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Stipple

Stipple is a drawing and engraving technique that uses numerous small dots to create shading and texture. The density and arrangement of the dots determine the perceived value, with closely spaced dots yielding darker tones and more widely spaced dots producing lighter ones. Stippling can be done with traditional media such as pen and ink, brush, or scratchboard, and it is also widely used in digital illustration.

Historically, stipple engraving developed in Europe during the 17th and 18th centuries as a method to simulate

In practice, stippling is valued for controlled, methodical shading and texture. It is common in fine-art drawing

The term stipple refers to the technique itself and to the resulting dotted surface texture. It is

tonal
gradations
in
printmaking
before
more
extensive
use
of
line
engraving
and
mezzotint.
Artists
varied
dot
size,
spacing,
and
overlap
to
achieve
subtle
transitions,
and
stipple
techniques
influenced
later
approaches
in
painting
and
print
production.
and
illustration,
where
the
dot
pattern
can
be
precisely
tuned
to
render
form
and
surface.
In
contemporary
contexts,
stippling
appears
in
tattooing
as
dotwork
shading,
where
small
dots
build
gradients
in
black
ink.
Digital
stippling
uses
software
brushes
or
algorithms
to
place
dots,
reproducing
traditional
stipple
shading
or
simulating
halftone
textures.
distinct
from
hatching,
which
uses
lines
to
convey
shade,
and
from
solid
fills.
See
also:
pointillism,
stipple
engraving,
halftone.