IELTS Speaking for Success - 🖍️ Drawing and Painting (S07E01) + Transcript

Episode Date: February 7, 2022

Do you like painting or drawing? Have you ever learned painting or drawing? What do you like to draw? What do you know about painting? Tune in and have a great day! - Get exclusive episodes on IELT...S Speaking parts 1, 2, and 3: https://linktr.ee/sfspremium Our course on Phrasal Verbs: https://successwithielts.com/podcourses Transcript: https://bit.ly/transcripts07e01 Find an IELTS Speaking Partner: https://links.successwithielts.com/ieltspartner Our social media: https://linktr.ee/successwithielts © 2022 Success with IELTS Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hello, Sunshine, I'm Maria. And my name is Rory, and we are the hosts of the AIL Speaking for Success podcast, the podcast that aims to help you improve your speaking skills, as well as your listening skills along the way. We've started this podcast to give you super vocabulary and gorgeous grammar for a high score, and also to bring joy and happiness and smileys. So, how is life in life? Scotland these days.
Starting point is 00:00:32 Oh, it's not really great. I mean, like, the weather is always cold, and you can't go out because of all the restrictions, and it's very boring, and I just can't be bothered anymore. Hmm. So you're winging and complaining, yeah? Yes. You aren't painting a very rosy picture, are you, or you? I'm not, but let's talk about drawing and painting pictures.
Starting point is 00:00:53 Oh, drawing and painting! Yes. A coincidence. Shh, shh, shh, shh. A coincidence on this podcast. Again, we are not planning this. So yes, dear listener, in speaking part one, they can ask you questions about drawing, painting, and it's a new topic, which was added at the beginning of January.
Starting point is 00:01:15 Because as you know already, every four months, four months, IELTS people change the topics. So they add new topics and they remove some of the topics. So every four months. Dear listener, we have our super-duper premium episodes, where Rory and I are discussing speaking part two and speaking part three using fresh new IOTS speaking topics. The link is in the description. So let's talk about painting or drawing. Do you like painting or drawing?
Starting point is 00:01:56 Not really these days. I doodle when I'm, I don't know, when I'm in dull lectures to keep my wand. wondering mind active, but that doesn't really count, does it? Have you ever learned painting or drawing? We used to do it quite often in school, though I was never particularly good at it. It was always a bother to make things realistic or color inside of the lines. Since then, I've made sporadic attempts at learning and trying to draw, but nothing formal in the sense of actual lessons.
Starting point is 00:02:27 Is it easy to learn how to draw? I think that depends on how much time you... and patience you have for it. In addition to whether, well, you have good teachers and role models, I had none of that, so it wasn't very easy for me. Although I do remember a time when I was very young, that it just came naturally to me. I'm sure it does for some talented people,
Starting point is 00:02:48 but most of us just have to work at it. How often do you paint or draw? Well, like I say, I sometimes doodle and scribble in lectures, but that's about it, really. I can't remember the last time I made a serious effort to draw something or someone, it must have been years ago when I was trying to depict a character from one of my books. And even that wasn't a particularly great effort. What do you like to draw?
Starting point is 00:03:16 Well, my doodles usually have sharp edges and dark colors, although that might just be because all I have is a, it's like a fine tip pen that uses black ink. So that just means these are the easiest things to draw. But mostly there is no pattern. It's just random shapes. What do you know about painting? Just how to teach it to small people, really. We talk about mixing colors and how tones and shades and tints can be made and changed and how to reflect on work to improve it next time. So if you wanted to talk about that, then I'd be okay. But if you wanted to talk about the history of art or how to critique it, then you'd be out of luck because I'm a novice in that respect. Thank you, Rory. Now you've painted a very
Starting point is 00:04:01 rosy picture of the vocabulary and grammar we can use about painting or drawing. It's Canadian Tire's Black Friday sale. With the lowest prices of the year. Hello, can we go? Limbo again. Shop the Black Friday sale at Canadian Tire and save up to 60%. November 27th to December 7th. Conditions apply, details online.
Starting point is 00:04:29 So first of all, what's the difference between drawing and painting. I'll tell you. I've found some picture. It's a rhetorical question. What is the difference? I will tell you. Yeah, okay.
