In this video, we're going to practice drawing the treble clef as well as the loads on the lines and the spaces of the stave. So let's start with the treble clef and we're going to go all the way to the left hand side of the stave, start just below the second line, covered up to the third line, back down to the bottom line, making a kind of spiral around, up through the stave, curve it round back down through the stave and off to the left with a tail. And that's how you draw a treble clef. Now we can just practice that a few times. And bear in mind that no to treble clef so gonna look exactly the same. As long as it kind of resembles the treble clef you're okay.
And you can just do this as many times as you feel is necessary. Now, as you know the other name for the trailer Cliff is the G cliff, and the function of the G Cliff or treble cliff is to indicate with an A G is on the stave, and it indicates the G on the second line with this kind of spiral that happens around the second line. So once we found the letter G on the second line of the stave, we can find all the other nodes in relation to that G. So going up from the letter G, we just take the next natural node after G, so the space above g would be a, the line above that would be B, space above that would be C etc. Going down from G you work backwards from GE, so the space below g would be F, a line below that would be E and the bottom space would be D. So now we can fill in all the notes on the lines and the spaces.
I'm going to start with the spaces. And I'm just going to write a circle and this call to head on every space I'm going to do the same with the lions. Now the next thing we're going to do is just simply write the names of the notes underneath. So we've got D, F, A, C, E, and G. And it's easy to remember the notes on the spaces within the stave, because they spell out the word face. Now we're going to do the same with the notes on the lines. So we've got E, G, B, D, and F. And to remember those notes, we can just use our acronym.
Every Good Boy does fine now As you know, we can turn any of these natural notes into a sharp or flat note by simply using a sharp or flat sign. So for example, if I want to make this F natural and F sharp, instead, all I would do is write a sharp sign in front of it. Now that's an F sharp instead, if I wanted to turn this D natural into a D flat, just write a flat sign in front of it. So the next thing we can do is just map out the chromatic scale on the stave. So I'm going to start by putting the treble kayfun. And this time, I'm not going to write the names of the notes underneath the notes.
I'm just going to write the notes and say them as we go. So we're going to start with an A D. And for now I'm going to use a natural sign in front of all the natural nodes. We might as well practice that natural sign at the same time as we practice the sharps and flats. And as you know, the next note in the chromatic scale after D would be D sharp. The n harmonic equivalent of that is E flat. Then we've got e natural, natural goes straight to F natural.
Then F sharp or G flat, g natural, G sharp on a flat, a natural. Now I'm gonna just move to the next line, cripple Cliff again and we ended on a natural so we're going to start here with With a sharp also known as B flat, B natural, straight to C natural. Then we have C sharp or D flat, D natural, D sharp or E flat, E natural, straight to F natural Once again we can move to the next line and start with F sharp, also known as G flat. And then she natural. So now we've looked at how to draw the treble clef and the function of the treble clef, the natural notes on the lines and the spaces how to turn those natural notes into sharps and flats. And we've mapped out the chromatic scale on the stave.