I like his information but highly repetative rephrasing the same thing over and over. Almost 9 minutes for the 1st sphere, maybe 2 minutes of information. He crosses his hand across his face gesturing, blocking the camera which isn't aiding to his emphasis. But Scott has a good, easily listenable tone and cadence, and teempo of speech. His commitment and care to covey points is evident.. Definitely worth a thumbs up! 👍
Ok but I expect improvement in background noise, repetitiveness and speed. Not painting speed but rather speeding up slow painting bits and balancing speaking time.
You guys need to calm tf down. He‘s just talking naturally and authentically. No need to analyze him like that with your high level efficiency tempo of speech balancing crap. I very much appreciate this 30 minute bit of him teaching me rendering in oil.
It's very rare that I ever hear someone talk about feeling the form and the type of mental state you have to be in to focus on the work. Often times I ask a few artists or professors about this and they were unable to give me a grasp of it or understanding where to explain the depth of feeling the form. I truly appreciate your explanation of feeling the form.
Its refreshing. Its Great. He's classically trained. Listening to him is like listening to one of my art professors. He's passionate. He's not just a fast art utuber...creating shell art.
You killed it! You described it perfectly. I’ve starting painting again after 20 years. I’ve been trying to “catch up” after all that time. This video brings me back to my art college days, but I feel like the older dude in the class that never fit in with the other freshmen… but because he’s more mature, he pays more attention, respects the process, absorbed more and ended up leagues ahead of everyone in the same amount of time. Ok, I’m a little bitter. Anyway, thanks so much for sharing your wisdom. I look forward to watching you more. From a distance. Not in a stalker kinda way.
Another caveat with painting skin tones is to try to paint during the day with as much natural light as possible. Working at night with artificial light can skew our chroma perception and it's very easy to end up with "boiled lobster" skin tones (high chroma) when viewed in the morning!
Your videos are helping many people. I tried my 1st face recently after binge watching your videos for days :) While she stayed in the "Oompah Loompa" stage for several days, I eventually created something I love and am so pleased with. Thanks for inspiring me to try. 🎨
I do digital painting of my daughter as a hobby and I didn't even realize I was doing type of painting where you lay down blocks. I didn't know that was a legit way to paint with oil, I was just trying to get a color right for different areas of her face. I have one I have worked on once in a blue moon for about two months now. This motivated me to finish it. I have found that in realistic drawings coloring in block ensures I get all the values where they need to be, when I do one blanket color and shade and highlight on that, it never turns out right.
You have a very unique way of sculpting the form that makes you stand out from other figurative painters! I really find your videos helpful! Thanx a lot Scott!
Hi Scott, could you please, turn on the option for closed captioning? It would be super helpful for those of us who are hearing impaired and would prefer to read what you're saying. I truly appreciate it. thank you.
i also support this idea. although i can more or less get along in English, unfortunately i can't understand a word of the movie. subtitles would be ideal.
I don't know, you are the only one who does not use the self-translation feature for all languages... This thing enables us to watch your videos in a comfortable and understandable way... Your videos and works are very good and deserve to be followed... I hope you take my words seriously, please.
This is a great way to explain this. I’m mostly a watercolor painter now, and we always work light to dark. So, recently, as I’ve tried to get back into oil again, this was how I started back at it. Glad for the confirmation I’m on the right track, and I love your smaller strokes. This method is so refined!
Thank you SO MUCH for posting and sharing your amazing wealth of experience ❤❤ I am an amateur artist and struggle sooo much with muddy colors because I *rush*. I love how poetically and simply you describe various techniques and outcomes. Your channel is so soothing and encourages me to trust and enjoy the process of bringing forms to life ❤❤❤
I admire your art, it’s fantastic! I'm just sorry the video doesn't have subtitles. If you can put them in the near future, here in Brazil we would be very grateful!!
Lots of good suggestions and things to think about! I totally agree with starting with the light points. It's much easier to get to the shadow and realize you need to go dark quicker, than to go from dark to light, get the lightest point and realize that it's not near light enough.
