Skip to main content

Sketching Pet Cats and Dogs

 This article was originally published on Hubpages in July 2009.


Ink sketches of Ygraine, my West Highland White Terrier

The trick to sketching pets is speed. If you wait for them to stay still then you may be waiting for a very long time! If animals move before your sketch is finished, you can be assured that they will never, ever adopt exactly the same pose again. So loosen up, and try to sketch an impression rather than fuss over exact details.

Observation and quick drawing responses are vital, then, and also a sense of timing - which is why I often wait until they're snoozing or at least relaxed and sitting still. And a sketch is supposed to be a quick impression of the subject anyway, rather than a detailed finished drawing.

I find a small sketch pad kept nearby is more convenient than a larger pad, and with an ink pen all you need do is take the cap off and you're ready to draw. If you start rummaging in drawers for pencil sharpeners or watercolour paints, or begin turning the pages of a large sketch pad, then the chances of your snoozing model rousing its sweet little fluffy head to see what it's being missing out on increases with every moment.

More than once I have tried to explain to my cats that it's impossible to sketch them while they're sitting directly on top of the sketch book and patting at the pen.

Ink sketch of Emily, my Jack Russell Terrier, when she was a puppy so small we nicknamed her Little Mouse.

Tips for Sketching

When sketching, think about the size of your page and how you intend to place your subject on that page. There's no need to labour over details of background, but avoid having your main subject floating like a balloon on a blank sheet. Give some indication of the ground or surface which your subject is on.

Think about where the shadows lie. An animal should not look flat, so remember the roundness of the body, the structure of the skeleton beneath the fur, and use shading to give depth to the animal's form.

Experiment with different kinds of drawing, such as line drawing, tonal drawing or cross-hatching. Try limiting yourself to ten minutes per sketch, which is a good way to increase speed, observational skills and lose any hindering 'preciousness' you may harbour about your work. Use different drawing materials, too, rather than limit yourself to what may be familiar. Chalks can be lovely to use on textured paper, for example.

Sketching Pets

Ink sketch of Mutley, my beloved geriatric one-eyed ginger-and-white tomcat. Drawing Mutley was easy because he spent much of his time asleep.

Ink sketch of Jazzy.

Ink sketch of Ygraine

Subjective Opinions

Describing my own drawings isn't something I've indulged in since my art school days, when constructive criticism was a part of every class. These-days I let my work speak for itself. A person viewing it will either like my work or not; an inevitable and entirely subjective choice. If someone else likes it, fine; if not, it doesn't matter to me as I draw and paint purely for my own pleasure.

Just a few fluid lines, but this sketch captures the essence of a cat.

Minimal lines, yet the mischievous expression brings this sketch to life.

Experiment and Have Fun Sketching!

Try a variety of different approaches to sketching. Use different materials to draw on and with. Set aside any pressure to produce "good" work. Like all skills, sketching takes patient practice to master. Remember that you are not obliged to show your sketches to anyone until you feel ready, or even at all.

If you have no pets of your own, perhaps you could visit your local park and sketch other peoples' dogs there. If you're happy to visit a zoo, you could have a go at sketching the captive animals living there.

Photographs have their place as visual prompts, but these can easily result in flat and lifeless looking sketches. Drawing the real thing, drawing from life, is a highly valuable skill which all successful artists need to develop. Don't be deterred if early efforts aren't so great; just keep practicing and learn to observe.

Take some time to study how other artists have tackled similar subjects, and discover what you like and dislike about their approach. Is a finished sketch too sweet or cartoon-like? Does it convey a sense of the animal's character? Does it capture an impression of the animal's movements, or of the texture of its fur?

Most important of all, have fun sketching.






Comments

Popular posts from this blog

A Cure for Aging?

"All that we profess to do is but this, - to find out the secrets of the human frame; to know why the parts ossify and the blood stagnates, and to apply continual preventatives to the effort of time.  This is not magic; it is the art of medicine rightly understood.  In our order we hold most noble -, first, that knowledge which elevates the intellect; secondly, that which preserves the body.  But the mere art (extracted from the juices and simples) which recruits the animal vigour and arrests the progress of decay, or that more noble secret which I will only hint to thee at present, by which heat or calorific, as ye call it, being, as Heraclitus wisely taught, the primordial principle of life, can be made its perpectual renovator...." Zanoni, book IV, chapter II, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton, first published in 1842. Oroboros keyring - Spooky Cute Designs The idea of being able to achieve an immortal life is probably as old as human life itself.  Folklore and myt...

Remembering Richie Tattoo Artist's Studio

Richard in the street entrance to his tattoo studio in Liverpool. The vertical sign next to Richard is now in the Liverpool Tattoo Museum. Yesterday, my sister Evelyn, Richard and myself stood outside Richard's old tattoo studio and looked up at the few remaining signs, whose paint has now mostly flacked away to reveal bare wood. On the studio's window are stick-on letters which read, "Art", where once it boldly announced his presence as the city's only "Tattoo Artist".  I can remember him buying that simple plastic lettering from an old-fashioned printer's shop. This was in 1993, not long after he'd opened the studio and before he could afford better signs. After he'd patiently stuck them onto the glass we realised that from the outside the sign read "Artist Tattoo", so we had to carefully peel the letters off the window and have another go, laughing over having made such an obvious error yet worried in case we spoiled the letteri...

Falling Trees and Blue Portraits

Birkenhead Park Visitor Centre, 7th April 2019, by Adele Cosgrove-Bray. My ongoing series of sketches in the park continues unabated, as is evident. On a few recent sketches I've added some simple washes of watercolour to bring another dimension to the scenes. I've long grown accustomed to sketching in public, and the few people who've passed any comment have always been encouraging. I've even unintentionally captured a tiny bit of park history:- I drew this lovely arching tree in February this year, and since then its own weight has pulled its roots out from the ground. Probably due to safety concerns, it has been brutally cut back so it's now little more than a stump, and the horizontal section, with all its vertical branches, has been removed. Hopefully the tree will survive this harsh treatment. "How can walkies please, when every step's a wheeze?" by Adele Cosgrove-Bray. Portrait by Adele Cosgrove-Bray; chalk and charcoal...