you shouldn't need to erase for some reason, you will have damaged. Unfortunately, you-all have damaged your paper and those grooves will always remain right there. I love that. Ms. Schell. A little bit of shadow, so I'll put that in there. That's reading. So very well. 8. Drawing Roses 07 Adding Tone Part 3: Comes down into here. We've got some dark values. And I've got light catching its petal right here. If you notice, I'm like really abstract in these shapes. I know that there's a lot going on. I'm trying to simplify an abstract these shapes while still keeping those details in. Because it's a fine line between totally obliterating those shapes to a true abstract shape. Or, you know, like I'm told, you know, like essentially I'm viewing the light and dark patterning as a, something that can be simplified into solid flat tones. That what that does is that it allows for simplification and clarity of drawing. Which I think the more you can start to incorporate some of those aspects to your drawing, I think the more engaging your drawing will become two. Because it's those abstract moments of where you might have like, uh, an interesting shape that then has an interesting edge quality that allows an invites the viewer into the art. If everything is too precise and to, to solved, to developed. I think what happens is that there is no room for invitation for the viewer. But leaving areas that are open. And what I mean by open in that I'm painting, I'm drawing this realistically. I'm drawing this realistically. But at the same time, I am also drawing in such a way that it can become, it has these very simplified tonal shapes. And that level of abstraction then allows for us to, to really get creative. And we, I mean, that's the point of art, right? Is to, to create something that speaks to the viewers, invites the viewer is in your painting realistically. You want it to look like the flowers. You want it to look like those objects. But you also want to make sure you're inviting the viewer into your, into your drawing. So I, I always, always, I'm looking for those places in my drawings where I can add, I can use abstract shapes like this center. I'm going to have to get in there and put in more dark shapes. Get some dark shapes in there to get depth. I am having to choke up with more on my my pencil. When I want softer, softer touch, I with an HB, I hold it at the end. See, this needs to be, that's catching light or that's in shadow. This one is catching light. But it's got a shadow shape, right? Cast shadow right there. We have shadow shape. We have a petal right here that's catching a lot of light. And then immediately behind it, There's cache shadows and then edges are catching light. Okay. Yeah, me too. I'm looking at that line. I don't want to use my hand to knockoffs that this petal is pretty dark. So I will be going and as is that one right there. So in the photo reference, there is a leaf that's coming off here. And I may or may not include it. I haven't decided yet. Or I can even hint at it. Because this is a sketchbook. It doesn't have to be a completed drawing. I can just choose where I want to have where I want to complete. Yeah, maybe that's what I'll do. I've hinted at it. I crossover my center part of the sketchbook that looks really nice. I like that detail. Okay. So this is, hey, there's a dark line in here. Instead of hatching, I'm just reinforcing that dark line, like going back and forth. Then there's a pedal and is curved and catching light at the tip. But this part is essentially shade. It's a form, a form shadow that, and what do I mean by form shadow? It means that the curvature of the item is, is creating a shadow shape based on the shape of the object. This is pretty, it's pretty dark. There's another petal right here. So let's see. It's dark is over here. So I'm going to say two petals. So I'm going to say I'm crossing, I'm drawing over my hatch. And there's a little bit of an edge of that pedal. I will be reinforcing some of the darker areas over here. Love that. So pretty wife that's really reading well too, isn't it? That's, that's always rewarding when it starts to read this flower petal right here. We have an area that is catching light. And then we have an area that's in shadow going back and forth. And then half of this, the edge of the petal that's rolling up is catching light differently than what's really deep value. Then this flower. So this, the fried here. I have the choice of keeping it up, drawing it thoroughly or keeping it more. Sketching outlined. And they might just keep it sketchy and outlined. Starting to look really good. So this petal is a little bit, It's, the pedal is curved up. So it would be in shadow if it wasn't for the flower petals. Translucency. How to cross hatch? Again, there's a little bit of an area of dark in here, so I'll get that dark and you probably have cut out 11 petal learn the other. But not significantly. And that's one of the things too, when we're working from a photograph and we're working from life. The main goal of this art is to, is to get the majority of what we see in there. You don't want to. We're not. I always think about it is we're not. Automatons were not these machines. We are still humans interpreting an object. And so that means that there might be times when you dropped something or maybe some of our measurements are off a little bit. And that's okay. The goal is to, you know, each drawing to do it a little bit better. So I I I don't ever beat myself up if I kinda get off if I get off track of it. I want to encourage that for you too. That you that you should give yourself grace if you get a little bit off. And instead, just make sure that you're really enjoying the process. Okay? So I have had, I think this is looking really great. So the next step is to though with a heavier, heavier or lighter or darker lit. And so. 9. Drawing Roses: Adding Tone Part 4: Let's demonstrate real quick. I'm gonna go over into this, this quarter right here. So what I want to show you real quick is I've been using an HB and if I hold it deeply, lightly from a distance, then if I hold it tightly and put more pressure, that the dark, oops, and I break my lead two, that's the dark as I can get. So I have a lead holder or an LED pointer sharpen. It gives me a very nice tip. I've got graphite dust, which I wanted to take off, and then there's my tip. This is a Tooby. And if I hold it in the distance that it's about the same as an HB. Then if I put again, I broke my tip. If I put clips, if I put down harder, I get a much darker. And let's do it. This is a light tone. Then this is a dark tone. And then if I go over it, I can even get darker. And that's actually demonstrate this is h be, zoom in. Okay, so that's HB. And then so here's a light tone. Then here's a dark tone. And then if I want to make it darker, it doesn't get much darker. So those are and then I have four be available to meet