Unlike traditional lead pencils, artist pencils are usually made with graphite, which is a metallic carbon. The various graphite hardness levels are delineated on the sides of drawing pencils with a corresponding number and letter. Drawing pencils can be ordered online, or found in art stores across the United States. Because they are specialty pencils, they are not usually found in supermarkets or drug stores. Common drawing pencil brands include Derwent, Faber-Castell, General's Kimberly, Prismacolor, Sanford, Reeves and Staedtler.
The softer graphite drawing pencils are known as "B" pencils. Artists use these pencils to achieve darker shading in drawings. Any soft drawing pencil you use will be marked with a number, followed by the letter "B." The corresponding number indicates the grade of graphite softness. The higher the number, such as 7, 8 or 9, the softer the pencil will be and the darker your shading will appear. For example, 9B is black on paper. It is harder to erase extremely soft graphite pencil marks as they make very dark lines on paper.
In the middle of the graphite shading spectrum are medium grade pencils, which produce medium gray shades. The most common medium shade is labeled "HB" on the pencil, and is a combination of both "H" and "B". Another medium shade grade is the "F," also known as the fine point pencil, which is usually used for making initial outline sketches that can be easily erased or covered later by darker shading.
Harder graphite pencils that produce light gray shades are marked with a number followed by the letter "H." Like the "B" pencils, the numbers on "H" pencils indicate the hardness of the graphite. When assessing your light gray shading choices, the higher the corresponding number, the harder the pencil will be and the lighter the shade of gray will look on paper. The hardest and lightest pencil in the series is 9H. "H" pencils erase more easily than "B" pencils.