This stick of graphite and wood is the most common drawing material.
What is pencil?
This ancient form of craft utilizes clay and clay molding techniques.
What is ceramics?
This print/photo process needs UV light to turn deep blue.
What is cyanotype?
This element is the basis of all drawing; it organizes the visible world.
What is line?
This principle of design uses the repetition of visual elements.
What is pattern?
This drawing medium is made of burnt wood, which creates very dark values.
What is charcoal?
This form of art uses textiles and textile manufacturing processes.
What is fiber art?
This is the first form of photography.
What are daguerreotypes?
These 3 planes create the illusion of space.
What is foreground, middleground, and background?
This principle is synonymous with kinesthetics.
What is motion?
Each painting medium us made up of these two things.
What is pigment and binder?
These windows decorate the walls of cathedrals.
What are stained glass windows?
The term for an "original" that can produce multiples.
What is a matrix?
This element has strong emotional/psychological impact.
What is color?
This principle has been measured in different ways across cultures, including the use of hands and heads.
What is proportion?
This painting material is used by many masters to create rich jewel toned paintings.
What is oil paint?
This popular form of accessorizing is derives from the latin term meaning "plaything".
What is jewelry?
This mechanical printing process involves the use of small colored dots to create different colors and values.
What are Ben-Day dots?
This element involves tactility, or appearance of tactility.
What is texture?
These 3 principles come together to make a work cohesive.
What is unity, varitey, and balance?
What is tempera?
This form of metal smithing involves hammering a thin sheet of metal over a relief design.
What is chasing?
This type of photography is used by journalists to tell a story.
What is photojournalism?
This type of value literally translates to 'light-dark' and was used by painters such as Caravaggio.
What is chiaroscuro?
This is the opposite of a focal point; involves intentionally de-emphasizing something important.
What is subordination?