two for this drawing. I don't think I'll need for B. I think I can stop at the to-be, but I'll demonstrate to you guys real quick. This is for B, that's light. So again, potentially depending on your pressure, you can get the effect of a from an HB to a for B on just by controlling your pressure. Then that's, you can see that it gives off a little bit darker. So that's for B to B. Then let's show a soft, That's soft one. And then a hard one starts off a little bit darker than the to-be. It gets really if you can get very dark very fast. So those are my those are my HB lead that I like using. But I'm going to switch to a to-be. Actually. Stay zoomed in. So I do the to-be. Brian. I want to get with my Tooby lead. I went to get my darker notes, a little darker. That means the center of this. Why do you do dark? Why would you get darker in value? Will that when you get darker in value, UE visually, you visually create a little bit more visual depth and are in the drawing because it helps with adding that a greater sense of three-dimensional squint my eyes added. Sometimes also the tube allows me to add a little bit more hatch to the drawing. So I've got that HB tone. Then if I want to add some, something a little bit more interesting, like reinforce a line a bit more. I can, I can do that by adding a hatch over that. You can create some really some wonderful pattern and texture doing that. And I'm sorry, I'm going to do right now. Squint my eyes. Realize this is not quite rolling the way I want it to. So I'm going to play with that just a little bit more. Drawing is really, really important. And growing your skill set, you, you want to get better at drawing if you can. Because drawing, if you start getting to where drawing becomes an easy, easy form of expression, you can pretty quickly also improve your painting. I find that the more I draw, the easier my painting experience gets. And so then I'm very, I get, I'm very motivated to always be working on improving my drawing. Because I also want to be improving my painting skills. Like I went over a little bit. That's okay. Some of it I'm not going to some of it I do go over and I loved that death or stay there. I didn't get it works for keeping, you know, creating a little bit more variety. Variety. Looking at that HB or the to-be immediately, if I put a little bit of pressure on, I get such a wonderful dark line and drawing it. I love at play between putting in a tonal mask and then playing this line. To be is just reinforcing that shape, that shadow shape of the petal. So different, different pressures provide different effects. Not all edges will get reinforced because that gives me kind of a fun variety of edge quality. And as I was saying earlier, that the more variety and kind of that dither, that abstraction that invites the viewer into your art. More. And the more you can find places for that, the more your art welcomes. And as I've said tonight, I'm a big believer that your art is about creating human connection, about finding ways to really kind of like share something that you think is beautiful. And then another person comes across it and goes, oh, me too. I find that so beautiful. I'm so glad you've taken the time to really express that, that sense of wonder and beauty that you feel from, from this experience. Say, there we go, It's coming together. I'm going to move on to the next flower then. What I wanted to do before I do the rows, I'm going to just take my pencil and work on this one leaf right here. I want to get that leaf in. There's a stem. I'm just going to let that trail off. I don't need to do much more with that. 10. Drawing Roses 08 Finalizing the Drawing: We are in the final, final stages of completing this drawing. And it only needs a few things I think to truly complete. And what I wanna do is I want to go in to this rose and put in a couple of more couple of areas where that needs to be a little bit darker. So I'm using my point, my Tooby lead holder. And yeah, let's get started because that's I think there'll be done real soon. So you just need to put in a couple of areas that need to be a little bit darker or that I think it will add greater depths to this drawing. And then by providing a little bit more depth, we'll get a little bit more variety in my value shapes. And that will add just a little bit more to the paint to the drawing. So I used a little bit hard pressure and type broke when am I Chip? A moment ago. So I'm going to sharpen my pencil. I've got a graphic dust on it, so always wipe off the graphite dust and then I'm ready to go. I squint my eyes and look at the areas that the value needs. Scope it deeper in value. Squinting again, okay, so it needs, needs to be some darker spots here. There we go. Then what I'm also noticed the, let's see. Then there needs to be a little bit more variety in here. Not so flat. This needs to go a little bit darker. So I'm going to go back and forth, create a little bit more visual depths. There's a little bit of catching light there, so here we go. Okay, So I think that's done. I, what, what else do I need to finalize the strike? So this is the phase where I'm finalizing my sketch. And I really love how that is, maybe my work. And create a little bit more interesting line here. There we go. A little bit of line there. And I'm going to go, Oh, he's a little bit of a foreshortened leaf that I really like. Let me get that drawn in. Then there's another leaf that's foreshortened only through half of it last time. Comes up over here and then it comes there we go. Here we go. Yeah. Okay. So there's my drawing for this week. Really, like how it's turned out. 11. Roses 10 Thank you: Thank you for joining me in this drawing process. I hope you really enjoyed yourself and that you learned a little bit more about roses and improved your drawing technique. And can now take these skills and take them to another drawing experience. I really want to encourage you guys to spend time every week or whenever you have an opportunity to sketch. Drawing is such an important part of the creative process. It is. And it's one of the easiest ways to express yourself creatively. We can always have a pencil with us. And if you're like me, I always like having a mechanical pencil with me and a sketchbook. So that gives me an opportunity to draw whenever and wherever I'm at. And and it's just such a wonderful way to express ourselves and learn a little bit more about the world that we live in. And to take a quick, I find drawing to be so very rejuvenating. And I hope, I hope that this class has helped you also see the wonderful power of drawing and how it can really bring about a level of relaxation and peace. And also just another opportunity to, to express yourself creatively. So thank you so much. If you are curious more about my work, please visit my website at Elizabeth floyd.com. And as always, thank you so much for being here. I really appreciate it.