20 LIFE CHANGING Art Hacks That *ACTUALLY* Work

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  • čas přidán 9. 06. 2024
  • Here's the BEST of the BEST art hacks that i've ever found. These are ones that I use every single time I make art.
    I made part two for this video! • 9 Art Hacks For LAZY A...
    ⇨ OTHER PLACES TO FIND ME! ⇨
    Instagram: @Rae_Dizzle_ bit.ly/35lxl1B
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    Business Email: contact@raedizzle.com
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    CZcams Shorts: @RaeDizzleShorts
    ⇨ SHOP MY ART SUPPLIES ⇨
    amzn.to/3DALVU7
    Artist credit:
    Crayon hack: @EchoGillette
    Chalk method: @XabioArts
    Painters tape: @ChloeRoseArt
    tiktokers:
    cleaning kneaded eraser: @lastroz
    acetone paint: @stainedhands
    neon paint hack: @creative_stef
    #diy #hacks
  • Jak na to + styl

Komentáře • 3,8K

  • @SuperRaedizzle
    @SuperRaedizzle  Před rokem +157

    I made part two to this! : czcams.com/video/tp-mfLo7fWI/video.html

    • @princepersona
      @princepersona Před rokem +7

      Tip 1:
      Use d-Limonene instead of acetone for cleaning your acrylics. d-Limonene is made from orange peel extract and is what Styrofoam recyclers started using instead of Acetone. Why it's better is one you get the same cleaning, two it's not a harsh toxic chemical (Your lungs and eyes will thank you) , three you have a nice orange / citrus smell, and four it's organic so you can dispose of it any way you want.
      Tips 2:
      Draw in little circles instead of lines when filling in an area to color it. It blends much better and the intensity of color can be changed based on pressure or number of layers drawn.

    • @happysunnyrain1531
      @happysunnyrain1531 Před rokem +3

      Turn the water off please 🙏 while you wash then turn it on again to rinse. Watching water💧👀 just spill on makes me want to close it so badly. :)

    • @Knightshaide2000
      @Knightshaide2000 Před rokem +1

      These are fantastic tips!

    • @leilaayoub9060
      @leilaayoub9060 Před rokem +1

      @@happysunnyrain1531 I always do!

    • @leilaayoub9060
      @leilaayoub9060 Před rokem +1

      I’m so excited to watch this pt.2!

  • @CraftescapeTX
    @CraftescapeTX Před 2 lety +3525

    There's a reason Wite Out works so well as a white paint. The inventor of the original brand Liquid Paper, Bette Nesmith Graham, was a secretary who was also an artist. She realized she could use white paint to fix typing mistakes in her secretarial job and came up with her own formula for the correction fluid. I remember in school Liquid Paper was an absolute must-have school supply! So fun to see it come full circle as an artist supply as well!

    • @cobaltclam
      @cobaltclam Před 2 lety +1

      And her son Michael was one of The Monkees. :)

    • @gracefulannie-grcflannie-
      @gracefulannie-grcflannie- Před 2 lety +145

      I got into The Monkees when the show was on MTV back in the 80s. My friends and I were floored when we learned that Mike Nesmith's mother invented Liquid Paper.

    • @Vanilla644
      @Vanilla644 Před 2 lety +29

      wite out/liquid paper is banned in our school and if our teachers see us use it, we lose points 😳

    • @gracefulannie-grcflannie-
      @gracefulannie-grcflannie- Před 2 lety +26

      @@Vanilla644 A lot of kids huff it. When I was in junior high, it was up to the individual teachers if we could use it or not. One of our science teachers caught on and would only let us use it at his desk. I don't think we could use it in high school.

    • @CraftescapeTX
      @CraftescapeTX Před 2 lety +32

      @@gracefulannie-grcflannie- I've always been a Monkees fan - that was how I found out about its origins too! I was so excited when we found out the Monkees were going to be on MTV. My family bought our very first VCR just so I could stay up and record every episode. 😍

  • @ggmrgameanddraw
    @ggmrgameanddraw Před 2 lety +2327

    For digital artists! You might look at layer options and wonder what the heck is a vector layer. A vector layer is a layer that, when the lines on that layer are resized, keeps the lines smooth! So no more fuzziness when you make your drawing bigger or smaller :D

    • @itz_cherrybomb9085
      @itz_cherrybomb9085 Před 2 lety +56

      Omg! Bestie you just saved my life!

    • @Blaykat
      @Blaykat Před 2 lety +44

      OH MY GAWD!!! THANK YOU O LAWD! YOU HAVE ENLIGHTENED MY LIFE!!!! (ok but seriously tysm)

    • @elishaheetebrij3681
      @elishaheetebrij3681 Před 2 lety +20

      Is this feature on procreate?

    • @LaurenNicoleGlenn
      @LaurenNicoleGlenn Před 2 lety +11

      O.M.G. THANK YOU. I had no idea!!

    • @starcomet8312
      @starcomet8312 Před 2 lety +9

      YOOO THIS IS SUCH A HUGE ISSUE FOR ME, THANK YOU

  • @_asocol_
    @_asocol_ Před rokem +513

    For watercolor artists, if you wanna paint clouds, make the whole sky a wash of the color you want it (aka blues or sunset colors) and make sure it is a lot of water and the paper is wet. After you let the pain soak in for like 20 seconds use a towel you cramped up to take off some of the paint in some areas. You will be left with beautiful white spots that resemble clouds. Adding gray in some areas over that spot can help it become more life like. Hope this helps other struggling artists like it did for me!

