Chalk Drawinge Book
Chalk Drawinge Book
Chalk Drawinge Book
By Rick Tan
Introduction
I think what keeps a grownup young and vital is the drive to learn new
things. Even as parents and teachers, we place ourselves in the position of
student. We welcome new experiences and new challenges. We learn what
we can learn from life around us. It is for the benefit of our own souls, but
also for the benefit of the children we teach and model for. I am thankful
that you have made a wonderful choice to learn about drawing with chalk. I
hope you find it helpful in your path to build up your creative self.
In my Chalk Drawing eBook, you will find morsels of information that will
assist you in working in this medium. You have to be willing to experiment,
to be challenged, to be open to making mistakes. As you chalk up more
hours on the board, you will build up your confidence and find your own
artistic style. Enjoy!
Drawing with chalk serves a visual aid in teaching your students new
concepts and skills. It becomes indispensable when you want to model a
precise way to write, or to demonstrate a process, or to aid in explaining
math computations.
For teaching purposes, you will use a chalk drawing or diagram quite
frequently, depending on the topic and how best suited chalk would be to
the students’ learning. The images you use must resonate with the children
somehow; the color, form, subject, and relationship to the topic you are
teaching must have some kind of meaningfulness. Your use of the
chalkboard can span the spectrum of mundane math skills review to the
magnificent depiction of St. Francis in a garden surrounded by birds.
You have to trust your instincts as to what feels appropriate for what you
are teaching and how you feel the child would respond to it.
What you will discover as the underlying skill in chalk drawing is that your
creative eye is constantly informing the process. Chalk drawing is not a
Since you have access to my chalk drawing video, you may decide to watch
it first before moving on. The information shared here explains a bit more
about the technique, but the video shows how I created the pictures. You
may even have both to refer to simultaneously. Do what is best for you.
Give it a go, find your own artistic style, aim high, be the chalk!
Line or Fill
Fundamental to Waldorf in the early grades is demonstrating the creation
of forms by starting from the inside out. It symbolizes the soul contained
within organisms and objects. Humans, for example, are not an empty shell
contained by an outline, we are instead filled with soul and body. When the
Waldorf teacher is in front of the younger child or student about to create
some kind of drawing, he or she is mindful about using fill to make the
image to honor this philosophy. Aside from the esoteric perspective,
choosing fill over line has a technical advantage in chalk drawing. Let’s
experiment and see if this is true for you.
Now, use fill to create the leaf. Using the side of your chalk, begin in the
middle of the leaf and gradually work your way to the edges of the leaf. Use
your creative eye to evaluate your fill work as you go, make adjustments,
add more where you want more curve, create the tip of the leaf, create
where the stem might be. Using fill, you increase your ability to render a
leaf shape you want.
Is there anything wrong with using an outline to render an image? No, not
at all. I use outlining all the time to begin my drawings in the upper grades,
and I use it all the time when I am in the process of starting the layout of
my chalk drawings. But, I have found that ultimately I use fill to give the
objects and images their final shape.
Forming a Shape
Our eyes tell us when shapes have taken on some level of familiarity. We
can recognize the silhouette of a circle compared to an oval, an oak tree
compared to a pine tree, a bear compared to a walrus. In using fill, you are
forming a shape. In this step, you are taking the fill technique to create
more complex imagery.
Exercise 1: Copy the giraffe I have rendered in the example below by using
the side of your chalk, preferably, a piece about an inch long. You can start
anywhere, but I have found that starting at the heart space of the animal
works well. Build out from there. Evaluate as you go. Your eye will see
Exercise 2: Find another image from your reference books to form its
shape using fill. Practice this technique with different images.
Shaping a Form
In the previous exercise, you had formed a shape. In this next step, you will
be shaping a form! What do I mean by this? Once you have established a
shape, it becomes now the structure – the form – from which you will add
features that further inform the observer of what that shape is. You will
add details such as clothing, color, and other identifying elements. Like a
sculptor who has created the shape of a human figure, you will now shape
it to give it more life and character. The advantage of creating the form first
is that you have some freedom and flexibility with placement and layout of
the various parts of your chalk drawing, if you are doing a scene or
landscape, for instance. When you are happy with where the forms are,
and their positioning, then you can begin shaping the forms.
Layering Color
In shaping the form, you added characteristic or distinguishing features.
Layering color is another step in shaping your forms as it adds another level
of detail and uniqueness to your chalk drawing. You might have a variety of
chalk colors to choose from, but layering color allows you to customize the
look of your drawing. It can add interesting texture and fun to your drawing.
It can add a level of realism - we actually perceive a multitude of colors
within what we may initially think of as a single color on an object.
Exercise 1: Start with the form of a bunny rabbit, like the example given
below. With the side of your chalk, layer some swishes of another color
over the rabbit form. Add yet another color if you wish. Try to picture the
direction of the rabbit’s fur, and intentionally swish your chalk along the fur
lines. Add a dark color for the eyes, and a small dot within the eye o
indicate the reflected light. Use a lighter color where I have placed it in my
example. You make take it a step further, and using the tip of your chalk,
actually create individual strands of fur to indicate another layer of detail.
Evaluate as you go.
Exercise 1: Using the three successive images below, create the effect of
light and shadow on a drawn plant. Start by forming the shape of the plant
with a medium shade of green. (Image 1) Next, we will shape its form by
using light and shadow. Use a light-colored chalk (yellow, light green, or
white) and apply this color with the side edge of your chalk or the tip of
your chalk to the portions of the leaves and stems that you think may be
receiving light from the sun above. (Image 2) Lastly, apply a darker shade of
green or blue to the portions of the leaves and stems that are not receiving
sun exposure, or may be receiving a shadow from a leafy structure above it.
(Image 3)
Smudging
There is a final step you can take with your chalk drawings, smudging. After
you have laid down your finishing details on your chalk drawing, you may
decide that the look you want requires you to smudge the chalk. Often, the
layering application of chalk already creates a blended appearance,
meaning colors and objects seem to flow into one another. You can take it
a step further if, by using your fingers, you rub the chalk into the surface of
your board, thus smudging the chalk, or you can call it blending too.
Take a look at the example of the plant we had drawn from the previous
exercise. I placed it below and put it side by side with the same drawing
that I had blended/smudged with my fingers. Compare the difference
between the two. It is a matter of preference (and time, board surface, and
appropriateness) when choosing between the two final looks.
Items you will need: chalkboard, chalk, straight edge, eraser, old rags,
reference books, carpenter’s level (optional), and board compass (optional).
Rick Tan, MD, is a Waldorf teacher, artist, feng shui consultant, and musician
who lives in Davis, California, with his wife and four children. He writes about his
experiences in the Waldorf classroom, at Rudolf Steiner College in Fair Oaks,
and homeschooling on his blog www.thewaldorfway.blogspot.com. Rick and his
wife Jennifer enjoy leading art, handwork and curriculum workshops, conducting
teleseminars, and consulting with homeschooling families. More information
about their services can be found at: www.syrendellacademy.com.