I've been practicing pencil drawing for about a year, focusing on still life and portraits, but I consistently struggle with creating realistic textures and achieving a full range of values without my shading looking muddy or flat. My biggest hurdle is hair and fabric; I either overwork the area with too many lines or can't build up the darks smoothly, and my highlights often get lost. For artists skilled in graphite, what are your fundamental pencil drawing techniques for building up layers and preserving contrast? How do you approach different textures methodically, and what specific pencil grades and paper types do you find essential for achieving deep, rich blacks and clean, bright highlights?
Two quick tips that helped me: start with a clean value map—work from light to dark in steps, and on hair/fabric focus on the rhythm of lines rather than trying to shade everything at once. Keep highlights by masking or lifting with a kneaded eraser.
Hair technique in practice: plan the major light and dark planes with light strokes, then build up with 2B–4B for midtones and 6B–8B for deepest blacks. Use directional strokes that follow the hair's flow, not a million random lines. Leave some broken edges to keep volume; highlight by lifting a few wisps rather than trying to paint them white.
Fabric textures: identify the weave or cloth type, then simulate it with a combination of cross-hatching and directional shading. Cotton or linen folds respond well to soft, elongated strokes; silk benefits from smoother, tighter shading with careful edges. Start with midtones, push shadows along creases, and reserve highlights with an eraser or white pencil. Paper with a bit of tooth helps fabrics read more realistically; too smooth a surface can flatten them.
Paper and pencils: I rotate through 2H, HB, 2B, 4B, and 6B for a broad value range. A smooth hot-press paper around 200–300gsm is great for portraits; a lightly toothed cold-press is better for texture. Blending stumps are for soft transitions, but I avoid over-blending on hair to keep strands readable. Keep a separate kneaded eraser to lift highlights and refine edges.
Quick questions to tailor advice: are you aiming for photorealism or a slightly painterly look? What size are you drawing, what paper are you using, and what reference photos? Do you prefer blending or clean edges? If you share a sample or a photo, I can suggest a concrete plan.