I really like that you work with inks - love the look of that wash. Me, I remain fearful of any medium I can't erase or remove with marlene. [emoji38]
Over the last couple of months, I took some basic drawing lessons online - 5, to be exact. I still suck.
Practise drawing an object without looking at the paper. Try it maybe 10 times. Then draw it while looking at it and the paper. If you continue this over a period of time, your drawing skills will improve dramatically. Another method is to tape some paper down to a table. Grab a magazine image or photo, tape it to the table upside down. Draw it. You can also buy some transparent film, use a sharpie and ruler, make a grid on it and place it over image your copying. Draw in smaller chunnks until image is completed. All these exercises will train the right side of the brain to coordinate with your drawing hand. People with serious drawing skills have a solid connection in the right side of brain and the hand.
I've actually heard of this - drawing objects upside down, so you are forced to pay attention to line and shape, rather than what your *think* the object should look like. Excellent suggestion.
Well, you've been very kind, Charlie.

I appreciate it, as this is wayyyy outside my comfort zone. Even when hand coloring, it's on a B&W photograph: no drawing skills necessary. But it's nice - and I really have come to believe, beneficial - to force your mind to wrap around other objectives, creatively. I really have little interest in drawing with pencils, but the classes
did force me to spend time on the effort needed to draw what you see in front of you.
The basic premise from these classes is that there are 4 shapes in all of nature: the cone, the sphere, the cube, and the cylinder - and that once you train your eye/mind to recognize them in everything, in their various presentations, it becomes easier to draw more realistically.
I've actually been doing some work with oil pastels - it started as another medium to work with hand coloring B&W photos, but I started doing some free-form work. That's when I realized how crappy I am at drawing. [emoji38]