Everything about Perspective & Correct Mathematical use of Vanishing Points | Perspective Drawing

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  • čas přidán 3. 06. 2024
  • What comes closest to part 2: • 8 Ways To Learn Spatia...
    What is a Vanishing Point? How does Perspective work?
    These questions will be answered complete and utterly and with great detail.
    If you just came here for the QUICK USE OF VANISHING POINTS:
    Go to 24:38. You can ignore the talk about infinite spheres. The View Plane is basically an infinite paper on that you draw, and that contains the Vanishing Points, that mostly are outside of your image/canvas. That should do for you to understand everything.
    If you just came here for the REALLY QUICK USE OF VANISHING POINTS:
    -The triangle of Vanishing Points has no angles greater than 90°.
    -The middle of the image is the orthocenter of the Vanishing Point triangle.
    -If you draw too far, it looks distorted.
    0:00 Introduction
    2:00 Motivation & Paradox
    5:26 Vanishing Points
    9:16 Projections
    10:16 Parallel Perspective
    11:48 Linear Perspective
    15:00 View Plane
    16:22 Fisheye
    20:00 Paradox Solution
    21:26 Application of Linear Perspective and Vanishing Points
    21:35 How many Vanishing Points are there
    24:10 1-, 2-, 3-point-perspective at one glance
    24:38 How/Where to place the Vanishing Points on the View Plane
    25:28 Place Vanishing Points, look where the Canvas is
    28:01 Why 60°?
    31:38 Place Canvas, look where the Vanishing Points can be
    33:00 All rules + causes at one glance
    34:13 90° cases and how to deal with far away Vanishing Points
    36:44 Horizon
    39:02 Facts, Tricks, Implications
    39:26 End
    Over 200 hours, I don't know if I ever again make a video... :0
    Nsio: www.deviantart.com/nsio/art/N...
    www.deviantart.com/nsio/art/W...
    Stephen Leonardi: unsplash.com/photos/ileSGpTvhjw
    Derivation for the formula for the radius: www.deviantart.com/ucandothat...
    Thank you!
    My DeviantArt Page: www.deviantart.com/ucandothat2
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 707

  • @phipsart6424
    @phipsart6424  Před 8 měsíci +47

    READ AFTERWARDS:
    Briefly, here is what comes closest to the promised part 2: czcams.com/video/Mtsv1IpjUgs/video.html&t
    Now: In the video I did not distinguish clearly enough between static and dynamic view. Dynamic view means what you see when you look around - just as in the example with the wall. Static view is what you see when you do not look around, basically a screenshot of your vision.
    As I demonstrated, dynamic view leads to fisheye (taking fisheye as 'some curving' - there may be more restrictive definitions). But, and this is where the video is not clear enough and mixes it up a bit, two things: 1. static and dynamic view are not the same. 2. Nonetheless, static view is also a fisheye! (again, taking it as 'some curving'). One argument, that it cannot be plain linear perspective, and that at the rim at least some curving needs to take place goes like this: Stretch your arms to the left and right, and look straight. Now, you should be able to see your fingers at your left and right hand, at the same time, at the rim of your vision. Maybe you need to move your fingers a bit, but you should be able to see them - at the same time! This setup confirms, that your viewing angle is around 180°, maybe even a bit above. And this is impossible for linear perspective. For linear perspective, the absolute maximum viewing angle is 180°, and if you take that much, the canvas and the distortion is infinite. This argument forces, that at least some curving takes place in our static view.
    For other arguments, you may have a look here (on google scholar I found barrier free access):
    www.researchgate.net/publication/363424858_The_Art_and_Science_of_Displaying_Visual_Space
    If you want to research further, Perceptive Perspective is the term you are looking for.

