CREATE STUNNING BACKGROUNDS EVEN IF YOU'RE A BEGINNER
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- čas přidán 3. 07. 2024
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I can't believe you're making this video free. I got a lot of insight on learning how to draw buildings just from this video!
Thanks for making this video!
i, too, like to scribble on a new layer above my paintings for a cinematic shot of myself working... haha, i feel that so much. great tips though thank you for another video!
16:18 Really cool to see my friend Mina's work featured here, we are really proud of her over in our study group she has been popping off like crazy recently with her other work
Thanks for this free highly educational video!
I'm happy to see more background design topics come up in recent years. Seems like it was always a forgotten thing, especially with the rise of blender and other 3D software. Most backgrounds I see are more of an afterthought rather than a part of that world. As I always say backgrounds are characters too! Give them love.
that was helpful, thank you! 🙏
Love your videos and art advice! I would love to see a Studio Tour video some day. It looks sick each time I catch glimpses of it in your videos!
Another banger tyler!!! Hope I can chat with you again soon. Thank you for this video. I am doing my best to digest this along with some of your other videos that are helping me get started. Everything is scary and new lol. Its nice to see a students perspective (ha!) and see how they went through the process and how they over came certain visual road blocks that they had to overcome and be creative with.
Man I wish I could afford your classes. Maybe one day ill be able to sign up for some mentorship! Its been a blast meeting all the people in the discord and everyone is so kinda an welcoming. Your students are outstanding and inspiring.
This is really helpful! I definitely struggle with even coming up with ideas for backgrounds to draw and this gives me some nice direction. I'd love to take your classes one day.
Hey Tyler, i'm currently focusing on only portraits, everything human so to say, but i always wanted to be able to draw these stunning fantasy environments but i always felt like it would slow down my progress with portraits, so my question to you is do you thing it is possible to learn both portraits and environments?
I have the same question. I thing portrait is a linear aproach and inviroment is shapes and composition . but this two we can use it in portraits To, so is good learning it. But i dont shure how to switch my mind for enviroment art or concept art
Yeah because they utilize the same principles. Shapes, forms, lines, etc. characters have them and environments so. Good shapes make a good character and good shapes make a good environment. It’s all having well rounded set of fundamental skills.
Dude drawing faces is the hardest thing in the world to master, once you can do that, environment is ez as long you drill the concepts right way with teachers like Mr Edlin here.
Thanks!
Yeeeeah this is dope 😎
Could you make a video series going from phase 1 to 4 ? Would be interesting to see the whole process.
Might need to remember these if I ever wanna start drawing medieval towns and stuff.
So good😮😮😮
So just my own take since I’m a beginner, alot of beginners I saw lack an understanding of perspective. So I used FZD schools method to understand perspective from all angles and managed to understand drawings better and implement it.
oui oui je suis d'accord avec tout ca
Could someone make timestamps for this video? So much easier to follow. Great video.
I hate it so much that we need to think how to beat AI to get work now... sigh
But thank you, this is so inspiring and helpful!
Hi Tyler! Would you say 3D modeling is a must to reach the final level on architectural design? If so, do you offer any specific training on that subject? Thanks!
If you want to be competitive In Todays market then yes. If you do it just for fun not as important. But it’s free and really easy to get started.
❤
Is there anyway I can join this class, I want to get better at my backgrounds so bad
Yeah there’s still time to join this term, follow the link in the description would love to have you
Где научиться использовать 3Д софт для концептов на таком уровне???😱😱😱
I feel like all of this stuff is the easy part. Coming up with ideas isn't hard, there's endless inspiration out there... its executing those ideas in a way that doesn't look incredibly jank that people struggle with. None of this really helps me with the stuff I actually struggle with when actually drawing a background, which is perspective and composition. .
