MelissaEsplin.com

Hand-Lettering with Pencils & Upcoming Workshops!

June 5, 2018
Hey friends!! Welcome here. I've got 3 upcoming workshops this summer (more in the works, fingers crossed). I hope to see you there!  Beginning Brush Lettering Workshop | DRAPER, UT | JULY 19 Learn brush lettering based on more traditional foundations and how to manipulate those foundations to write some funky letters! All skill levels welcome, but it is geared more toward beginners. Lefties welcome! Eventbrite - July 19 Brush Lettering Calligraphy Workshop Penmanship Workshop | PROVO, UT | AUGUST 16 Learn the art of beautiful penmanship and how to harness your own style to tell your story. This is perfect for beginners, lefties and future brides! We'll go through foundations, style and how to address an envelope.  Eventbrite - Beginning Cursive Penmanship & Letter Writing Night 2-Day Brush Lettering/Digitization Intensive | NASHVILLE, TN | AUG 25-26 Join me in Nashville for a whole lot of fun with a 2-day lettering intensive with the pointed brush. We'll dig deeper than in any other class in the two days. We'll go letter-by-letter through variant options, work on word and compositional structure and style structure. At the end of the class, we'll work on the beginning essentials of digitization by making our own personalized stamps with our artwork. All skill levels welcome.  Paperinkarts - brush lettering event august 2018 I hope I can see you at one of the above workshops this summer. We always have a blast and I try to pack as much information as possible so you leave the workshop motivated, empowered and ready to continue your calligraphy journey. Now let's talk hand-lettering!! Calligraphy and hand-lettering can be intimidating. Especially if you're just starting out and teaching yourself. That's where the humble, yet mighty pencil comes in. The pencil's got your back. In fact, I have my online class students pull out the pencil before they touch any kind of pen or marker. The master penmen use pencils, so you can, too. I'm really excited to have shared this fun and simple technique on KSL's Studio 5 on how to incorporate pencil lettering into your every day creativity. Let's do this, shall we?!? Isn't this a fun card? You can totally make this in about 10 minutes.  The cool thing about pencil is that you can erase it until you commit. So watercolor pencils you can erase until you add water. You can erase most pencils quite effectively until you commit by pressing really hard or going overtop in pen. You can see the difference between committing with pressing hard with a dark pencil on the right and a marker on the left. The cool thing is you don't have to have fancy materials in order to be successful with your pencil lettering. Here's what you need: 
  • Paper - use a mixed media paper if you're using watercolor pencil.
  • Ruler - you gotta draw light grid lines or your lettering will be all over the place. Clear grid rulers are my fave.
  • Pencils - I've teamed up with General Pencil to create a pencil lettering kit, try it! It's great.
  • Brush - I like small round brushes for this, but any brush you have on hand could also work!
Step 1: Cut down your paper to size. I'll leave it up to you as to what size you want to trim it down to. Get a ruler and mark out your top and bottom lines. The master penmen use a ruler to mark out guides, you should too.  Lightly draft out your message. I find that short words in this style work best. Also, when drafting out your letters, make sure they're generously spaced apart. Because we'll be outlining around each letter, you'll want to make sure you give yourself enough room for those outlines. Grab a watercolor pencil and roughly mark out the outlines with watercolor pencils. For the sake of this style, pick two colors that you'd like to go together. Use the darker of the two colors for this part of the outline. Wet a small round brush (this is a size 2 round) and smooth out the outline of your watercolor pencil. Leave a little bit of white space and outline each letter. I love the General's draughting pencil for this. It's hard enough to maintain a stable line, but it's smooth and dark.  With your lighter color, outline the right-hand and bottom sides of your outline. You'll use a light touch to lay down pigment to not disrupt the draughting pencil layer.  Using the same wet round brush, smooth out and soften the drop shadow you've created.  Once the watercolor is dry, erase away guidelines carefully. I like to use the corner of the eraser.  Bam! You're done. You can send it as-is, or you can trace over the darker pencil marks in pen or marker to make the layout pop even more. This tutorial is free for personal use. Affiliates are used to link to products I actually use and have. Your support here makes more content possible. Thank you!