    • @akezimak
      @akezimak Před 5 měsíci +2

      The reality is more complex, of course.
      Yes the vision field is curved, but normally you still perceive straight lines as straight. The reality is that _brain doesn't operate images at all._ It continuously scans the scene and converts it into very high-level concepts and relationships in real-time, omitting the details. That's how you're able to have a field of vision close to 180° or more while still perceiving straight lines as straight at the same time. I'm sure animals with the 360° visual field (e.g. birds, rabbits) are very similar in this.
      This self-contradicting property is impossible to represent with any mathematical projection or perspective, on any media, not just on a flat surface. You "see" a set of abstractions, not an image, so you cannot "draw what you see" 1:1. *Anything* you draw is always an artistic interpretation, without exceptions. Many artists mix perspective planes to better represent their message or mental state; this is an advanced skill way beyond the scope of this video. If you (the reader of this comment, not the author) are here for a tutorial, just keep your fisheye distortion very subtle and barely noticeable to get a more or less natural looking scene.
      Also, your gaze latches on "important" objects as it scans the scene, giving them more attention and possibly refocusing the eye. This makes them look closer than they really are. Distance estimation is extremely non-linear - that's why when you draw in mathematically correct curvilinear perspective, you might find some objects far too small. Try compressing the distances in the background if you find it important for the composition, this might or might not make it look more convincing, depending on what you're trying to draw.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@akezimak
      Thanks for your comment. Do you have sources for further reading? For instance for your point about us perceiving lines still as straight.

    • @Not_Even_Wrong
      @Not_Even_Wrong Před 4 měsíci

      In regards to @akezimaks comment:
      Stephen pinker has a book "how they mind works" some of these things come up in it (it's not a great book though... And his politics suck...).
      But here my own short explanation:
      It's the same effects as when you take a picture inside and wonder why your white walls seem yellow, it's because they are, from your light bulbs, but your brain keeps color correcting what you see to white, because it knows that they're white. What you perceive through this, is not optical reality, but actual reality in a sense (well that's what the brain is trying to do... Arguably the wall is really yellow, but you brain disagrees in a sense...).
      For your brain (so you survive ...) it's more important that you realize straight lines are actually straight then perceiving the bend that your optics apparatus introduces, that's why straight lines seem straight to you although they don't really look straight, the brain tries to show you reality behind the objects basically (in so far as it serves your survival).

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 4 měsíci +1

      @@Not_Even_Wrong Thanks for your comment and your point. I need to update my pinned post a bit soon

    • @akezimak
      @akezimak Před 4 měsíci

      @@Not_Even_Wrong There's a related concept in robotics called SLAM, and for someone familiar with it our discussion is trivial/obvious: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simultaneous_localization_and_mapping
      Basically your brain is *extremely* efficient in doing that in realtime, except it builds the map as relationships between concepts instead of the point cloud as most robots do, and that not-quite-3D-not-quite-2D map is what you normally "see". Some robots do that too, there's neural SLAM, topological SLAM, etc.
      However it's just a mildly interesting side fact in the context of drawing. It's not necessary to know all this to make convincing-looking art, some basic rules will suffice 🙂

  • @snoopy9009
    @snoopy9009 Před 11 měsíci +209

    My dear sir, as a person with an analytical, overthinking mind who can’t just “wing things”, this video is heaven to me. Thank you for your hard work ❤.

    • @Grav169
      @Grav169 Před měsícem

      Exactly my thoughts, he just put everything into "perspective"

  • @LiamJonesArtist
    @LiamJonesArtist Před rokem +70

    Isn't it a huge challenge to not just understand perspective, but to explain it? Teaching this in simplest terms is it's own work of art!

  • @GarotoArcano
    @GarotoArcano Před rokem +193

    the fact that this is free on youtube, it just freaks me out, you have no idea of how much you're helping artists man. wish you get every kind of recognition you deserve dude!

  • @quelmnossfe
    @quelmnossfe Před rokem +15

    05:42 With that revelation I literally said ''wooooh'' so loud that someone came to ask what was going on, thanks for sharing your knowledge.

  • @biology-of-life
    @biology-of-life Před 2 lety +211

    No joke... this is the most grounded and helpful art video about perspective I have ever seen by far! I think the long work was completely worth it. This deserves far more recognition dude!

  • @mrwang420
    @mrwang420 Před 2 lety +73

    The problem with drawing perspective is that most humans have 2 eyeballs. Meaning there is not 1 observer. There are 2 observers. Each one seeing in a fish eye manor, but because of the front placement, the lefts fish eye effect crosses with the rights fish eye effect and the crossing result is the bent lines become straight.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 2 lety +20

      I don't think its this what lets the lines appear straight. I think it still is the fact that we don't see the periphery clearly.
      But you are right, there is a little bit more to our vision. Depending on what you are looking at, one eye can see something that the other one cannot. At objects very close to your vision, like 5cm in front of your nose you notice it clearly, that your eyes/brain cannot match the images so well into another. But this effect mostly applies to objects that are really close. For most applications you can go as if it was only one observer.

