Fig. 236.
“Inking In” Drawings.
When a drawing is completely finished in penciling, it should next be “inked in” for preservation.
Care should be used that the pen may be perfectly clean; the pen should be held nearly vertical, leaning just enough to prevent it from catching on the paper; the pen should be held between the thumb and first and second fingers, the knuckles being bent, so that it may be at right angles with the length of the hand.
The ink should be rubbed up fresh whenever it is about to be used, for it is better to waste a little time in preparing ink slowly than to be at a continual trouble with pens, which will occur if the ink is ground too rapidly or on a rough surface.
To test ink, a few lines can be drawn on the margin of a sheet, noting the shade, how the ink flows from the pen, and whether the lines are sharp. After the lines have dried, cross them with a wet brush; if they wash readily, the ink is too soft; if they resist the water for a time and then wash tardily, the ink is good.
Care must be exercised not to overload the pen with ink, and, like the pencil, the pen should always be moved from left to right and from the bottom to the top of the board. When inking, both “nibs” of the pen point must rest evenly on the paper and the pen be pressed only lightly against the T-square. Never ink any portion of a drawing until the penciling is complete.
In inking long, fine lines it is well to go over each line twice, without moving the T-square, trying not to widen the line on the second passage; also see that the pen contains ink enough to finish a line, as it is difficult to continue with the same width of line after re-filling.
To produce finished drawings, it is necessary that no portion should be erased, otherwise the color applied will be unequal in tone; thus, when highly finished mechanical drawings are required, it is usual to draw an original and to copy it. Where sufficient time cannot be given to draw and copy, a very good way is to take the surface off the paper with fine sand-paper before commencing the drawing; if this be done, the color will flow equally over any erasure it may be necessary to make afterwards.