Every video of yours is like Christmas morning for my art skill. Can't wait to see what you put out next!
Thank you so much! For the next video I have planned an approach to make certain aspects of painting easier
never watched a video before that actively encourages you to click off :)
see you in two weeks then
edit: well, turns out i had already experienced this a while ago when learning the basics of perspective, the note at 4:29 sums it up pretty well, the readily available theory is not enough, you have to go and exercise the knowledge you've gained. in Ernest Watson's "Creative Perspective", he suggests the ratio of 1 part theory, 50 parts practice.
I guess it's not good in terms of the algorithm, but maybe it is good for you^^
Thank you thank you
this is my first time hearing this and this sounds very good to improve
Definetly usefull, thanks!
will be back in 2 weeks
Great channel. This has potential to go far. Looking forward to more videos from you. Subscribed.
i like your approach to this tutorials, others are almost all the same and you put yourself a lot in the shoes of someone who's learning
yes, I think the reason is, that most art youtubers are more settled professional artists, while I am not there yet. I have a more instant grasp and really payed attention on how certain things clicked, but the downside is, that I cannot judge that well what may be more important. For example I kind of regret on what things I put the focus in my first videos. I think there are not many artists on my non-professional level on youtube, that's why my tutorials seem to be unique. I hope that I can fill a gap though
Hmm. I had previously watched your video on mathematical perspective, and that was transformative. But how do I know if I have already "unlocked" the experience you're speaking of, as someone who has done a great deal of perspective learning and practice?
Probably you are past that point. But maybe still just try to draw like I suggested. Also, certainly everybody has to find their own path of learning, and what I have shown here probably can be learned in other ways as well
@@phipsart6424 thx. I did try the observational drawing exercise.
I immediately recognized the curving of the three axes as i turned my head (due to having learned about curvilinear perspective).
_But_ i will say that the observational drawing exercise gave me more insight into how depth and distance in real life are represented in a drawing. I had to see the physical distance of objects in my chosen setting (especially those overlapping each other) and judge how to represent that accurately in my drawing. So I guess it still helped me a little 😊
ok I'm gonna stop the video and practice it 2 weeks but one question, is it fine if I turn my eyes toward the objects far from me while drawing? I mean it changes the perspective right? but I can't see things if I don't turn my eyes
@@phipsart6424 Thank you so much, I don't now if it's possible but I'll post it after 2 weeks and tag you
what is the third excersice at 4:49, the one with holes on the boxes? What is the name because I am trying to find some examples on pinterest to practice.
I am not sure there is a name to it. I first did the cubes for the sake of practicing cubes, and once I had that, that is a nice spot to practice ellipses by fitting them into the planes.
if you continue being bold and keep some comedy to your videos, upload with a bit more regularity without compromising the quality of your videos, and perhaps get a better mic, i believe that you will blow up
PS: consider doing more videos like the 40 minute perspective one. that was truly a masterpiece and youtube needs more informative and detailed videos like those. That style reminds me of the video "understanding color" by blender guru, you might have seen it.
By chance I have seen that video :D
Thanks for your comment. My perspective video that indeed skyrocketed compared to my others was a one-time shot I think. It was one topic that as far as I can see (and I watched a lot of perspective tutorials) never was covered in such depth, and very many people want to know about it. This was kind of a niche that I could fill. It's unlikely that I find such a big niche again, and it seems this one video also does not push my other videos much. So I do not have hope for my channel to blow up; also I do not have as much to say for frequent uploads, say once a week^^
There are way better artists on YT than me, I am by no means a professional. Maybe I can shine a bit with sharing very concrete experiences of which I hope some people can benefit. Atm I have 3 concrete videos planned, one on which I am working on right now. They may be kind of unique as well, but be of interest for way less people than the perspective video. If I wanted to upload frequently with such quality, I need to become a better artist first.
Thanks again for your comment!
ineed you bro T_t
It's not like you just get spatial imagination at one point - it's rather that you start feeling it, and then the real journey of training and resharpening it begins.
Also, please leave a comment on how/if it worked for you. If not we may find another way!
Happy drawing!