    • @moonlitegram
      @moonlitegram Před rokem +4

      ​@@phipsart6424 I don't think its just because the periphery isn't as clear. I think there's a significant difference between what our eyes see (the raw data coming in) and what our minds perceive (the outputted information from that data). Our eyes may take in light resulting in a fish eye perspective but our minds don't necessarily process the data in that way. After all, that wouldn't be particularly useful information considering the bent distorted lines in our fish eye data aren't actually bent as they exist in the world - they are indeed straight lines. What we actually perceive in our minds, the information our mind has gathered from the data of seeing, is indeed closer to linear perspective. Our minds know those bent lines of the wall are actually straight. So we perceive them as such, even if the light from them does come in warped through our vision. Which is why linear perspective in photography etc appears natural to us - its how we're perceiving the world in our mind.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před rokem +1

      @@moonlitegram I agree with most what you say. The processing in the mind for sure is a significant factor. However at the rim of the vision some fisheye needs to take place, because our vision is too big for being plain linear perspective (180° is the absolute maximum in linear perspective, and horizontally we see even a little more than this). Also, in the middle of the image, fisheye and linear perspective become indistinguishable. From what I know it is possible or even likely, that some linearization/mitigating of the fisheye effect may take place, in other words, the fisheye effect only slowly increasing towards the rim. However I would not necessarily say, that this is because we know that physically straight lines should be straight, because: The same thing does not hold for example for spheres. A sphere observed with linear perspective is not necessarily a circle in the image, but an ellipse, if you are not looking directly at its center.
      Oh and by the way, I for myself fancy that in the part of our vision between center and rim I see the curving a bit lol

    • @jacyoutube4459
      @jacyoutube4459 Před rokem

      @@moonlitegram you speak with such impunity, as if neurodivergence doesn't exist, or that people don't have varying degrees of vision--both ocular and imagination 'vision.' Don't take for granted that the process by which you've worked this out universally applies, and happy trails 🤙

    • @mahdiasad1353
      @mahdiasad1353 Před rokem +4

      This comment and its replies are on a whole another level 😐

  • @Dennisjay9
    @Dennisjay9 Před rokem +38

    I love this video, and pretty much hate that I spent years being told "draw what you see" yet no one explains that liner is so drastically different from your eye sight. I guess people figure this out naturally but even my art teachers didn't tell me this after so many failed drawings so the mistake kept happening without an answer, until now.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před rokem +8

      I think also many art teachers are not so much aware of this. Glad that it helped! :)

    • @dont-want-no-wrench
      @dont-want-no-wrench Před rokem

      it has to do with the angle of view, if you kept your head straight you wouldnt see the fisheye effect, that comes from looking at different places and drawing those.

  • @p4rk756
    @p4rk756 Před 2 měsíci +5

    Our geometry professor suggested we watch this video to get an intuition of projections! Great video, good job!

  • @asherhan8443
    @asherhan8443 Před rokem +32

    As a self-taught art student, this is the best perspective video I have stumbled upon so far, thank you so much!

  • @tarajones-legros3661
    @tarajones-legros3661 Před 6 měsíci +2

    The infinite sphere and the beholder - the pieces of trying to understand this for years clicked into place. Thank you!!

  • @afm5785
    @afm5785 Před dnem

    So glad this video is here! Most vids about perspective are pretty useless. They just show how some gears work in specific situations, but totally ignore the big picture. It's like trying to use a drill that's taken apart and missing the motor.
    And by the way, speaking of why we don’t notice the fish eye effect in our eyes. This is most likely due to the fact that we do not perceive the world as some image from our eyes, but perceive it directly as a 3D object. The vision processing system of our brain already knows at what curvature of the lines in the projection of the eye, these lines are parallel in reality. But when we create a fish-eye effect, we significantly increase the curvature. For the brain, such curvature is equivalent if in reality they were not parallel lines. This is why it seems to us that the fisheye picture is convex.
    To see curvature, it is not necessary to have a clear 360-degree viewing angle. You can simply look around and collect the picture from a high angle. Then see how parallel lines behave. You will see that the "raw" image has crooked lines. But at the same time you feel them as completely parallel lines in three-dimensional space.

  • @blekkek755
    @blekkek755 Před rokem +6

    I didn't udnerstand a thing, but i'm probably gonna rewatch this video several times to get the idea. Thanks for covering such an interesting topic! No wonder why my linear perspective drawings looked weird when i went outside of the 60 degree

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před rokem +1

      If you can formulate a question just let me know!