Starting point is 00:04:46 I found some random picture on the internet, and I'm going to believe it, and surely it's the truth and nothing but the truth. So, drawing is about plans and lines and shapes. So usually you use one color. and you usually use pencils or pens or some crayons, perhaps. Painting, painting, is the practice of applying color to a paper or canvas. You know, these painters have a canvas.
Starting point is 00:05:22 Imagine this dolly painting his paintings with a canvas. Rory, did you get the difference? Probably, but for me, painting is with a paintbrush and lips. liquid that you... You can't see what I'm doing, but I'm moving my hand in the way that you use the paintbrush, if you're rubbish of painting. And drawing is about using a pen or a pencil. That is my definition, and that's what I'm sticking with.
Starting point is 00:05:46 Correct. So, Rory, you told us that you doodle. Google doodle? You doodle? You know, when you're bored and you just draw small pictures. Hmm. So you doodle, and that could be considered as drawing. Yeah?
Starting point is 00:06:03 Maybe not particularly good drawing. So you can say like, oh, I usually doodle to keep my wandering mind active. So if your mind is wandering, then you're not focusing. And an active mind is doing something. Now, you said that we used to do it at school. So, like, I think everybody used to paint or draw at school. So, like, painting lessons, what do you call these lessons, like painting, drawing classes? I think we just called it art.
Starting point is 00:06:32 art lessons art classes Oh okay Okay Art lessons And then Rory said It was always a bother
Starting point is 00:06:39 So Rory is not into painting or drawing But dear listener If you enjoyed it Or you enjoyed it You can say Like oh I was fond of Or I'm fond of
Starting point is 00:06:49 I'm a fan of I really enjoy it That's my passion I can't live without drawing or painting So for some people It came naturally Like they just
Starting point is 00:07:00 You know They are born And they can draw or paint, just like that, right? But for others, you need time and patience. You could talk about, there's another one that you could use for like any time someone asks you about something like, I think that depends, how much time and patience you have. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:07:19 So together with a doodle, you said scribble. You scribble in lectures. In fairness, scribble is just like messy and fast handwriting. So it's not quite the same. So when Rory answers questions about painting or drawing, he uses words doodling and scribbling. Okay. The same for writing, to be honest. So do you listen, now you can understand how far Rory is from drawing or painting.
Starting point is 00:07:46 Yeah, very far. And then the question is like, what do you like to draw? Even if you say, I hate drawing, I've never drawn anything in my life. The examiner would continue, what do you like to draw? And so you can talk about your doodles, because to doodle is a verb and doodles, you can use it as a noun, my doodles, my kind of silly drawings. And then you've mentioned that you use dark colors and you have a fine tip pen. Yes, that's just one kind of pen. There are different kinds.
Starting point is 00:08:24 You have a ballpoint pen for pencils. You have a lead pencil. I don't know. Are there different kinds of pencil? Yeah, yeah, we talked about it. We did, but it was so long ago. Yeah, it was. Yeah, dear listener, if you want to know some nice vocable about pens,
Starting point is 00:08:40 check out our episode about pens, which was ages ago. It's one of our very first ones, I'm pretty sure. It's like three years cool. Yeah, it was like, it was fun. So, when Rory doodles, there is no pattern, just random shapes. And this could be called draw. to be honest with you. Maybe you should save it, Rory, and then we can sell it.
Starting point is 00:09:04 Like, oh, this Rory from the podcast, these are his doodles. And then we make millions of pounds. How about that? I don't think that's something that anyone is likely to pay money for. No, just you wait, you wait, okay? Give us 10 more years. We're going to go, like, you know, super popular and we'll sell your doodles. Okay, come back to me in 2032, and we'll see how that goes.
Starting point is 00:09:29 Yeah, Alcalcia. Yeah, de listen, if you enjoy painting, you do need specific vocabulary about painting. So we don't give you vocabulary about painting, but again, if you enjoy painting, make sure you use different words about paints and canvas and different oil paints and brushes. Brush strokes, that's the movement of the brush. Mm-hmm, color schemes. Yep, yep. then what do you know about painting?