    • @user-yn8my2le3x
      @user-yn8my2le3x Před rokem +9

      thank you so much for this tip! A few days ago i was struggling with the clouds in a painting, but now i'll re-do it, using this art hack :D

    • @jennischwab3138
      @jennischwab3138 Před rokem +4

      I can Never draw them!! Thank you so so much!!

    • @Erudessa22
      @Erudessa22 Před rokem +11

      For another texture of cloud, you can use the ripped edge of spare watercolor paper to remove the paint

    • @bonnylouwho76
      @bonnylouwho76 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Thank you, I have tried paper towels for removing paint as well. Sea sponges, etc. I will be trying this method out again, seeing how I can change up the cumples and wrinkles.

  • @MurryMoonSpit
    @MurryMoonSpit Před rokem +162

    I only paint with makeup brushes! I discovered this a few years ago after I had a party (alcohol was involved) and my friends got into my paint and brushes and left them out to crust all night and they were kinda done for. I wanted to paint something that week and was like dammit! But realized I had a huge cabinet full of unused makeup brushes and was like “Damn, why hadn’t I thought to use these before?” They are so much smoother and more refined than most artist brushes for the price. When you go to buy a high quality artist brush they can get insanely expensive. You can get a pack of Walgreens brand makeup brushes in all different sizes and shapes and they paint like a dream.

    • @johnsonjo8454
      @johnsonjo8454 Před rokem +1

      Hi

    • @BbangsazBread
      @BbangsazBread Před rokem +2

      GENIUS

    • @Local_Mm2Player
      @Local_Mm2Player Před rokem +3

      Tysm 🎉

    • @georgeedward1226
      @georgeedward1226 Před 6 měsíci

      True.

    • @ArisEmriis
      @ArisEmriis Před 2 měsíci +1

      Crusted paintbrushes can be saved if it's only been a few days. Coat the bristles in linseed oil and let them sit for 24 hours or so. Then wash them with a solid brush cleaner. There's no need to go spend more money even if it's cheap stuff. You're better off just reviving the brushes, IMHO.

  • @honoreyoung844
    @honoreyoung844 Před 2 lety +947

    Art tip: chalk pastels (especially the lighter shades) get dirty with the dust of the other colors…put cornmeal in a ziplock, toss in your dirty pastels and shake the bag. Your pastels come out nice and clean again! And the best part is you can just zip up the cornmeal bag and keep it with your pastels to use over and over again. I have had my sandwich bag of cornmeal for years and it looks too dirty to clean anything but I tell you at it’s still doing the trick.

  • @vijaypoonia8840
    @vijaypoonia8840 Před 2 lety +739

    My art hack ✏️: Whenever doing drawings with coloured pencils, use a base like paints, markers etc. which will make the process MUCH quicker. You will be able to cover large areas in little time and after that you can use coloured pencils to add details. If you use only coloured pencils, you will take a lot of time and finish through your pencil fairly quickly. Hope this helps :)

    • @amcvart9839
      @amcvart9839 Před 2 lety +7

      Yesss I do that all the time ✏

    • @vijaypoonia8840
      @vijaypoonia8840 Před 2 lety +20

      @@amcvart9839 I actually discovered this a few months ago when I was watching a fellow art CZcamsr ‘Temi Danso Art’

    • @satishchannabasappa2049
      @satishchannabasappa2049 Před 2 lety +2

      Thanks for the tip

    • @starglqm
      @starglqm Před 2 lety +16

      Paint as in watercolor paint right? Because I would imagine with acrylic paint the pencil will just scrape it off but maybe there's something I don't know

    • @4Rgames
      @4Rgames Před 2 lety +3

      it's easier to blend when there's not something already there

  • @tb9041
    @tb9041 Před rokem +13

    Im on an acrylic paint forum for beginners on FB and a lady there told us to use Vit E oil or olive oil and add a little to our acrylic paint and then it would act more like an oil paint and would blend better, dry slower and also bring out the color more. She said she uses it just for certain areas. She said her aunt did this for 40 years and was a great artist. I tried the Vit E and found it too thick and sticky, so then switched to olive oil and it really is amazing!

    • @bonnylouwho76
      @bonnylouwho76 Před 2 měsíci

      Olive oil was what the old European masters used. They also used real human blood and other bodily fluids, Which is why modern day paints cannot match up with their colors, unless and until they employ the use of something similar. What can I say.

  • @Jennifer-qc2tq
    @Jennifer-qc2tq Před rokem +9

    I've never heard of anyone doing this...but I tell every artist I meet. I ALWAYS flip my drawing or painting around (through the entore process) and and look at it in a mirror. You can spot your mistakes with proportion, symmetry, weird white space...I do it with all of my work and I can't even express how helpful it is. Especially, when you're like "I know something isn't right...but what?"

    • @cshell9137
      @cshell9137 Před 13 dny

      I learned this in my first drawing class and it's an invaluable step! And I'll squint when I look at the reflection--it really helps me to see the values of my colors.

    • @anniemartin4957
      @anniemartin4957 Před 11 dny +1

      I used to teach art in school. I kept an oversized mirror in the back of my classroom and taught, even 3rd graders how to use it. They made my heart sing when they would actually use it!