  • @jgz3892
    @jgz3892 Před 2 lety +6

    This is Best perspective video on youtube

  • @IAmYes.
    @IAmYes. Před rokem +10

    I remember experimenting with 3-point perspective and I drew something really far away from the 'good area' and i wondered why it looked so weird. This not only cleared it up for me, but it taught me concepts that I never would've even imagined were possible.

  • @tollestoertchen
    @tollestoertchen Před 2 lety +242

    this is pretty much the best video on perspective I've seen on youtube - and I've seen them all :D
    Thank you for making it, with it had more views, you definitly deserve that!
    Seeing the vanishing points set on a sphere with the viewer in the middle has been an real eye-opener!

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 2 lety +7

      haha thanks! yeah, I feel I covered it in a yet unseen depth. thanks, I am very happy to read that! :)

    • @HumanBeing2137
      @HumanBeing2137 Před 2 lety +3

      agree

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před rokem

      @@motherisape Can you explain how you find the vanishing point? You mean on the canvas where you draw?

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před rokem

      @@motherisape That's right. I would not focus so much on calculating, but rather to get such an intuition

  • @buraianmath
    @buraianmath Před 2 lety +2

    This is probably how it felt when man kind discovered fire. My dude, I can imagine generations of children watching this video. Maybe in 10000 years people keep this as time capsule of the best explanation of vanishing point in existence

  • @blaise8738
    @blaise8738 Před rokem +5

    I simply learned more about perspective here in 40 minutes than during 3 years of art school :0
    Thank you so much !!!

  • @NightJun
    @NightJun Před rokem +4

    I thought about it for a long time, and got stuck on the [basic] thing of perspective for almost a year. I once gave up understanding perspective, but I couldn't do it. I just really wanted to understand his mathematical formulas. What I found on the Internet were theories. No one has explained this stuff from such a simple perspective, I would recommend this video to anyone willing to understand perspective, well done.
    You deserve it, thank you for your research. A few days ago, I broke through to 06:13 seconds by myself. I tossed and turned in bed and couldn't fall asleep. The moment I figured it out, I jumped up happily.
    Dude, this is one of the few happy days since I learned to draw for a year and a month.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před rokem +1

      I'm glad that it makes sense to you now! Although I feel a bit bad now, imagining people trying too hard to figure out what I am saying - just write a comment if you got stuck at one point :)
      Hope you have more happy days to come!

    • @NightJun
      @NightJun Před rokem

      @@phipsart6424 OK thanks!

    • @NightJun
      @NightJun Před rokem +1

      @@phipsart6424 I mean, I learned perspective on my own, and before this film, it took me a year and three months, a few days ago, to break through to the theory of 06:13 on my own.
      Then a few days ago, I found this video and it solved a lot of my problems and even gave me more.
      So don't bad now. You solved my problem, of course I will still ask

  • @2draw794
    @2draw794 Před 2 lety +1

    what a beast! been watching perspective vids for couple days and this definitely cover everything I need! thanks Phips

  • @Lukasek_Grubasek
    @Lukasek_Grubasek Před rokem +2

    Finally a video that helps you understand a concept and doesn't just treat it as "trivial". It isn't trivial. All of the tutorials out there offer no actual explaination for these concepts. Instead they just throw this at you and say that it takes years to develop an understanding for it. No it doesn't. It takes years to internalize it and use it intuitively but you can easily understand it with a 40 minute explaination.

  • @polarpeb
    @polarpeb Před 2 lety +4

    You absolutely nailed it with this video, thanks for putting in the work!

  • @gjeaks
    @gjeaks Před 3 lety +53

    Thank you for doing this video. You've put into words what I've failed to articulate for myself. Might have to rewatch some parts but overall I think I've got a better understanding of perspective now.

  • @karrorri1097
    @karrorri1097 Před 2 lety +6

    you did justice to the topic.... before this video, I thought of perspective as a cheat to project a 3d world on a 2d surface, but that infinite sphere cube thing made me realize that everything is projected on an infinite plane and we can see only some part of that plane and that is picture place or canvas... also I never thought of multiple types of perspective projections and when I learned about that it made a lot of things clear, like why certain scenes are different even they are snaped from the same location in space.... so overall thank you for taking time to put everything you learned together... it saved me months of confusion...
    thank you

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 2 lety +1

      makes me feel it was worth it, very happy to read that! :)

  • @mo0od749
    @mo0od749 Před rokem +3

    Absolutely amazing visualization of a usually tricky subject. Thanks for the great video!

  • @sara_door
    @sara_door Před 2 lety +4

    this was one of the absolute best perspective videos i’ve ever seen thank you so much!

