Hatching
A row of lines all facing in the same direction.
You can overlap them if you want the area to appear darker.
A brief interlude - Great Snooker Players of Yesteryear
Lord Charles Chalkstone - The dapper dandy of the snooker halls.
Gentleman potter Lord Chalkston was always immaculately turned out. Although deadly serious when competing, things lightened up considerably when he won, as he invariably blew his entire winnings on champagne for his opponent and the audience.
He should have won the Open in 1924, but was thwarted in the final frame when his brycream melted under the lights and smeared his monocle.
Cross-hatching
The lines rose cross-crossed.
Contour hatching
Follows the contour or form of the object.
Another Great Snooker Player of Yesteryear
James ‘Beaky’ Dawson - He had a nose for a good pot
Dawson was blessed with an unusually long nose which he used to great effect to help line shots up. He had a peculiar quick of adding chalk to the tip of his nose as well as his cue, swearing that is helped his game.
Dawson’s success as a sportsman began to Peter out in his early forties, but he retrained and went on to become a highly successful sommelier through the wine regions of Europe.
Scrumbling
Lots of tiny squiggly lines.
Stippling
Many, many dots.
A further Great Snooker Player
“Wide Bill’ Willamson - Canada’s ever-cheerful cueman
A former lumberjack, ‘Wide Bill’ made his own cue suing a tree branch he whittled down. Much loved by fans and fellow professionals alike, his exhibition matches were always packed out. The highlight of his shows was always when he knocked the cap off a bottle of beer from twenty paces using the cue ball.
Here are the six examples together. You can use this image as a reference if you like.
What’s next?
I put out a Cartoon Newsletter featuring a whole host of characters, along with occasional cartooning tips. Add your name and mail to the orange below and I’ll wing a copy your way.