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Pen care
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Illustrator Draftsman 1 & C - Volume 3 Executionable Practices
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Ink washes

Pens and Inks, Continued Ink Ink is a water-soluble emulsion of opaque pigment.   Ink comes in colors, but the most opaque and the color you will be most familiar with is black. Although you can thin ink with water, once ink dries it becomes waterproof. Old ink is no longer useful.    The emulsion separates or the pigment thickens. If the ink has separated, throw it away.    If the ink has thickened, you may be able to salvage it by adding a small quantity of water.    Thinning ink with water reduces opacity. Ink drawing Drawings made in ink are referred to as line drawings. The image is black and white. Areas that appear grey do so only by textural variation. Textural variations Stipple and crosshatch are examples of textural variations.    How light or dark areas appear depends on the ratio of black ink lines to the white paper space between  the  lines.  When  rendering  textural  effects,  make  sure  the  first  set  of lines dry before crossing them with another.   If you do not, the lines pool and blur or the paper becomes saturated and the pen nib tears the paper fiber. Figure 1-23 shows lines made by a variety of pens and brushes. Figure 1-23.—Varied effects with different pen points and brushes. Continued  on  next  page 1-37

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