  • @barr6124
    @barr6124 Před rokem +40

    This video is a masterpiece and will remain relevant and useful to artists and designers forever. The way you seamlessly integrate intuitive and analytical approaches is so helpful for comprehending the maddening paradox between natural drawing and linear perspective. I have been alienated from linear perspective constructions for years because it seemed to blatantly contradict what my hand and eye wanted to produce. I would just draw what felt right and adjust until things were (reasonably) acceptable. I am extremely grateful to you for resolving this apparent contradiction so beautifully, and giving us the tools to move forward with both drawing styles in such a clear and complete manner. I wish you all the best!

  • @mnieman8140
    @mnieman8140 Před rokem +1

    Hands down the best perspective video I've ever seen.

  • @cosminv8751
    @cosminv8751 Před rokem +3

    Best perspective understanding tutorial, thank you so much, I've watched a lot of perspective videos throughout the years but this one had me in awe. Great work, thank you for putting this much effort into this 🔥

  • @dumyes
    @dumyes Před rokem +1

    Great work. You did a marvelous job. It solves my problem incorporating LP into my pieces

  • @and-reass2719
    @and-reass2719 Před rokem +1

    Thank you very much for this amazing video. You have answered all of my questions that I couldn't find the answer to.

  • @threadsofsaffron
    @threadsofsaffron Před 10 měsíci

    brilliant video! ive had thoughts about 'circular' vanishing points, i'd never considered we experience the world in a spherical array of vanishing points.
    as an artist ive always been drawn to and understood the idea of perspective in a very intuitive way, and enjoyed drawing it freehand. very happy to see all this logically laid out!

  • @afonsoferreira1701
    @afonsoferreira1701 Před 2 lety +15

    As an art student, I really appreciate this video man, this is the most important thing for me to Master in the drawing field since I want to pursue architecture. Keep up the great work!

  • @patomax3197
    @patomax3197 Před 8 měsíci

    THANK YOU SO MUCHHH BEST PERSPECTIVE TUTORIAL IVE EVR SEEN😭😭😭

  • @pipipupu256
    @pipipupu256 Před 8 měsíci

    im usually someone who works very intuitively, but having my intuitions confirmed and reinforced by such a well structured explanation is incredible. thank you

  • @user-ne7tf3ne9k
    @user-ne7tf3ne9k Před 10 měsíci

    This is amazing I learned a lot watching this once and will definitely watch it multiple times again as their is so much good information!

  • @royahk4413
    @royahk4413 Před rokem

    THIS IS THE BEST TUTORIAL ABOUT PERSPECTIVE, MY ENTIRE LIFE IS CHANGED NOW THANK YOU SO MUCH

  • @1MightyR
    @1MightyR Před 2 lety +3

    Excellent tutorial! Very useful, great work! 💪

  • @Alumx
    @Alumx Před rokem +6

    this is probably the most thorough take on perspective that still touches art aspect that i've seen
    Your grasp on theory and explanations are top notch :D
    can't wait to see more stuff from you in the future! Cheers

  • @thedot9253
    @thedot9253 Před rokem +1

    Man! A thousand thanks for this detailed work! Im gonna watch this viedeo and try out everything until it is burned into my brain and I have you to thank! Best of life to you my man!

  • @PseudoWounds
    @PseudoWounds Před 5 měsíci

    Thank you, fantastic video, the radius tip was really great

  • @VincentKeeling
    @VincentKeeling Před 2 lety +5

    An excellent video on perspective and very much appreciated the mathematical formulas as well. Thanks so much for all your hard work!

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you! As I don't recommend it for everyone, I'm glad the formulas are of use for some people :)

  • @busterlundgaard8573
    @busterlundgaard8573 Před rokem

    Absolutely fantastic video. Thanks alot, wish I had this when i tried learning perspective a few years ago!

  • @giancarlonealmaru7303
    @giancarlonealmaru7303 Před 11 měsíci

    No need to apologize brother, you just made me understand topic in 40 mins thank you. Keep it up

  • @mountainsno
    @mountainsno Před rokem

    I can tell this is extremely valuable. Thank you. I will have to listen to it a few times. But I'm sure I'll learn. Thank you for the sphere image alongside the cube. It's really helpful. I'm listening for the second time. Yes the points on the infinite sphere and the lines etc. Wow. Thank you again.

  • @BaconbuttywithCheese
    @BaconbuttywithCheese Před 2 měsíci

    Fantastic explaination.