  • @TemiDansoArt
    @TemiDansoArt Před 2 lety +1407

    I got so many gems from this video! Never thought to use makeup brushes for blending 😅🔥

  • @randomrainbow4479
    @randomrainbow4479 Před 2 lety +724

    When you first open a tube of paint, swipe the threads of the cap with a bit of petroleum jelly or wax to help prevent dried paint getting all up in there and making the cap nigh impossible to remove without mangling the tube. Reapply whenever you feel it's wearing thin.

    • @yourstruly7009
      @yourstruly7009 Před 2 lety +4

      That's pretty ingenious!

    • @yourstruly7009
      @yourstruly7009 Před 2 lety +1

      @@charliebyerly3931 thnx

    • @ssnekky
      @ssnekky Před 2 lety +2

      That’s so smart

    • @charlirobinson1548
      @charlirobinson1548 Před rokem +4

      @@charliebyerly3931 ... thank you. Was just going ask. Hate when my E6000 gets messy.

    • @ooohlaa13
      @ooohlaa13 Před rokem +3

      @@charlirobinson1548 u got that right. Also be careful when purchasing e6000 Joannes often runs out but they still have black or white and I made the mistake of buying black for shoe repair on a pastel shoe and did not realize it until it had already made a mess. Just sayin!

  • @katjohnson7775
    @katjohnson7775 Před rokem +112

    I also love my colored pencils, my preferred brand is prismacolors also. I completely agree with the white being the best for blending anything!! I’ve even used it to blend marker and pencils or even gel pens. I’ll use my pencils till there is nothing left which leads me to another hack for those who can’t afford to get the premium art supplies like me. When my pencils are too short I simply stick them into a soda straw. I cut them down to a length that will hold 2 pencils (1 on each side’. 😊

    • @starfire139
      @starfire139 Před rokem +6

      Okay that’s a great hack

    • @maryott37
      @maryott37 Před rokem +6

      🤩genius!!! Thankyou❣️low budget single mom here😭

    • @angelsmokee
      @angelsmokee Před rokem +1

      How do you use the straws with the pensils in them ??

    • @Elizabeth-qt1mp
      @Elizabeth-qt1mp Před rokem +2

      Cool. I seem to love certain pencils, they get short and have to be replaced too soon, and I never like the new ones as well. Ho-hum. Good idea 💡 though.

    • @jennischwab3138
      @jennischwab3138 Před rokem +2

      🤯🤯

  • @christinaonsurez9526
    @christinaonsurez9526 Před rokem +34

    I've found that regular rubbing alcohol removes even dry acrylic paint from your paint brush.i got little ones that always let the paint dry on my brushes

    • @monibaroni7499
      @monibaroni7499 Před 2 měsíci +1

      Hand sanitizer is awesome and it conditions the brushes too

  • @ireti1245
    @ireti1245 Před 2 lety +217

    It is usually impossible to color a double sided coloring book with alcohol markers.
    Art hack:
    Get clear gesso and spread with a sponge on the part of the paper you want to color let it dry for around ten minutes. The print of your marker will not go on to the other side of the page.
    It works like magic. (◕ᴗ◕✿)

    • @blueberry3210
      @blueberry3210 Před 2 lety +4

      Love u!!!!

    • @itz_cherrybomb9085
      @itz_cherrybomb9085 Před 2 lety +5

      Bestie- I want to give a hug so virtual hug

    • @crystaldawn2708
      @crystaldawn2708 Před 2 lety +4

      Oh my gosh. This is genius! 😩🙏❤️

    • @BethanyEidson
      @BethanyEidson Před 2 lety +5

      Life changing!!! I have so many books I want to work in but couldn’t bare to do it. Yay!!!

    • @Vikram70345
      @Vikram70345 Před 2 lety

      I saw a CZcams video on that.. But it made the surface uneven and spoilt the marker tips. Can you please suggest what to apply the gesso with to get a smooth surface!

  • @afroborilafemme
    @afroborilafemme Před 2 lety +336

    I love that at almost 2mil followers, her biggest videos at near 7mil views, she just reviewed colored pencils over $1k, but so many of these hacks are perfect for us broke artists. Rae never forgets her broke Dollar Tree Art days and I love her for that because that’s where I’m still at in my art journey.

    • @mornasev
      @mornasev Před 2 lety +9

      I'm also a Dollar Tree artist! I agree, Rae gives me confidence to go and do things! I don't need fancy paper, just a bit of creativity!

    • @nickorange4881
      @nickorange4881 Před 2 lety +7

      I'm also there. I do like dollar tree though. I like to pick up stuff from there. Sometimes stuff is not quality but sometimes they hit it out of the park . I got a rubber mallet there. I got glass pens there. And it came with a small container of ink. I know rae uses the poster board paper for making quality stuff, but sometimes I just take a piece and i doodle it with a dollar free sharpie. I cut some of my paper post card size since i draw small.

    • @mornasev
      @mornasev Před 2 lety +3

      @@nickorange4881 Dollar General is another good store for inexpensive but ok art stuff. I have a couple of little sketchbooks I carry with me everywhere that I got from there. Good for practice.

    • @nickorange4881
      @nickorange4881 Před 2 lety +2

      @@mornasev yes. I got a mini sketchbook there that i plan to put in my bag. After I'm done with my current mini sketchbook. It's so Convenient to have that size. Much better than the big spiral i had that's the size of about printer paper but is heavy. I wanted to draw regularly but it was heavy and such a pain to bring around.