You see, stuff like perspective and composition have(somewhat) strict rules and there's a ton of instructional materials out there for you to learn it. It's either right or wrong. There's no subjectivity when it comes to perspective because at its core it's math, intuitive math...yes, but math. I would argue that that's the easy part but generating truly unique ideas and concepts is hard because there's no right or wrong ( ofc copying someone's idea is wrong) but other than that it's all grey. Coming up with ideas and concepts that are unique is exhausting and requires a lot more than being a good draftsman.
@@atharvalotake8437 Yeah, and its the stuff that is actually hard to learn and execute, because I've been struggling with it for years. The explanations for it are extremely confusing and hard to follow. It would be far more helpful to see an artist actually set up a scene step by step and explain how it works vs. ramble about a bunch of idea techniques.
Its also super misleading to act like a beginner would get anything out these ideas. A good idea doesn't matter if your execution of it looks terrible. If this video had been titled 'Generating Ideas for Background Design' or something similar, then that'd be fine. But no, its another misleading clickbait title. I don't need ideas, I need help understanding actual technique.
@@veryfilthything Concept art/design content is generally targeted towards people looking to go professional, so I think maybe throwing around the term "beginner" can be a bit unintentionally misleading. The concept art industry is pretty competitive, so it's assumed you've already got the fundamentals down. Clearly the work being shown isn't from beginner artists, so don't feel too bad if you find this video not to be helpful.
Perspective is tough, I've struggled with it for years. You just have to pick a book or a course and stick with it. Find other people's perspective drawings, stuff like you see in the video here, and copy them out. Try to reverse engineer the perspective in photos, kinda like the way he shows in the video. That is actually a pretty common exercise. Lately, I've been going through manga and doing very quick sketches of panels just getting the perspective down with the basic forms of the image. Do lots of loose sketching and you'll build a more intuitive understanding of how to handle it. It's easy to get lost in a book with all the theory and stuff, but the only real way to make sense of that theory is to draw a lot. Understanding the stuff only really comes with experience. I wish I could say there was one easy way to go about it or a good trick, but you really do have to just fight it until things start to click and make sense. The important thing is to stay consistent, stick with it, don't get frustrated and drop it. Stick with it every day until you really feel like you've made some progress. The only way through is to just keep going, even if you feel lost or confused.
I can recommend Perspective Made Easy, the Framed Perspective books, and Scott Robertson's How to Draw books. If something doesn't make sense in a lesson you can usually find someone else explaining it in a different way, either in a different book, or a youtube video. Worst comes to worst and you're totally lost, just keep drawing and maybe it'll click another day. Don't expect short term results or you'll just frustrate yourself.
@@asdadsgsaadasf6043 That's good advice and mostly what I've been trying to do. It would be helpful tho if people actually talked about these kind of exercises and showed step by step examples and talked about common pitfalls etc. Cause even tho I've tried to learn perspective many times, I struggle immensely with it. There are very few vids here on youtube actually showing perspective being set up and applied at a professional level with a proper explanation about how to learn it.
I went to college for concept art and learned basically nothing practical there... its really frustrating constantly being fed vague advice and ideas on youtube rather than any sort of concrete direction, which is def what 'beginners' need.
@@veryfilthything Dan Beardshaw's channel has tons of stuff dealing with perspective. Stephen Travers has lots of videos dealing with sketching architecture and landscape, and talks about how to deal with perspective. David Finch has a really good channel with some stuff on perspective. I know back in the day New Masters Academy had a whole course on perspective, but that's paywalled. There's perspective stuff on Gnomon, but it's paywalled so I've never seen it. Maybe hunt for videos/streams of comic artists drawing environments and scenes, or concept artists working, stuff like that.
Maybe see if you can find a forum somewhere that you can post your studies for feedback. I used to post my stuff on one years ago when I was starting out but it's long gone. I imagine there's all sorts of reddits or discords or whatever people do now.
I get your frustration with art school, I think the only people who really do great there are the ones who need it the least, college is just not a great format for learning art.
i hope he is not a cannibal cause that skull kinda looked like you