  • @Perilous815
    @Perilous815 Před 2 lety +4

    This was gold, thanks for going all out!

  • @Ugitron217
    @Ugitron217 Před 2 měsíci

    absolutely insane gem of a resource, making this info accessible to people is such an inspiration to me

  • @hawkedarkwizart8924
    @hawkedarkwizart8924 Před rokem

    this is the best instructional video on perspective i've ever seen. sometimes, the best way to make art better is explaining the technical aspects of it.

  • @itlugannipotpot5508
    @itlugannipotpot5508 Před 2 lety

    This is one of the Best videos on perspective that I have watched! I've learned new things from here! Thank you so muchnfor this video mate, really helpful!

  • @GohOnLeeds
    @GohOnLeeds Před rokem

    All kidding aside, this is an amazing resource, and should have had so many more views than it does. Fantastic job, dude.

  • @francolunardi6144
    @francolunardi6144 Před 2 měsíci

    ... Just the answers I needed man! Great video

  • @yfchan7753
    @yfchan7753 Před 2 lety +16

    Currently the most informative video about perspective I have ever seen. Thank you for making this video. This video should be worth more than 892 views.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 2 lety +2

      Reading such comments makes me feel it was worth it, thank you very much! Also the views are slowly accelerating, so it's not too bad :)

  • @thapthoptheep2076
    @thapthoptheep2076 Před měsícem

    This is great - the fish eye effect gets easier to see if you hold an object very close to the eye.

  • @iokhufu
    @iokhufu Před rokem

    im so glad i was able to watch this for free, this is amazing information!

  • @yen_bm
    @yen_bm Před rokem +1

    extremly good and educational video on perspective!
    amazing, i feel like i finally understood something about it lol

  • @NontNanont
    @NontNanont Před 2 lety +2

    Best perspective video i've ever seen!!

  • @helencrossing5375
    @helencrossing5375 Před měsícem

    Hi Thank you so much for all the work that went into preparing this wonderful video. Truly amazing. Dense information but fabulous way you have illustrated the concepts. I need to watch it again and also looking forward to watching part 2

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před měsícem

      Thank you so much!
      Here is what comes closest to part 2:
      czcams.com/video/Mtsv1IpjUgs/video.html&t

  • @enjoyedeggs5175
    @enjoyedeggs5175 Před rokem +1

    I've looked for a video like this one for years. Thank you.

  • @kiendang2994
    @kiendang2994 Před 2 měsíci

    this is the most helpful video on the youtube i have ever seen! really thank you so much, it helps me a lot!

  • @Edy_hdz
    @Edy_hdz Před 2 lety +1

    This is probably the best perspective video I’ve seen so far. I may congratulate you, this is precious work

  • @magicman1006
    @magicman1006 Před rokem

    I've always been curious about the full theories behind perspective, but I've never found a video besides yours that addressed most of the questions and theories I've had, I love this video, keep up the amazing work!!!

    • @magicman1006
      @magicman1006 Před rokem

      I really enjoy not only improving in art, but having a deep understanding of the concepts, and skills and theories that make up art, and I think this video does just that, I really can't put into words how much I like this videos, like in my 5 years of watching art CZcams videos, I've never seen one this in depth

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před rokem

      @@magicman1006 Thank you so much!

  • @8hng
    @8hng Před rokem

    Simply FANTASTIC... this is the best video i have ever watched on YT. thanks a bunch.

  • @o_scuras11
    @o_scuras11 Před 5 měsíci

    Im sure practice and patience will pay back 😆
    Very grounded tutorial, thank you!

  • @alexis-the-artaddict2120

    This is such a well made, as well as informative video!!! Thank You !

  • @dana5865
    @dana5865 Před 10 měsíci

    I was looking for a video for my students and this is the best and not just for them but also for me. This is not just about the title but is pretty much all about to to deliver what u know or have in ur mind. Ofc this will correct u during the process so that you will become even better by just following this artist's methodology on all the instructions.

  • @willtn
    @willtn Před 2 lety +2

    this is a super video! well done, dude. as other commenters have pointed out, you've made something substantially above other videos on the subject of perspective. i have also had some thoughts about the concept of the "infinite sphere" myself, and you've articulated and summarized it all really clearly in to a 5 minute segment better than my scrambled notes ever could. :)
    keen to see more of your content, subbed!