    • @kaylawallace1634
      @kaylawallace1634 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@nickorange4881did you mean to say dollar free 😅😂😂
      Please dont ask me why that's so funny. Its an inside joke. With myself. Im gonna start using that though. Dollar free all day. They BOGO a lot more than they know.

  • @harucanread5310
    @harucanread5310 Před rokem +98

    Art hack for helping you learn how to draw portraits. What helped me was learning how to do makeup. Specifically drag and cosplay makeup. It allowed me to figure out dimensions of the face and how they are expressed in a 3-D setting and it was very helpful when I went back to drawing.

    • @shrianshmakesart
      @shrianshmakesart Před rokem +6

      Tbh , tracing helped me alot for realism , i don't do realism anymore bc I've combined my brush pen style with gouache , ig it's going pretty good

  • @lemonberry7973
    @lemonberry7973 Před rokem +55

    Also a perspective/landscape (idk what to describe it as) hack, when drawing a scene with multiple figures, have each figures eyeline line up with the horizon line. This will prevent different figures from looking like they’re floating or sinking, and keeps everything on the same level. (Of course further distanced subjects will be smaller compared to closer ones, but they should still line up with the horizon line!)

  • @willmfrank
    @willmfrank Před 2 lety +237

    For photographing your artwork, do not shoot under bright sunlight; wait for a slightly overcast day, so that there is a thin layer of cloud to diffuse the sunlight. Make certain the the sun is at one side of your artwork, and place a reflector ( a sheet of white poster board or foam core makes a really effective and really inexpensive reflector ) on the other side. You will get a very even lighting effect with no highlights or shadows.

    • @Lulisette
      @Lulisette Před 2 lety +29

      and when you put a piece of white paper under your artwork, sticking out a bit, you can adjust the colours of your photo refering to that white bit of paper on your computer, then crop the photo

    • @lihtan
      @lihtan Před rokem +8

      @@Lulisette The trick I do, is I keep a piece of white cardboard in my camera bag, and use it to manually calibrate the white balance on the camera. I like your tip, as it could be used to confirm how accurate the WB correction was!

    • @js-tw3vs
      @js-tw3vs Před rokem +2

      Thank you for that.

  • @NewlifeOPEdits
    @NewlifeOPEdits Před 2 lety +338

    My art hack:
    I was once recommended by an art friend to put a sponge (cut to the shape of the cup) at the bottom of the paintbrush water to gently wash the brushes on. I was surprised how well it worked and I've been using the trick ever since.

    • @HeatherBryant22
      @HeatherBryant22 Před 2 lety +10

      I have also used soft makeup scrubbers at the bottom for the same trick!😊

    • @molly_in_mke
      @molly_in_mke Před 2 lety +14

      I used a makeup brush cleaner pad/mat from the dollar store and cut it to fit the base of my cup

    • @wintersprite
      @wintersprite Před 2 lety +16

      I just tried something similar last night with a silicone dish scrubber (if only it worked better for its intended purpose).

    • @natbarnett3726
      @natbarnett3726 Před 2 lety +1

      This is genius

    • @melpot4296
      @melpot4296 Před 2 lety +5

      Wire/copper sponges work better for this

  • @lihtan
    @lihtan Před rokem +21

    The technique I use for transferring a reference image onto another sheet of paper, is to place them both up against a window, and use it like a
    light table.
    What I do to get clean edges with masking, is to use electrical tape instead of masking tape. Because it's non-porous, it can't absorb paint
    that would lead to bleeding. Be careful when you overlap it, so that you have tiny gaps where it crosses another piece of tape.
    When I used to do house painting, I would save money on trim brushes by buying the cheapest one they had at the dollar store, then I'd use a
    beard trimmer to clean up the ends of the bristles, so that I could nice tight cut lines.
    If you use OLFA or X-Acto knives a lot, learn how to sharpen and hone them! Blades can now last months or even years. I only replace them when they break now.

  • @pinkgirlsuzi
    @pinkgirlsuzi Před rokem +9

    Here's one I learned when I was a nail artist. I just sort of figured it out. Use alcohol to remove acrylic paint on just about anything including clothing. The only caveat is that if the acrylic paint is completely set up, you won't be able to remove it completely and you'll need acetone. But in the case of doing nails, if you are doing some art you first any topcoat and let it dry and then do the art over the topcoat then topcoat again. By doing that, if you mess up, you just wipe it off with alcohol and viola! You are all set to go again. Don't forget to topcoat over your masterpiece when you're done.
    And for the rest of is artists, I always keep rubbing alcohol on the table when I'm painting with acrylic. It helps with clean up and any mistakes. If your brushes are getting a little yucky, soak them for a few minutes and they'll come clean. And because alcohol is drying, if your brushes start getting a bit dry, just give them a little conditioning with hair conditioner or oil. But only use a bit and remember to wash it out before you use it again. I also train my brushes with hair spray.

  • @lucieb2734
    @lucieb2734 Před 2 lety +477

    My art tip: the best way to learn/ practise mixing colors is to pick out ONLY red, yellow, blue and white paint and then mix all the colors you need for your piece YOURSELF. Including black. Even if you own the exact color you need - forget it and make it yourself. Fr it's such a helpful challenge.
    Edit: as the comments pointed out - yes, the primary subtractive colors (cyan, magenta, yellow) would be better for this challenge. If you can, use these three colors (and white). However if you don't own cyan or magenta paint (almost nobody did at the school we learnt this challenge at), just use red and blue instead. Trust me it still works wonders.