Thank you Scott! You have literally helped my severe frustration with painting from dark to light! I started with watercolours in my art career and was taught to preserve the white canvas and find the light. Painting from the dark and plodding through the shadows through what I like to call the "midtone muck" had me glopping too much paint onto the canvas and would end in much frustration trying to paint dark to light like everyone else! It always felt like I was trying to work a dark 2d cartoon into a sculpture! This is so liberating! I will paint from the light and create the forms going forward, I can't thank you enough for making this video! 🥰
Thanks for the video, it is quite timely in my case. I am about to embark on a large diptych of a couple flowers. I'm working on some color test/sketches as I complete the drawings. I just read Virgil Elliot's book "Traditional Oil Painting." Most of the techniques there are based on translucent shadows and opaque lights. So it somewhat grows outward from the terminator with the opaque paint laying on top of the shadows. I guess my question here would be about methods toward maintaining the opaque lights over translucent shadows while painting from light to dark. The thing I will try first will be to paint "downwards" from the lightest in opaques, and then leave a gap where it goes to shadow, paint the shadows translucent (no white) up to the terminator, then paint in the gap with opaque darks.
You have me really wanting to try oils. I haven't touched them since college, 1989. Just did my first acrylic 2 months ago since then too. I forgot how fast that stuff dries and it drove me crazy.
Thank you 🙏 I thought I was going crazy when I noticed myself feeling more comfortable working with the lightest instead of the darkest, I don’t just love your art I admire it. Thank you 🙏
You blew my mind. I’m in a beginning painting class and these are issues I ran into with no solution. I’m so glad I came across this video because I believe it’s best to learn this techniques early on. 💖💖💖💖
In my opinion that style of painting, realistically, is what I´m search in for. Thats what I want to develop on my own way to paint. I paint the tone colours in light and shadow. Each one by one. Yours lessons made me get much more confident, eficient.
I’m a teacher myself trying to be a portrait artist! I love oil painting, I usually get the drawing right and the likeness I’m pretty good at it. But I wish I could master the process better. Soooo Thank youuuuuu! First time I see a video of yours! I appreciate great teaching
That was really useful information! Good idea of getting the light colour made with the correct chroma first and then working down from the light area towards the darker shapes. This way I have the light coloured already worked out and painted. Whereas, if I start from dark and work up to the light colour, I may find it more difficult to get to the correct hue and value because I am painting from previous darker areas. And furthermore, an excellent 'tip' you made - which I never thought about - is that as you lighten the hue by adding white, you are going to lose some chroma! And if you are working from dark to light, the chances are you are going to find your lightest colour lacks chroma because you have been adding white from dark to light. That explains why paintings look dead or washed out! So you would add a touch of chroma in the light area just so that it does not lose the colour and not become lost in a sea of neutrals. These were excellent and subtle points you made that I never thought of before. Thank you! I have subscribed.
You see the rounding there . Thank you for it.i’am learning oil paint but never paint a portrait . I started in oktober 2023 i painted a Andreas Schelfhout as a class painting whit the other students . I like it to do not the sort of painting but paint i love😊
This is the first of Scott's videos I have seen. Wow you are good! And I GET IT working from light to dark. It just makes sense! I'm going to try it now! Thank you. I'll be back! I've liked and subscribed. Thank you! Suzanne
This is amazing. Your way of teaching really gives appreciation for the science behind masterly painting. It’s the stuff that makes people drawn to a great painting without being able to articulate what’s makes it great.
Excellent tips and beautiful work Scott. Thank you so much for sharing your depth of knowledge. Your delivery is both very clear and really fun to watch too! Thanks again!
Thanks for the insightful video. Now that you illuminate the point of starting light to dark, I realized my more successful portraits were painted this way, and not getting stuck in the mud. I think in school I had a hard time differentiating all a prima, direct painting, and indirect painting, and how to approach each route differently. Placing big brush strokes of the “average” value/hue in spots usually left me working in mud. The “use a large brush” manta also had me working with brushes far too large. I’ve since corrected, but that was such a hurdle.
Your expertise is incredibly outstanding,✨ to me you are definetely a modern day Bouguereau! The way you capture the slightest details in skintones is just mesmerizing ! Thank you ❤ your explanations were exactly what I needed to overcome a few of the struggles I ve been dealing with. 🙏🙏🙏 ✨⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐✨
Very helpful, excellent tips, without unnecessary background music! Have to change to light to dark method when painting, starting with a head portrait that appears rather dull. Also need to stop painting with the "miners helmet". 😄
Very helpful, and if I haven’t misunderstood other videos I’ve watched (been watching loads since total beginner painter, like just started a month ago) - I understand this goes against a conman advice I’ve picked up, going from dark to light. I’ve tried to do that mostly, but also tried a few other things and still very much trying to find what works for me. This I believe would work better for me especially because of the reasons you mentioned about hitting the right hue. And avoiding too many layers of paint trying to find the right values and hues. Thanks!