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 2 lety

      Thanks, makes me feel it was worth it! :)

  • @upalipremathilake6855
    @upalipremathilake6855 Před 2 lety +1

    Excellent tutorial! Very useful, great work! and thank you very much..........👍

  • @kusumkala4660
    @kusumkala4660 Před rokem

    Genuinely helpful.
    Thank you so much.

  • @ingvar-taranis7535
    @ingvar-taranis7535 Před 10 měsíci

    Nice and useful information, thanks!

  • @CristiArt
    @CristiArt Před 2 lety +1

    Good explanation. Thank you!

  • @LorenzoCeccucci
    @LorenzoCeccucci Před 4 měsíci +1

    man, you are the absolute nr. 1, finally a mathematical treatment of perspective :) It would be amazing to have an analytical treatment of measuring point an their correct position. Keep up the good work!

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 4 měsíci

      How do you mean that? Having a point in 3d space and calculate where it is on the canvas, or the other way round or something else? Thanks for you comment!

  • @Infinity-ki7wi
    @Infinity-ki7wi Před rokem

    Woah this is the best video about Vanishing Points :O Thank you! :)

  • @arleenlasleur
    @arleenlasleur Před rokem +1

    I REALLY LIKED THIS ONE. I talk to many beginner artists who are slightly better than me, but they just can't explain it for me (maybe they are not so good mentors, I understand this). They repeatedly tell me: stop drafting! Draw. We're not making gears on lathe, no top/side/front projections, draw as you imagine this!
    But I'm can't imagine. I need to know actually, thoroughly. They tell me I'm doing my drawings in too engineer way. So I better understand math, formulas are really easier for me than "as I imagine this". My imagination is too ambiguous.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před rokem

      To overcome this and maybe get an intuition for space and drawing, I think drawing your surrounding is a good way. Like I did in this video, when I drew in this fisheye way. If you want you can watch my latest video czcams.com/video/IWFO_9TPAFI/video.html
      Maybe this helps you: Just draw what you see and what you see beneath that, without construction lines etc
      Thanks for your comment, keep me updated if you wish!

    • @trunglethe9299
      @trunglethe9299 Před rokem

      they aren't believing in science and always hope for the magic to happen. This is how the majority of people are, they are likely to abandon methodology of how everything works, and stick to guessing the correct option. When they explain something,others don't understand and then start to blame reasons such as lack of practice, lack of attention, not talented, ... which are all wrong. I'm so happy to see you guys comment. Alhough so hard to find, there is always someone who strive to find the truth. There is still hope for this world

  • @KIWImike69
    @KIWImike69 Před rokem

    This is a great video! Thank you so much for making and posting this video.

  • @artgeometrix6346
    @artgeometrix6346 Před rokem +1

    So cool. A really excellent job here. Well done indeed

  • @jasonnguyen3246
    @jasonnguyen3246 Před rokem

    this is a great video with such easily accessible explanations. thank you sir

  • @darsh8964
    @darsh8964 Před rokem +1

    Great tutorial man! Very helpful in understanding the nuances of perspective, hopefully the algorithm will spin this out to more folks as it's a 10/10. Thank you for sharing!

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před rokem +1

      In the first year this video was online, it got a total of 600 views, so I am not complaining now :) Thank you!

  • @19CarlosGomez64
    @19CarlosGomez64 Před měsícem +1

    I found this video three years late.
    Congratulations on such a tremendous amount of work! You are very clear and have gone into depth on the topic. The perspective is nothing more than a lie. But it is the only way we can represent the 3D world on a flat surface.
    For a Renaissance approach to fisheye perspective, see Van Eyk's "Portrait of the Arnolfini" from 1434. The curved mirror on the wall reflects the room in a similar way to how the image is formed inside our eye : a curved surface. This is the reason for the curved lines of the "fisheye" perspective.
    For the field of view, I use a 72° angle. I decided that a 10% distortion between curved (true) and linear (false) perspective would be acceptable for my comic designs. But like you said, it depends on the artist.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před měsícem

      I would not say that there is true or false perspective, or that one of them is a lie. There are just different ways to do it. Thanks for your comment! :)

  • @katana2665
    @katana2665 Před rokem

    Though I am advanced illustrator, this video was very helpful and well done. Thank you for sharing your insight.

  • @Eric-yd9dm
    @Eric-yd9dm Před rokem

    This video answers so many questions I knew I always had, but could not figure out what they really were about and thus could not search for answers. Thanks!

