The Importance of Value in Art

The Importance of Value in Art

Otherwise Known as Shading

The importance of value in art should be of top concern if you’re after realistic drawings. Value, otherwise known as shading, is a main player in what makes a drawing look three-dimensional or not. Without strong values, a drawing looks flat. The artist must be able to indicate highlights versus the darkest shadows and every shade in between in order for a drawing to look realistic.

importance of value illustrated by side by side one shade circle vs sphere with full shading

Proper value turns the same flat, grey circle into a sphere. (Image Credit: Myra Naito)

Accurate shading is what gives an object volume, shape, and dimension. It’s also what tells the viewer where light is coming from. Many beginning artists seem to be timid when it comes to value. Their darks are not as dark as they should be and therefore the drawing falls flat.

value strip from white to black

Most realistic drawings use a full range of value, from the lightest lights to the darkest darks.

A good tool for an artist to have is a value scale. You can purchase one in art stores or online, but it’s a great exercise to create your own.

Draw a strip of 11 adjoining one-inch squares. Number each square from 0-10. And it’s best to use artists’ pencils for this as typical yellow school pencils won’t have the necessary range. Leave 0 completely white. Square 10 should be completely black. You’re next going to fill in each of the remaining squares from the lightest to darkest of greys. The transition from one square to the next should be even and smooth.

importance of value for realistic drawings illustrated by varying degrees of shading (value) in a portrait of a cat with buddha

By simply increasing the dark values, the drawing develops more depth and dimension. (Credit: Myra Naito, mnaitodesigns.com)

You can use these scales by holding them up to your photo reference to determine just how dark that value should be in your drawing.

Patience is a virtue!

The trick to getting believable value is to build it up gradually. If you attempt to go dark all at once, you could overestimate things and at that point, it’s very difficult to undo it. Going dark means you’re exerting a lot of pressure on the paper, which flattens out the tooth of the paper. Once that happens, and you try to erase, there’s something that always looks a bit off about that area because you’ve already knocked down all of the tooth and texture of the paper. So unless you know that area is a #10 black without question, go slowly and build it up.

Artist’s pencils can also help greatly here. The bonus is…they’re not very expensive! My two favorite brands are pictured above. They come in a variety of graphite hardness/softness, usually a scale from 2H (very hard) to 9B (very soft). The harder the graphite, the lighter the marks it makes. You will never get a true black from a 2H pencil. On the other end of the scale, a 9B pretty much only produces very dark black marks. It is very soft and smudges easily. These pencils can be purchased individually or in sets and are not very expensive.

 

 

FREE CLASS:

How to Draw: The Very Basics 

 

Further reading:

The Importance of Line in Art

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