Come on fellow artists give Scott a Thumbs Up. He puts a lot of work into his Video's.
I like his information but highly repetative rephrasing the same thing over and over. Almost 9 minutes for the 1st sphere, maybe 2 minutes of information. He crosses his hand across his face gesturing, blocking the camera which isn't aiding to his emphasis. But Scott has a good, easily listenable tone and cadence, and teempo of speech. His commitment and care to covey points is evident..
Definitely worth a thumbs up! 👍
Ok but I expect improvement in background noise, repetitiveness and speed. Not painting speed but rather speeding up slow painting bits and balancing speaking time.
You guys need to calm tf down. He‘s just talking naturally and authentically. No need to analyze him like that with your high level efficiency tempo of speech balancing crap. I very much appreciate this 30 minute bit of him teaching me rendering in oil.
It's very rare that I ever hear someone talk about feeling the form and the type of mental state you have to be in to focus on the work. Often times I ask a few artists or professors about this and they were unable to give me a grasp of it or understanding where to explain the depth of feeling the form.
I truly appreciate your explanation of feeling the form.
Its refreshing. Its Great. He's classically trained. Listening to him is like listening to one of my art professors. He's passionate.
He's not just a fast art utuber...creating shell art.
"I'm going to have to get up from my chair“ hahah feeling thisssss
I burst out laughing when i saw your reaction to realizing you had to get out of your chair 😂
You killed it! You described it perfectly. I’ve starting painting again after 20 years. I’ve been trying to “catch up” after all that time. This video brings me back to my art college days, but I feel like the older dude in the class that never fit in with the other freshmen… but because he’s more mature, he pays more attention, respects the process, absorbed more and ended up leagues ahead of everyone in the same amount of time. Ok, I’m a little bitter. Anyway, thanks so much for sharing your wisdom. I look forward to watching you more. From a distance. Not in a stalker kinda way.
Your skin tones are so vibrant I love your art style in your works. Thank you for these art lessons.
Another caveat with painting skin tones is to try to paint during the day with as much natural light as possible. Working at night with artificial light can skew our chroma perception and it's very easy to end up with "boiled lobster" skin tones (high chroma) when viewed in the morning!
Your videos are helping many people. I tried my 1st face recently after binge watching your videos for days :) While she stayed in the "Oompah Loompa" stage for several days, I eventually created something I love and am so pleased with. Thanks for inspiring me to try. 🎨
I do digital painting of my daughter as a hobby and I didn't even realize I was doing type of painting where you lay down blocks. I didn't know that was a legit way to paint with oil, I was just trying to get a color right for different areas of her face. I have one I have worked on once in a blue moon for about two months now. This motivated me to finish it. I have found that in realistic drawings coloring in block ensures I get all the values where they need to be, when I do one blanket color and shade and highlight on that, it never turns out right.
You have a very unique way of sculpting the form that makes you stand out from other figurative painters! I really find your videos helpful! Thanx a lot Scott!
Hi Scott, could you please, turn on the option for closed captioning? It would be super helpful for those of us who are hearing impaired and would prefer to read what you're saying. I truly appreciate it. thank you.
I second this, it would really help a lot of us
You right closed caption willbe helpful for many people who doesn.t speek english perfect I subscribe maybe nex time caption willbe on
i also support this idea. although i can more or less get along in English, unfortunately i can't understand a word of the movie. subtitles would be ideal.
Por favor ative a legenda!
I don't know, you are the only one who does not use the self-translation feature for all languages... This thing enables us to watch your videos in a comfortable and understandable way... Your videos and works are very good and deserve to be followed... I hope you take my words seriously, please.
Your skin tones are exquisite, you're in a league of your own bro.
I say that as a self taught superrealist oil painter myself. ❤💪👍
Ditto. What he said.
This is a great way to explain this. I’m mostly a watercolor painter now, and we always work light to dark. So, recently, as I’ve tried to get back into oil again, this was how I started back at it. Glad for the confirmation I’m on the right track, and I love your smaller strokes. This method is so refined!
Thank you SO MUCH for posting and sharing your amazing wealth of experience ❤❤ I am an amateur artist and struggle sooo much with muddy colors because I *rush*. I love how poetically and simply you describe various techniques and outcomes. Your channel is so soothing and encourages me to trust and enjoy the process of bringing forms to life ❤❤❤
I admire your art, it’s fantastic! I'm just sorry the video doesn't have subtitles. If you can put them in the near future, here in Brazil we would be very grateful!!
