Jump to content

Stippled shadows: Difference between revisions

From Sloptionary
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 2: Line 2:


=== Noun phrase ===
=== Noun phrase ===
Shadows rendered through many small dots, specks, flecks, or broken marks rather than smooth gradients or solid black areas.
'''stippled shadows''' ''pl''
 
Shadows rendered with many small dots, specks, or broken marks rather than smooth gradients or solid areas of darkness.
 
== Definition ==
A visual shading effect where shadow is created by changing the density of tiny marks. Sparse dots create lighter shadow, while tightly clustered dots create darker shadow.


== Expanded Definition ==
== Expanded Definition ==
A visual shading technique where darkness is built up by placing tiny marks close together. The denser the marks, the darker the shadow appears. In illustration, comics, engraving, manga, photocopied art, and retro print styles, stippled shadows create texture, age, grit, and handmade depth.
In stippled shadows, darkness is built through accumulation. Instead of blending gray tones or filling an area with flat black, the artist places many small dots close together. The closer the dots are, the darker the shadow appears.
 
This technique is common in ink illustration, engraving, comics, manga, photocopied art, printmaking, and retro graphic styles. It gives shadows a textured, handmade quality and can make an image feel aged, gritty, delicate, or archival.


== Plain-English Version ==
== Plain-English Version ==
A shadow made from lots of little dots instead of smooth airbrushed darkness.
A stippled shadow is a shadow made from lots of little dots instead of smooth airbrushed darkness.
 
== Visual Principle ==
The basic rule is simple: more dots mean darker shadow; fewer dots mean lighter shadow.
 
[[File:ChatGPT Stippled Shadows.webp|alt=Black-and-white educational illustration titled “Stippled Shadows,” showing a side-profile face, diagonal light bars, and dot-density examples. The shadows are made from many small dots, with darker areas formed by denser clusters and lighter areas formed by more widely spaced dots.|thumb|Educational illustration showing stippled shadows formed by dot density.]]
 
[[File:Midjourney Stippled Shadows.png|alt=Black-and-white stippled illustration showing shadow areas made from many tiny dots, with darker regions formed by denser dot clusters and lighter regions formed by sparse dots.|thumb|Stippled shadows built from dense clusters of tiny dots rather than smooth gradients.]]


== Example Usage ==
== Example Usage ==
“The portrait used stippled shadows around the eyes, giving the character a haunted, old-print texture.”
“The portrait used stippled shadows around the eyes, giving the character a haunted, old-print texture.”
== Notes ==
Stippled shadows are related to stippling, halftone, screentone, hatching, and engraving, but the defining feature is the use of dot density to create shadow value.

Revision as of 01:03, 31 May 2026

English

Noun phrase

stippled shadows pl

Shadows rendered with many small dots, specks, or broken marks rather than smooth gradients or solid areas of darkness.

Definition

A visual shading effect where shadow is created by changing the density of tiny marks. Sparse dots create lighter shadow, while tightly clustered dots create darker shadow.

Expanded Definition

In stippled shadows, darkness is built through accumulation. Instead of blending gray tones or filling an area with flat black, the artist places many small dots close together. The closer the dots are, the darker the shadow appears.

This technique is common in ink illustration, engraving, comics, manga, photocopied art, printmaking, and retro graphic styles. It gives shadows a textured, handmade quality and can make an image feel aged, gritty, delicate, or archival.

Plain-English Version

A stippled shadow is a shadow made from lots of little dots instead of smooth airbrushed darkness.

Visual Principle

The basic rule is simple: more dots mean darker shadow; fewer dots mean lighter shadow.

Error creating thumbnail: Image type not supported
Educational illustration showing stippled shadows formed by dot density.
Black-and-white stippled illustration showing shadow areas made from many tiny dots, with darker regions formed by denser dot clusters and lighter regions formed by sparse dots.
Stippled shadows built from dense clusters of tiny dots rather than smooth gradients.

Example Usage

“The portrait used stippled shadows around the eyes, giving the character a haunted, old-print texture.”

Notes

Stippled shadows are related to stippling, halftone, screentone, hatching, and engraving, but the defining feature is the use of dot density to create shadow value.