    • @hearts4marzz
      @hearts4marzz Před 2 lety +1

      how do you even make black 💀

    • @yoshianimations6171
      @yoshianimations6171 Před 2 lety +14

      @@hearts4marzz when doing it often enough it will almost go automaticly, but for starters I'd say make a slightly red brown and a slightly blue purple and blend them together. After than you can experience with adding little bits of colour and see what works best. Make sure to make quite a lot so that you won't have to remake that color. And oh, I see that most people hesititate using yellow cause blue and red look darker, but yellow is absolute a must.

    • @hearts4marzz
      @hearts4marzz Před 2 lety +3

      @@yoshianimations6171 ok thanks :)

    • @yoshianimations6171
      @yoshianimations6171 Před 2 lety +1

      @@hearts4marzz np ^^

    • @wayfaringspacepoet
      @wayfaringspacepoet Před 2 lety +11

      @@hearts4marzz you can make it using ultramarine blue mixed with raw umber or burnt sienna

  • @1tsnotmemar1-o6
    @1tsnotmemar1-o6 Před 2 lety +441

    My art tip: Not all colors have the same tonal value. It’s part of the reason red and green look extremely similar to some people. It helps to occasionally snap a photo of your artwork and edit out the saturation of your colors (y’know grayscale) and seeing the tonal contrast of your piece. It can help to organize your most saturated paints in tonal order.
    Also, darkening yellow with black can create a muddy green color. Darken with brown instead.

    • @safala
      @safala Před 2 lety +28

      Purple is better in my opinion. At least with watercolors, which is my preferred medium. I think it's because purple is opposite to yellow on the color wheel.

    • @Lunatic5306
      @Lunatic5306 Před 2 lety +14

      If red and green look EXTREMELY similar to you, you might be color blind

    • @thaliacrafts407
      @thaliacrafts407 Před 2 lety +13

      This is a trick that user interface designers use to make their design colorblind friendly

    • @mariantreber8055
      @mariantreber8055 Před 2 lety +1

      There are glasses and clip ons to correct colorblindness. $99. in some cases.

    • @rhiannonhooper
      @rhiannonhooper Před 2 lety +3

      Get a colour blindness test and let us know if we r “hue/shade deaf”

  • @amandafriesen4026
    @amandafriesen4026 Před rokem +33

    Prismacolor’s Colorless blender is also pretty good. But still I get the special blending skills of the white pencil. Nothing compares. And you’re right, it’s specifically Prismacolor brand. It’s magic.

    • @gemmacruz6356
      @gemmacruz6356 Před rokem +5

      Was going to comment the same things but saw yours.
      I'd add in, from my own experience that the white prismacolor is good for blending lights while the colorless blender is good for darks and shadows, I've found it makes them even darker

  • @hambeastdelicioso1600
    @hambeastdelicioso1600 Před rokem +30

    I've known about the hairspray fixative hack since 1971 when my mom put me in a summer art camp. The preferred brand was Aqua Net and the only reason I remember that is because it's what my mom used. When I attended college twenty some years later, Aqua Net was still the recommended brand!

    • @bonnylouwho76
      @bonnylouwho76 Před 2 měsíci +1

      YES! I think I learned that from my older sister who was in college when I was little back then. I need to buy some aqua net if they still make it. I have one can of fixative and it was expensive so I tend to hoard it. I have gone back to the basics after profound health and life challenges and am basically having to relearn everything. ( Vision loss and accidents. )

  • @lupus2o493
    @lupus2o493 Před 2 lety +350

    One hack I discovered recently:
    Whenever you are tracing a drawing on another piece of paper pin it together with bobby pins. It is so much more convenient than using tape because you don't risk ripping the paper.
    Hope that helps ❤️

    • @itz_cherrybomb9085
      @itz_cherrybomb9085 Před 2 lety +2

      THANK YOU!

    • @lindatannock
      @lindatannock Před 2 lety +11

      You can use white Blu-Tack too! Pop tiny bits around the border of the paper to hold it in place!

    • @mg8642
      @mg8642 Před 2 lety +1

      That's a great one

    • @ezra5737
      @ezra5737 Před 2 lety

      Don't trace drawings

    • @adarose6382
      @adarose6382 Před 2 lety +2

      thats really helpful, thx

  • @shivanipathak5380
    @shivanipathak5380 Před 2 lety +220

    My art hack: so during the whole process of drawing anything you should always flip the artwork or look at it through a mirror so you can check if you got the proportions and perspectives right. If it looks wonky and weird you'll know which part you messed up and can fix it quickly. It works because we get used to seeing the work so much we overlook the mistakes and it becomes apparent when it's flipped.( Not upside down like mirror view flipped) i don't know if this can be called an art hack but sure did help me a lot when I was first starting out and didn't know much about perspectives and proportions.

    • @kinseyclose4968
      @kinseyclose4968 Před 2 lety +4

      I do this too!

    • @miaikonteras4006
      @miaikonteras4006 Před 2 lety +7

      I do this too, with both traditional art and digital. Way back when it was mentioned in a "how to draw" book I owned, using a window or lightbox.

