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| location: Home > Art Fundamentals > Basics > Ink | |||
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Inks are made from solutions of carbon particles suspended in water
and mixed with a binder such as shellac. Depending on the binder, they
can dry to a matte or glossy finish, be opaque or transparent and can
be mixed with each other and overlaid to create an infinite variety
of shades and tones. Inks can also be water- or oil-based. Inks are primarily applied with brushes or pens. They are sold in glass or plastic bottles with eyedropper caps, or in squeeze-bottles with narrow necks. Both allow you to fill a pen easily without spillage. There also are inks specially made for technical pens, graphic design use and airbrush applications. All brushes and pens that come in contact with ink should be washed immediately when work finishes because, once dry, ink is very difficult to remove.
Most technical pens are refillable but many use their own compatible ink cartridges that should never be refilled from a bottle but discarded once empty. Inks for reservoir type pens are available in filler bottles. Some drawing inks contain a high proportion of shellac that dries quickly and can clog the fine filament inside the ink delivery system within the nib. The most suitable ink is one that is free flowing but quick-drying, with good adhesion qualities. Some water-based dyes do not have sufficient viscosity for technical pens, causing the dye to flow too freely from the nib and flood the drawing. These should be avoided if possible.
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Tonal and Textural Effects Using Ink Top Row (left to right): ink into water, dry
brush dragged, broad nib pen, crosshatch on dry and wet paper.
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