Old-Fashioned Sketching

Today we all use cell phones to do exactly what our grand- and great grandparents did back in the day with sketchbooks. Sure, there are differences. With our high-rez cameras we do much more than sketch, but the ethos is not dissimilar. Instagram and all the other social photo tech is an instantaneous way of making pictures, often without the skill of trained photographers. You didn’t have to have training to draw in a sketchbook, just desire. Nonetheless, drawing was a skill taught in many classes and at home, so sketchbooks were journals for jotting down impressions of things. And yes, I know that sketching is still a big deal. Indeed, go to any art supply store and the fashionable branded sketchbooks are in abundance—and they’re costly, too. But once upon a time, it was de rigeur just to carry one around like a cell phone.

This book from 1891 could be the Moleskine of its day. But I prefer to think of it as the iPhone of its day, only without the annoying junk calls, emails and texts.

I don’t know who owned it. Whoever it was had a modicum of facility. Certainly more than I do. But the drawings are less interesting than the fact that they were done in the first place. The sketchbook was a companion as well as a confidant.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Get the Latest Issue of PRINT, Focused on All Things Typography

  • Jessica Hische and 9 other brilliant women ruling type and lettering today
  • The top 25 American type masters
  • Twelve overlooked typefaces you should be using
  • Inside Monotype and MIT’s research lab
  • Tattoo artist as typographer?
  • Debbie Millman pens a love letter to Louise Fili
  • And much, much more.

The post Old-Fashioned Sketching appeared first on Print Magazine.

Source: Printmag