    • @baticeer_
      @baticeer_ Před 2 lety +7

      you always see digital artists flipping their canvas but somehow it never occurred to me to use a mirror to do the same thing traditionally lol! good tip!!

    • @willowdarcy
      @willowdarcy Před 2 lety +6

      This is totally a traditional technique and I still forget! It's really good. The other one is to stand far away from it, especially if you are painting large.

    • @carolinekent1877
      @carolinekent1877 Před 2 lety +4

      Taking a picture also works for this

  • @wendycriss8619
    @wendycriss8619 Před rokem +18

    I was too lazy to go to the store and pick up some cornstarch to mix in with my acrylic paints so I tried to substituting baking powder.
    I couldn't believe it worked ! It went on smooth made the paint much brighter and my project only took one coat. Granted it does start drying out so you want to move quickly.
    I used a pinch of powder to a tablespoon of acrylic paint.

  • @theaprilnesscompton9686
    @theaprilnesscompton9686 Před rokem +43

    This is the first time I've seen an art hack video that contained actual useful information of things I honestly did not know before!! Thank you so very much for all of these!!

  • @sooth15
    @sooth15 Před 2 lety +245

    The best art advice that has stuck with me for years was from Neil on "Art Attack" (a tv series geared towards kids - I was a kid at the time) is this: Draw what you see, not what you think you see. It's very "basic" advice and may come automatically to a lot of people, but it has always stuck with me.

    • @willmfrank
      @willmfrank Před 2 lety +34

      Dude! I'm sixty years old and I STILL watch reruns of Neil Buchanan's "Art Attack!" You've got to keep that childlike sense of wonder and discovery.

    • @PaulaZF
      @PaulaZF Před 2 lety +11

      I was taught to draw the shadows.

    • @eyden1562
      @eyden1562 Před 2 lety +4

      AAAAAAAAH, I LOVED THAT SHOW SO MUCH 😂

    • @crystaldawn2708
      @crystaldawn2708 Před 2 lety +9

      Those salt drawings always shook me to my core. 🙏 He inspired so many of us!

    • @eyden1562
      @eyden1562 Před 2 lety +2

      @@crystaldawn2708 Those were my favourite too 😂😍

  • @maellebardet1351
    @maellebardet1351 Před 2 lety +137

    My painting hack : to get a darker shade of any color instead of using black, use just a little amount of the complementary color. Its fricking magic. The most beautiful darks greens just by adding a bit of Magenta or Red.
    So my second hack is embrace Magenta, the primary "red" for color mixing. And if you want red, just mix yellow with Magenta, magic.

    • @srivaishnavee
      @srivaishnavee Před 2 lety +2

      Woah it actually works

    • @-shanta-
      @-shanta- Před 2 lety +12

      I can confirm that when I figured this out it changed my life. Using complementary colours is now pretty much my go to technique for creating any sort of shadows, cause they seem to blend in way better than black, in multiple mediums

    • @wintersprite
      @wintersprite Před 2 lety +1

      I learned this one in school.

    • @safala
      @safala Před 2 lety

      Yes and yes!

    • @Skittl1321
      @Skittl1321 Před 2 lety +4

      I learned this in a class recently. I don't think it's a hack to not use black...it's good color theory

  • @LaurenMwithMK
    @LaurenMwithMK Před rokem +13

    Something I recently discovered while trying to paint one of those block letters from Walmart. It's made of pressed wood, so the edges have some gaps and grooves that remain even after sanding. At first, the paint (I was using acrylic) would just seep into the gaps, so I mixed it with Mod Podge glue and sealer. You could also use paintable wood putty around the edges first, but Mod Podge is a LOT cheaper and more versatile.

  • @lillianalevizopoulou3779
    @lillianalevizopoulou3779 Před rokem +18

    I loved the tape hack. I've been so frustrated with (always) not getting a clean line and your tip makes so much sense

    • @bonnylouwho76
      @bonnylouwho76 Před 2 měsíci

      I have used electrical tape, I was just never sure if that was an allowable "thing" in art circles as I am self taught. lol

  • @blakelay
    @blakelay Před 2 lety +259

    The gray canvas works on digital art too! Either program your default "paper" color or make a layer and fill it with 50% gray. It really makes a difference!

    • @itz_cherrybomb9085
      @itz_cherrybomb9085 Před 2 lety +4

      FACTS!

    • @mg8642
      @mg8642 Před 2 lety +2

      I didn't even think of this, thanks!

    • @rinnace
      @rinnace Před 2 lety +1

      wait wdym "50% gray"? like the opacity?

    • @blakelay
      @blakelay Před 2 lety +1

      @@rinnace I mean, like, right in the middle of black and white.

    • @YoungDymisty
      @YoungDymisty Před 2 lety

      @@rinnace yes.

  • @cenepeed1818
    @cenepeed1818 Před 2 lety +98

    My tip: if you use varnish or have hardened paint on paintbrushes, you can use CONDITIONER to get it off after a couple mins of scrubbing!

    • @leyalaatasto9096
      @leyalaatasto9096 Před 2 lety +10

      To add to this: use toothpaste for the more heavy duty stuff! Just be careful to not get it into the metal bit :)

    • @nycapt2a
      @nycapt2a Před 2 lety +1

      Really?! This amazing 🤩

    • @nycapt2a
      @nycapt2a Před 2 lety +1

      @@leyalaatasto9096 oh cool!

