cross-hatching
(noun)
A method of showing shading by means of multiple small lines that intersect.
Examples of cross-hatching in the following topics:
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Hatching and Cross-Hatching
- Hatching and cross-hatching are artistic techniques used to create tonal, shading, and textural effects by drawing closely spaced parallel lines.
- Hatching and cross-hatching are artistic techniques used to create tonal, shading and textural effects by drawing closely spaced parallel lines.
- The primary concept of hatching and cross-hatching is that the quantity, thickness, and spacing of the lines will affect the brightness of the image, and emphasize forms by creating the illusion of volume.
- Cross-hatch lines are used to provide additional tone and texture and can be oriented in any direction, often overlapping each other to create heavily shaded areas.
- Albrecht Dürer uses hatching and cross-hatching in both the background and foreground of this image.
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Varieties of Line
- There are six important varieties of line: actual, implied, straight, expressive, contour, and hatch lines.
- 'Cross contour lines' delineate differences in the features of a surface.
- 'Cross-hatch lines' provide additional texture and tone to the image surface and can be oriented in any direction.
- Layers of cross-hatching can add rich texture and volume to image surfaces .
- Albrecht Dürer employs hatch and cross-hatch lines in this silverpoint self portrait.
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Qualities of Line
- Hatch lines are defined as parallel lines which are repeated short intervals generally in one direction.
- Cross-hatch lines provide additional tone and texture and can be oriented in any direction.
- Multiple layers of cross-hatch lines can give rich and varied shading to objects by manipulating the pressure of the drawing tool to create a large range of values.
- Contoured hatching refers to hatching using curved lines in order to describe light and form of contours.
- Hatch lines are visible in this detail from Albrecht Dürer's Veronica
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Line
- Cross contour lines delineate differences in the features of a surface and can give the illusion of three dimensions or a sense of form or shading.
- Hatch lines are a series of short lines repeated in intervals, typically in a single direction, and are used to add shading and texture to surfaces.
- Cross-hatch lines provide additional texture and tone to the image surface and can be oriented in any direction.
- Layers of cross-hatching can add rich texture and volume to image surfaces.
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Single Sheets
- He is known for further developing the engraving methods by refining the cross-hatching technique to depict volume and shade.
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German Woodcuts
- He is known for further developing the engraving methods by refining the cross-hatching technique to depict volume and shade.
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Engraving
- Florentine liners are flat-bottomed tools with multiple lines incised into them; these are used to do fill work on larger areas or to create uniform shade lines more efficiently than laboriously cross-hatching.
- He also developed engraving techniques, such as refining cross-hatching to depict volume and shading, particularly in curved lines .
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The Drawing Process
- Pen and ink drawings often use hatching, which consists of groups of parallel lines.
- Crosshatching uses hatching in two or more different directions to create a darker tone.
- Broken hatching, or lines with intermittent breaks, can be used to form lighter tones, and by controlling the density of the breaks a gradation of tone can be achieved.
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Ottonian Metalwork in the Early European Middle Ages
- Many of the finest examples of the crux gemmata (jeweled cross) date from Ottonian rule.
- Made of wood, these crosses then were encased in carved gold and silver and encrusted with jewels and engraved gems.
- Arguably the finest of these Ottonian jeweled crosses is the Cross of Lothair, dating from around 1,000 and housed in the Aachen Cathedral.
- However, the cross was actually commissioned over a century later for Otto III, the Holy Roman Emperor.
- The cross also depicts the Hand of God holding a wreath containing a dove representing the Holy Spirit in the crucifixion scene.
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Sculpture of the Early Christian Church
- Monumental crosses such as the Gero Crucifix (c. 965–970) were evidently common in the ninth and tenth centuries.
- Large stone Celtic crosses, usually erected outside monasteries or churches, first appeared in eighth-century Ireland.
- By the ninth century, reliefs of human figures were added to the crosses.
- The largest crosses have many figures in scenes on all surfaces, often from the Old Testament on the east side, and the New Testament on the west, with a Crucifixion at the center of the cross.
- Muiredach's High Cross (tenth century) at Monasterboice is usually regarded as the peak of the Irish crosses.