Lots of good suggestions and things to think about! I totally agree with starting with the light points. It's much easier to get to the shadow and realize you need to go dark quicker, than to go from dark to light, get the lightest point and realize that it's not near light enough.
I was sceptical at first, but I'm glad I watched all the way through because that makes a lot of sense.
The fact that you are taking the time to explain your process is already awesome. I
Thank you Scott! You have literally helped my severe frustration with painting from dark to light! I started with watercolours in my art career and was taught to preserve the white canvas and find the light. Painting from the dark and plodding through the shadows through what I like to call the "midtone muck" had me glopping too much paint onto the canvas and would end in much frustration trying to paint dark to light like everyone else! It always felt like I was trying to work a dark 2d cartoon into a sculpture! This is so liberating! I will paint from the light and create the forms going forward, I can't thank you enough for making this video! 🥰
👋👌👌👌👌
Well, you have helped me; this one person. I would venture to say that you have helped many.
Two people 😄
Three! @@nesrinamin8579
I love how clear you’re explaining in details. I’m learning a lot from you 👏🏼🙌🏻
Thanks for the video, it is quite timely in my case. I am about to embark on a large diptych of a couple flowers. I'm working on some color test/sketches as I complete the drawings. I just read Virgil Elliot's book "Traditional Oil Painting." Most of the techniques there are based on translucent shadows and opaque lights. So it somewhat grows outward from the terminator with the opaque paint laying on top of the shadows. I guess my question here would be about methods toward maintaining the opaque lights over translucent shadows while painting from light to dark.
The thing I will try first will be to paint "downwards" from the lightest in opaques, and then leave a gap where it goes to shadow, paint the shadows translucent (no white) up to the terminator, then paint in the gap with opaque darks.
Thanks for showing me a technique I never heard of. All my teachers said the complete opposite, dark to light.
You have me really wanting to try oils. I haven't touched them since college, 1989. Just did my first acrylic 2 months ago since then too. I forgot how fast that stuff dries and it drove me crazy.
I just love how you explain things, it makes it so easy to understand! And this makes total sense!
Thank you 🙏 I thought I was going crazy when I noticed myself feeling more comfortable working with the lightest instead of the darkest, I don’t just love your art I admire it. Thank you 🙏
Well, the sides of my mind have now met the middle of my mind, so thank you.
Ooff this was so eye-opening… the uphill battle from dark to light resonated so much with me 😢
🙂
this was so well-informed and helpful. thank you!
All of this was incredibly helpful. Following. Thank you so very much!
You blew my mind. I’m in a beginning painting class and these are issues I ran into with no solution. I’m so glad I came across this video because I believe it’s best to learn this techniques early on. 💖💖💖💖
Wish I had a mentor like you! Good teaching!!! It’s very rare
In my opinion that style of painting, realistically, is what I´m search in for. Thats what I want to develop on my own way to paint. I paint the tone colours in light and shadow. Each one by one.
Yours lessons made me get much more confident, eficient.
I’m a teacher myself trying to be a portrait artist! I love oil painting, I usually get the drawing right and the likeness I’m pretty good at it. But I wish I could master the process better. Soooo Thank youuuuuu! First time I see a video of yours! I appreciate great teaching
I appreciate your descriptions of the process. You bring tangibility to the obscure. Thanks.
That was really useful information! Good idea of getting the light colour made with the correct chroma first and then working down from the light area towards the darker shapes. This way I have the light coloured already worked out and painted. Whereas, if I start from dark and work up to the light colour, I may find it more difficult to get to the correct hue and value because I am painting from previous darker areas.
And furthermore, an excellent 'tip' you made - which I never thought about - is that as you lighten the hue by adding white, you are going to lose some chroma! And if you are working from dark to light, the chances are you are going to find your lightest colour lacks chroma because you have been adding white from dark to light. That explains why paintings look dead or washed out! So you would add a touch of chroma in the light area just so that it does not lose the colour and not become lost in a sea of neutrals.
These were excellent and subtle points you made that I never thought of before. Thank you!
I have subscribed.
You see the rounding there . Thank you for it.i’am learning oil paint but never paint a portrait . I started in oktober 2023 i painted a Andreas Schelfhout as a class painting whit the other students . I like it to do not the sort of painting but paint i love😊
This is the first of Scott's videos I have seen. Wow you are good! And I GET IT working from light to dark. It just makes sense! I'm going to try it now! Thank you. I'll be back! I've liked and subscribed. Thank you! Suzanne
As a “Sphere 1” painter, this was super interesting. Gonna try the top down approach and see how it goes. Thank you!