    • @sterredv3861
      @sterredv3861 Před 2 lety

      Omg thanks for this

  • @Zahras-Official
    @Zahras-Official Před rokem +12

    Tip : if your paint brush (dosen’t matter big or small) if it’s frizzy then just dip it in hot/boiling water works like a charm and also gets paint off your brush just a bit faster! 💕

    • @kathyadmirespurlock5308
      @kathyadmirespurlock5308 Před rokem +1

      Thank you! Sometimes when I use my brushes then clean in acetone I swear my brushes look like the hair of a troll doll! I didn't know how to get my bristles back into looking like a paint brush instead of a troll doll with a bad hair day. So thank you for this tip.

    • @Fatima-Zahra103
      @Fatima-Zahra103 Před rokem

      Thanks

  • @lanamagness5371
    @lanamagness5371 Před 2 lety +173

    Add paint to spackle (drywall repair paste). It makes a wonderful 3D effect. It can be applied with a pallet knife or put it in a decorating bag to bring flowers or anything else off the canvas or whatever you are painting on.

    • @AndreaCrisp
      @AndreaCrisp Před 2 lety +21

      Yes! And along the same lines, if you are just playing and using cheap products (not worried about archival quality) you can also add a bit of Elmer's/PVA glue to spackle. The added glue changes the texture and makes it less likely to crack, especially if adding cheap craft paint that has less binder and pigment. Knowing both is great, because they have different textures/looks when dried.

    • @milenalanka6509
      @milenalanka6509 Před 2 lety +4

      It can also crack and fall off, happened to me.

    • @debramoss2267
      @debramoss2267 Před rokem +1

      @@milenalanka6509 aw that's disappointing. I hope you could rescue it.

    • @mika-bq7iw
      @mika-bq7iw Před rokem +7

      @@AndreaCrisp thats kind of funny because you can make crackle paint using elmers glue also :)

    • @mika-bq7iw
      @mika-bq7iw Před rokem +3

      @@milenalanka6509 could you possibly have applied the elmers glue first and then paint over it while it was still wet?

  • @kwahoo
    @kwahoo Před 2 lety +44

    If you want a smooth finish with a crayon, you can actually "prime" your paper with a layer of wax before you start drawing. Just take the white crayon or some uncolored paraffin wax and lay down a thin layer on your paper. I don't know about other brands, but Crayola will layer beautifully once it has some wax under it.

  • @avantgardettos
    @avantgardettos Před rokem +18

    Just found your channel and watched a bunch lol, and then made my first painting in over a year. Thanks for the inspiration!

  • @ElenaMZapata
    @ElenaMZapata Před rokem +21

    I'm an art teacher and all these hacks are giving me life, thank you!!!

  • @fantaismycat4709
    @fantaismycat4709 Před 2 lety +153

    Digital art hack: instead of using the 'blur' tool to blend, use an airbrush brush to blend. Keep overlapping it with both the two colours you are blending. I think it looks much better this way and feels like you are actually doing something because sometimes the blur tool feels like you are doing nothing

    • @P1xelat3d89
      @P1xelat3d89 Před 2 lety +6

      My friends and I used to make our own custom brushes in PS, which meant you could get that exact blend and texture you wanted in your work 😄

    • @liizzset
      @liizzset Před 2 lety +4

      This hack works. Had done this hack myself too. Used to do the blur tool as well too. And same result as said comment. And it works in many or not if all of the blending I digitally do. Looks smooth. Beginner so ai am not sure of another word for smooth in this case. But it depends on the particle size too for the air brush settings. Some digital airbrushes tend to use square like dots instead of small dots. Therefore, sometime you have to check for size and pressure of the software's air brush.

    • @crystal03marie
      @crystal03marie Před 2 lety

      Tbh I use both together 😂 like the airbrush won't be soft enough for my taste so I'll use the blur tool over it

  • @Aulith
    @Aulith Před 2 lety +241

    Acrylic paint art hack: do you ever miss using layers in digital art, being able to delete them when you don't like the result? Very high percentage alcohol (like hand sanitizer) will take thin layers of acrylic paint off your canvas, you can easily remove a glaze like this for example. I use a q-tip. And if you wanna make sure you don't remove too much paint underneath, just use any kind of transparent medium, or even a thin coat of vanish before adding a new layer on top of the work you are already happy with. That way the alcohol will definitely not mess it up in case you wanna remove what you paint over it. :)

    • @YoungDymisty
      @YoungDymisty Před 2 lety +6

      Lol took me a second to realise you meant varnish and not vanish the stain remover 😂.

    • @willmfrank
      @willmfrank Před 2 lety +2

      @@YoungDymisty Yeah!...If you confuse the two, you'll get pretty much the opposite result.

    • @YoungDymisty
      @YoungDymisty Před 2 lety +3

      @@willmfrank 😂 right !

    • @Totalstranger108
      @Totalstranger108 Před 2 lety +5

      I use mod podge between “layers” to lock the lower layers and make the layer I’m working on “removable”.

