How to Compare Values When Drawing

Seeing a single value is hard. Seeing whether one area is lighter or darker than another is a skill you can train — and it is what painters do constantly, in the studio and outdoors. This lesson covers simple tools and a step-by-step comparison method we use in foundation drawing at Art Tutor Hanoi.

Why compare in pairs

Instead of guessing “value 6” for every shape, you anchor a few reference areas (often the lightest light and darkest dark), then compare everything else relative to those. With seven major shapes you might make up to twenty-one pairwise checks — in practice you focus on shapes that are close in value.

Make a value finder

A value finder isolates two areas so hue does not distract you.

Three-hole version

Paint an old card or mat board middle gray. Punch three holes. Hold it up so each hole frames a different area; squint to see which spot is lighter. Paint the card a uniform gray — a colored card will bias your judgment.

Slit version

Cut a narrow slit instead of holes. Slide it across skies, water, or walls to read slow value transitions without naming the objects.

Gray value finder card with holes held in front of a landscape

Tools to avoid

  • Red transparent “value viewers” — reds read lighter than they are and skew comparisons.
  • Slotted printed value charts outdoors — the chart and your subject are rarely in the same light; the comparison fails in shade vs sun.

A black mirror (or phone screen turned off) can also help: hold it beside your subject to see simplified reflections in black and white.

Four-step comparison sketch

  • Squint and sketch seven or fewer big value shapes — ignore small details.
  • Mark your lightest and darkest shapes with numbers (1 = dark, 9 = light is a common convention).
  • Compare every pair that might be close; adjust numbers until the order is correct, even if the exact numbers shift.
  • Use the sketch as field notes for a studio painting or a charcoal study.

Two adjacent objects with the same value count as one shape, even if their colors differ.

Outline value map with numbers marking light and dark shapes

Try it at home

Exercise — Identifying values

Choose a still life or a view from a window. Make six quick outline maps (about ten minutes each) with value numbers only — no shading. Photograph the scene, convert to grayscale, and check whether your ranking matches. Beginners: six sketches; if you already draw regularly, aim for a dozen.

Common questions

  • Do I need exact numbers? — Ranking light vs dark matters more than perfect digits.
  • White paper indoors looks white but is darker than sunlit snow — trust comparisons, not memory.
  • Next lesson — 1.4 shows how to posterize photos to check your value plan.

Send a value map for critique

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