Six Cheap Thrills For The Frugal Drawing Artist

Drawing is one of the least expensive art mediums around, so to celebrate your smart and frugal choice of medium, here are six inexpensive drawing tools to add to your supply stash.

1. Sav-A-Point Pencil Protectors by General – Pencils always get knocked around and leads are fragile, but these little plastic caps keep sharp points unbroken. They work on both wooden and mechanical pencils.

2. Paper Tortillons and stumps – Extremely useful for blending and for lifting out subtle highlights. Keep the tips clean by spinning them in a kneaded eraser or by running them over sandpaper.

3. Pack of Emery-Boards – Use them to shape erasers, clean stumps, and to quickly re-point pencil leads or create a chiseled tip.

4. Kneaded Erasers – Very handy once you get used to their soft putty texture. Pinch them into various shapes for erasing oddly shaped areas and for creating textures. Use them for cleaning vinyl erasers too. They are notoriously easy to lose, though. I buy several at a time.

5. Small flat brush – Great for blending and for working with powdered graphite.

6. Homemade Powdered Graphite – It’s easy to make your own powdered graphite. Just run any pencil lead over an emery-board to create a small pile on a piece of paper. (A little goes a very long way, so you won’t need much.)

To store it, tip the paper and let the powder slide into a jar. Wide mouth jars work well because you can dip your brush in and pick up a little on the tip. I use short cocktail sauce and jam jars and I get to eat the stuff inside too, which makes it doubly frugal. And yummy. :)