Starting point is 00:10:01 Well, nothing much. And we said that, oh, this is what you teach to small people. Small people like children. I just know how to teach it to small people, that's all. I wouldn't say that I'm an expert, though. And indeed, someone who is not an expert, who is just at the very beginning, is called a novice. And you can say a novice in that respect.
Starting point is 00:10:21 That respect refers to something that you talked about previously. So here it was art history and how to crooked. critique, which means to judge art. But I'm a novice in that respect, because I don't know how to do it. I just see a nice picture, and I'm like, oh, it's a nice picture. It's better than anything I could do. Fantastic. Yeah, Rory looks at the painting, and then he goes, oh, that's nice picture.
Starting point is 00:10:44 But behold, we have settled upon another phrase that we could use in any circumstance. So the phrases, if you wanted to talk about blah, blah, blah, then you'd be out of luck. because I'm a novice in that respect. So you just say like if you want to talk about and then like some superior subject then you say well you're out of luck and if you're out of luck it just means that you can't talk to me about it
Starting point is 00:11:08 or you can't do anything with it because I'm a beginner and I don't know anything about it. Sweet. Sweet. So the vocabulary, the vocabulary about colors first. You did say like mixing colors or how tones, shades and tints can be made and changed. So these ones are really good about drawing and paintings.
Starting point is 00:11:32 So what tones, shades and tins are? Well, a shade is just a color but with black added to make it darker. And a tint is a color with white added to make it lighter. And a tone is any color with gray added to sort of bring it down a little bit. Yes, correct. That's what they are. they work, I have no idea, because like I say, I'm a novice in that respect, I'm not an expert in that respect. There we go. Do you listen, don't overdo it, okay? Once is enough. I'm overdoing it
Starting point is 00:12:09 because I want to draw attention to the fact that it's useful. Yeah, yeah. And because I had too much energy drink. Yeah. And if you don't say it naturally, the examiner would look at you like, what? You've learned this cliche and now you're just, you know, repeating what you have learned by heart. Lechay, it's something that I made up that can only be heard on this podcast, but is actually sophisticated enough to get you a high score. Ben 9 score. I am a useful person. Dear listener, thank you for listening. And now let's listen to Rory's answers again.
Starting point is 00:12:41 This time, you can notice all the nice vocabulary and grammar Rory has used. And also, you can repeat after Rory, so you can do this listen, stop, repeat technique. so you can pause the episode, repeat what Rory has told us, copying his intonation, his voice, so you can just be like Rory. Again, it's useful for your intonation, it's useful for your fluency, and fluency and intonation are one of the two criteria in IELD speaking. Do you like painting or draw? Not really these days. I doodle when I'm, I don't know, when I'm in dull lectures to keep my wandering mind active, but that doesn't really count, does it?
Starting point is 00:13:36 Have you ever learned painting or drawing? We used to do it quite often in school, though I was never particularly good at it. It was always a bother to make things realistic or color inside of the lines. Since then, I've made sporadic attempts at learning and trying to draw, but nothing formal in the sense of actual lessons. Is it easy to learn how to draw? I think that depends on how much time and patience you have for it. In addition to whether, well, you have good teachers and role models, I had none of that, so it wasn't very easy for me.
Starting point is 00:14:11 Although I do remember a time when I was very young, that it just came naturally to me. I'm sure it does for some talented people, but most of us just have to work at it. How often do you paint or draw? Well, like I say, I sometimes doodle and scribble in lectures, but that's about it, really. I can't remember the last time I made a serious effort to draw something or someone. It must have been years ago when I was trying to depict a character from one of my books, and even that wasn't a particularly great effort. What do you like to draw?
Starting point is 00:14:46 Well, my doodles usually have sharp edges and dark colours, although that might just be because all I have is a, it's like a fine tip, pen that uses black ink. So that just means these are the easiest things to draw. But mostly there is no pattern. It's just random shapes. What do you know about painting? Just how to teach it to small people, really. We talk about mixing colors and how tones and shades and tints can be made and changed and how to reflect on work to improve it next time. So if you wanted to talk about that, then I'd be okay. But if you wanted to talk about the history of art or how to critique it, then you'd be out of luck because I'm a novice in that respect.

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