Get ready for a drawing challenge that’s equal parts fun, focused, and a little bit wiggly — it’s time for continuous line drawing!
In this lesson, you’ll draw your subject using just one single line — that’s right, no lifting your pencil off the paper, not even once!
It might sound tricky at first, but this technique is a brilliant way to loosen up, stay present, and really connect your eyes with your hand. You’ll start to look more closely, move more confidently, and worry less about perfection.
It’s not about neatness — it’s about flow. Like a rollercoaster ride for your pencil! So pick your starting point, take a deep breath, and let your line dance across the page.
You’ve only got one line, and it’s not allowed to stop. No lifting your pencil. No sneaky shortcuts. Just your hand, your eye, and your imagination going for a walk together!
It helps you loosen up and draw more freely (no more stiff, robot lines!).
It teaches you to really look at what you’re drawing — not just guess.
It makes you brave, because you have to just keep going even if it gets a little wobbly.
And best of all? It’s fun. Like drawing on a rollercoaster!
Artists like Paul Klee, Egon Schiele and Picasso all had a go at continuous line drawing:
To begin with, practise your cross-hatching in a series of boxes, varying the number of intersecting lines you use to make change how light or dark your boxes are.
Once you’ve done the steps above you should have a nice stepped gradient, well done!
Have a go at creating another cross-hatched gradient, but this time you only need to draw one long rectangular box.
Try to create a gradient just like before, only this time you want it to transition from light to dark as seamlessly as you can, without any sudden changes.
Once you’ve got to grips with your shading gradients using cross-hatching, have a go at drawing a cross-hatched vase (or similar object).
Extra tip: if you draw contour lines on your vase you’ll find it easier to know where to cross-hatch
Add cross-hatching to your vase using a black fine-liner pen, just like you did on your practice gradient. The difference this time is that your gradients will follow the contours of the vase.
To keep it simple, draw a vase that is lighter towards the centre and darker towards the outside, then put a linear gradient on the ellipse at the top to create a shadow.
What do you think has gone well and how might they be improved?