I burned a load of waste wood (some offcuts from my work shop, some old fencing, some prunings from the garden) in a steel oil drum incinerator, basically just to get rid. Being an artist, I noticed some usuable chunks of charcoal in the ashes left behind. Some of it was like the regular windsor and newton or rowney type stuff, smooth and velvetty which was predictably "ok". But what I really liked was that some of the charcoal seemed to be only partly "done" and instead of that soft wispy mark that so easily is lost, I was getting a gritty scratchy quality that scored into the paper, almost like an etching, leaving charcoal dust in the scratched lines. The problem is, I dont know how I got that particular gritty sort. I dont know what sort of wood. It could have been ash/oak/birch/beech/alder/larch/pine or whatever shrubs live in the garden(no idea what they are) And the wood just burned until it was gone, I didnt cover it or seal the oil drum. Has any experienced charcoal maker any tips to try and reproduce an "under-done" batch?