| From
the March/April 1998 issue of The Horn Book Magazine
Studio
Views
TICONDEROGA #2
by Donald Crews
y
hands-down favorite medium would have to be graphite or lead, the
core of a pencil, the material that makes the marks on paper. Lead
makes the words, images, idle thoughts (doodles), specific information
— crucial and otherwise — visible.
With the lead from a pencil I can make thin delicate
words and lines, bold solid black forms, and wispy, smooth gray
shadings. All with the same soft lead. Everybody can, anybody —
no experience necessary. Everybody can do it, from the very beginning,
right out of the box.
Any pencil will do, but my absolute favorite would
have to be a TICONDEROGA #2, brand new (they don’t last long)
and freshly sharpened. Golden yellow (Cadmium yellow), six-sided,
with yellow and green ferrule, and at one end a pink eraser.
Sharpening a new pencil, cutting away the wood
to get at the lead, was, at first, very conservative: a hand-held
sharpener with one or more hobs for various thickness of pencil.
A little later on, and more interesting and bold: a penknife (a
non-threatening, pencil-sharpening-only penknife). More limiting:
a wall- or desk-mounted hand-turned apparatus.
Up/down, side/side, cross/cross, scribble/scribble,
swirl, and then smudge/smudge with a thumb or finger. A wonderful
way to make marks on paper. Spare use of the eraser preserves it
and avoids losing some potentially useful bit.
Number two is a degree of lead soft enough for
most of my needs, but if I must have a very bold, extra-black image
for a dog or a train in a tunnel or the night sky, only an EBONY
VERIBLACK will do. The whole pencil is black, the lead very soft
with unparalleled smudge-ability.
Sketching, note-taking, list-making using a lead
pencil in sketchbooks, on envelopes, and on bits of paper of every
size and description is a necessary, useful, and pleasurable part
of my life. Finding a bit of an old pencil note or sketch, no matter
how cryptic, can bring entire events into focus.
Never-used lead pencils also have their place.
I often come across pencils in my drawer that say Grand Rapids,
Michigan; Bismark, North Dakota; Meteor Crater, Arizona; Mississippi
State University. I’m sure the lead in any of these pencils
would produce very satisfactory images, but I can’t bring
myself to spoil the typography in order to use them. So I’ll
just sharpen another TICONDEROGA #2 and get busy.

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