Master painter that looks like Anthony Varela. Magic combination. ✨
This is amazing. Your way of teaching really gives appreciation for the science behind masterly painting. It’s the stuff that makes people drawn to a great painting without being able to articulate what’s makes it great.
Dang! This dude is good! Great eyes in the portraits.
Very convincing argument. I’m convinced. Thanks Scott
Danke für diese wunderbaren Erklärungen, die mir nie zu lange wurden.
You are one of the best teachers i have met on social networking!!! THANK YOU
Scott! You're a star teacher and your grasp of the technique is outstanding. Thank you 😊😉
You are so much a part of your experience it is absolutely enthralling
This is so helpful! I have the supplies but haven’t begun to paint. I’m excited to start. Thank you! I’m subscribing 🙂
EXCELLENT, absolutely EXCELLENT breakdown! Thank you so much for teaching us.
I love this but I also need the CC as I cannot lip read when I cannot see the speaker.
Amazing work ❤
He is so great!thanks Scott!
Great advice!
Excellent video. Thank you!
This is so helpful!!! Thank you!!!
Thank you for your videos 💚
Excellent tips and beautiful work Scott. Thank you so much for sharing your depth of knowledge. Your delivery is both very clear and really fun to watch too! Thanks again!
Great info! Thank you!
Thanks Scott, excellent video as always
Brilliant!!!
You nailed it for me! Thank you again!
That really helps me, thanks alot 💚
Fantastic video Scott. Thank you
Thank you Scott!
Brilliant video, thank you
This makes so much sense!!!
Thank you for all your videos 😊
Thanks Scott. This was very helpful!!
Awesome info thank you!
Excellent portraits! 👍
Thank you for your technique advice.
Thank you for these great tips!!
Dude! That was so good! I really understood, as I gazed at my muddy portrait -- you really helped! Thank you! And you're funny!
Got to try this.
Thank you! Makes a lot of sense
Thanks for the insightful video. Now that you illuminate the point of starting light to dark, I realized my more successful portraits were painted this way, and not getting stuck in the mud. I think in school I had a hard time differentiating all a prima, direct painting, and indirect painting, and how to approach each route differently. Placing big brush strokes of the “average” value/hue in spots usually left me working in mud. The “use a large brush” manta also had me working with brushes far too large. I’ve since corrected, but that was such a hurdle.
Scott, so happy to find you! You articulate this so well. I've learned loads from this one video! Subscribed!
You’re the best, Scott.
Great lessons here. Thanks for sharing
Your expertise is incredibly outstanding,✨ to me you are definetely a modern day Bouguereau! The way you capture the slightest details in skintones is just mesmerizing ! Thank you ❤ your explanations were exactly what I needed to overcome a few of the struggles I ve been dealing with. 🙏🙏🙏
✨⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐ ⭐✨
You are amazing! Thank you so much for teaching us. 🙏🎨
Very helpful, excellent tips, without unnecessary background music! Have to change to light to dark method when painting, starting with a head portrait that appears rather dull. Also need to stop painting with the "miners helmet". 😄
thank you so much for your video❤❤
Excellent Thank you!👍
This makes total sense. Love how you rebel against all those oilpaint ‘rules’.
Thank you, really useful presentation
Very helpful information, Scott. Thank you for explaining this!
Thank you for sharing this video, so very in depth!
Good one. Thanks!
Very helpful, and if I haven’t misunderstood other videos I’ve watched (been watching loads since total beginner painter, like just started a month ago) - I understand this goes against a conman advice I’ve picked up, going from dark to light.
I’ve tried to do that mostly, but also tried a few other things and still very much trying to find what works for me.
This I believe would work better for me especially because of the reasons you mentioned about hitting the right hue. And avoiding too many layers of paint trying to find the right values and hues.
Thanks!
Great video. Fundamental. Generous of you.
Game changer. THANK YOU Scott!
Thank you!
You are a great master artists sir
Brilliant video, providing some of the best explanations I've heard on how to turn form.
Good teaching and anologies! Your lessons are always enjoyable to watch, Scott! Thank you! 😃🎨👍
Thank you Scott. This is very helpful thought provoking insights.
Nice talk .......enjoyed it.
Wow!! As always, I learned so much! I appreciate the demonstration of the different approaches in making your point, it really helps! 😊