  • @humuhumu961
    @humuhumu961 Před 2 lety +1

    How tf do u only have 188 subs. What u put in that video summarized one of the biggest areas necessary for any artist. I hope you can continue to create videos like these.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 2 lety +1

      Thank you! New video coming the next days, but not about perspective :)

  • @leebehl3063
    @leebehl3063 Před rokem +3

    Great video! Thanks. Personally I think the Renaissance people once they confronted fisheye perspective just put it aside. What mattered most was the viewers comfort zone of seeing the picture plane. The viewers angle was all that mattered and however fish eyed things truly are in nature, as you have said, our sharp image is only about 60 degrees or so anyway. If they had video games in that time, perhaps they would've cared to address it.

  • @deadsharkinthesea
    @deadsharkinthesea Před rokem

    Thank you so much for this lesson🙏

  • @chinguyenlinh3069
    @chinguyenlinh3069 Před rokem

    my god finnally a video that actually explains perspective. You got my subcribe dude.

  • @RishiVibe
    @RishiVibe Před 6 měsíci

    Good work sir. I appreciate your hard work. Thank you ❤

  • @rosemihopoetry1891
    @rosemihopoetry1891 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I wish I could understand the math part of this, I feel like I need to,rewatch it several times to grasp some of it!

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 10 měsíci +1

      You do not need it at all in order to become good at perspective drawing :)
      But if you have questions or a point in the video where you got lost, just ask!

  • @HumanBeing2137
    @HumanBeing2137 Před 2 lety +12

    this is just amazing, best video on perspective, thank you for your research, this will be monumental someday, I will be recommending this to everyone who will want to learn about perspective

  • @eevaaichner6109
    @eevaaichner6109 Před 3 lety +4

    sehr cool! danke für den perspektivenwechsel. 😎

  • @icetyper3353
    @icetyper3353 Před rokem +1

    Your video is a Gold in the CZcams Ocean, dude
    I'm glad I found you)))

  • @brooklineg7727
    @brooklineg7727 Před 2 lety +2

    Excellent video. I will need to watch it again several times, practice, and i hope it becomes more intuitive

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 2 lety

      For it to become intuitive, I know some things that may help:
      You could draw your surrounding, like I did in the beginning of the video. Eventually you will see lines not running down the paper, but coming towards you.
      More technical, you could draw cubes in perspective. First with vanishing points, and then try more and more to not rely on drawing the guidelines. Eventually you can draw cubes freely.
      These are 2 approaches. The first may be more fun, the second is similar to DrawABox, which is a good and free online course. Maybe you have a look at it, I recommend it well.
      Other than that, make sure, you don't lose the fun at it on the road! :)

  • @iliasgrado6424
    @iliasgrado6424 Před rokem

    That was an amazing video with so much info. I’ve got classes where I’m tasked with giving speeches, and organizing information for proper presentation. That said I’m very impressed with how you presented this topic. Also you’ve got really nice line confidence

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před rokem +1

      Thank you! I spent literally hundreds of hours for this video, and much thought went into the structure and when to say what and how much :)

  • @zxvy3595
    @zxvy3595 Před rokem

    thank you so much ! best perspective video ever

  • @ILovetoDrawKids
    @ILovetoDrawKids Před 7 měsíci

    thank you for the video ,explaning perspective .Its by far the most valuable understandble and *not talking about course and a depthful yt vid .Thank you sensei!

  • @chevjohn5829
    @chevjohn5829 Před 2 lety +1

    This video was amazing thank you!

  • @yugenmaharjan6699
    @yugenmaharjan6699 Před 2 lety

    this is definitely one of the best if not THE BEST perspective tutorial ever..
    I had spent more than a year researching on 'how to draw on perspective' but NONE have better explained perspective than this one...

  • @forever20channel96
    @forever20channel96 Před rokem

    This video is very helpful, thanks a lot!

  • @rosascreativeworks5403
    @rosascreativeworks5403 Před 2 lety +1

    Nice. I learned perspective drawing old school on drafting boards with pencils and rulers. These days 3D modeling helps me a lot if I find something difficult. Great video. Danke schön!

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 2 lety +1

      It's definitely a great help! Bitteschön :)

  • @eskilitor5802
    @eskilitor5802 Před 2 lety +4

    god bless you , you have presented us with such information!

  • @galaadslenz
    @galaadslenz Před 2 lety +1

    WE need more content man 😉 you been doing good stuff

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  Před 2 lety

      Thanks! I have 2 concrete videos planned, but I relocated and got a full-time job now, so I cannot promise anything soon^^ But I will try my best!