Your drawing kit should be minimal and consist of familiar materials. I recommend watching videos of past solar eclipses so that you can practice your technique. It will help give you a sense of the timing required to sketch live on eclipse day.
I prefer a white pencil with black paper for sketching the filamentary structure of the corona against the dark background of the sky. But if you’re more comfortable with graphite, you can draw a negative sketch onto white paper and then later scan and invert it with image-editing software. Green is the opposite of red, so if you use white paper, a green pencil will do the trick for prominences.
Prepare the paper ahead of time by creating 2- to 4-inch circle templates. You can fit several on a single page if you wish to sketch the partial phases. But during totality, remember that you’ll need extra room to draw the outermost layer of the Sun’s atmosphere.
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