    • @AndreaCrisp
      @AndreaCrisp Před 2 lety +2

      Also helpful if you get acrylic paint on somewhere it's not supposed to be! 😳 Like your favorite shirt, furniture etc. I pretty much only do art in "art clothes" now. 😂

  • @kathylapointe5899
    @kathylapointe5899 Před rokem +4

    I am 63 and just started painting with acrylics. I’ve been a frustrated artist my whole life and have tried it all. Painting seems to be my best choice. That said, I’m SO GLAD I watched your videos. Such great information for someone just starting out without access to other painters close by! Thank you ever so much!! Your artistic ability is by fair the best I’ve seen!! You rock!😘

  • @alexandrarock4848
    @alexandrarock4848 Před rokem +12

    I love adding interesting texture with coarse sea salt! I have no idea if the sodium is going to degrade the paint over time but I have some I did 4+ years ago that still look identical to when I finished them, no warping and sometimes a tiny bit of texture can upgrade a painting majorly. liquitex makes a medium that does the same effect but table salt is cheap and we all have it around but kosher or sea salt is best

    • @alienardo
      @alienardo Před rokem +3

      The salt in acrylic paint is a nice hack. Getting a nice matte finish mixing salt water solution to the color. Too much looks whitish or cloudy but great use of effect.

  • @meh_lady
    @meh_lady Před 2 lety +76

    Another great spot for good lighting for smaller objects is inside the fridge! I’ve been into nail art for many years and lots of us take hand and swatch pics in the fridge. You can put colored paper or fabric in there for a background. It’s better than most light boxes. 😊

    • @lei_draw
      @lei_draw Před 2 lety +5

      *me:* **peacefully taking a 278th picture in the fridge**
      *dad:* What are you doing? It's cold there

    • @geminis1523
      @geminis1523 Před 2 lety +3

      Omg thank you! I have a really crappy camera and really poor lighting in my apartment. I have to take so many pictures of my art and then edit it slightly to make it even look close to how it actually looks in person lol. This will help me so much! ❤

    • @ooohlaa13
      @ooohlaa13 Před rokem +2

      I love the ingenuity of this and of all the commenters. Isn't sharing great? Wouldn't the world be so much a greater place if we all shared freely? Thanx for this not only for the useful hack but for your free floating inventiveness and willingness to take the time to share. Blessings!

  • @Abbey-vm1gn
    @Abbey-vm1gn Před 2 lety +84

    I use this art hack specially for mural painting(I’m sure you can use it on other stuff), but if you mix white acrylic gesso into cheap acrylic paint(like 50 cent apple barrel paint) it makes it similar to thick body paint for WAY cheaper. Makes you use a lot less paint and it drys slower. Been using this trick for awhile now and has not let me down. (Has saved me fortunes on buying thick body paint)

    • @sislertx
      @sislertx Před 2 lety +1

      Or black gesso...which is hard to find.

  • @salt4138
    @salt4138 Před rokem +4

    take a picture of your sketch and use any basic editing application to mirror it or just hold a mirror up to your sketch before you start rendering, it'll help you see parts that might look strange or out of proportion, you can keep looking at the mirror to make sure your corrections worked until you're happy with it, I swear it's helped me so much with noticing lopsided eyes or weird composition :3

  • @victoriaamadorrousseve6612
    @victoriaamadorrousseve6612 Před rokem +245

    Have been an artist for 50+ years, not full-time, but regularly throughout the years. This is the first time I’ve watched a CZcams video you made. Thanks for the tips! I wish I knew some of these back in the day!

    • @r.coffman1431
      @r.coffman1431 Před rokem +6

      It is strange, be ause my dad has been an artist for a little longer than you and I find most of these hacks to be common sense... I guess I have just been taking what I have learnt from him for granted.

  • @_moonchild_7822
    @_moonchild_7822 Před 2 lety +149

    2:49 I just tried this art hack out, but I didn't have cornstarch. So I used baby powder instead, and it works great! So if you don't have cornstarch you can use baby powder too❤️

    • @mom42boys
      @mom42boys Před 2 lety

      FYI: Baby powder is just cornstarch. It used to be made from talc but since the talc mined to produce baby powder typically also contained asbestos, which causes cancer, companies stopped using it and changed to using cornstarch. Johnson & Johnson has been in court for years trying to defend that fact that they KNEW there was asbestos in their baby powder for years but did nothing about it. Thousands of women have gotten cancer that is directly related to their use of baby powder but Johnson & Johnson trying to hurt them again by working to not have to pay for their huge medical bills. It's really fucked up. 😪

    • @brendaleelydon
      @brendaleelydon Před 2 lety +18

      It depends; some baby powders actually are cornstarch (with fragrance added in), while others have a talc base. I don't see any reason why talc wouldn't mix with acrylic, but I don't know if a talc-based powder would work exactly the same way. 😊

    • @EvBarney
      @EvBarney Před 2 lety +13

      Most baby powder is made with cornstarch these days (at least in the US) because talc can be toxic and cause problems if used regularly long-term. That said, yes, read the label.

    • @_moonchild_7822
      @_moonchild_7822 Před 2 lety +3

      @@brendaleelydon Oh okay, thanks for letting me know 👍🏾 I didn't know that lmao-

    • @crystaldawn2708
      @crystaldawn2708 Před 2 lety +3

      A bit of white gesso works great as well! I know it's pricier but I have a huge tub of it and a much smaller container of cornstarch lol :)

  • @Breegan
    @Breegan Před rokem +10

    you can also use crayons on top of colored pencils for smooth texture or to help with blending or dimension
    edit: i for dimension i mean like - if you’re coloring water and you want it to also have like a greenish hue to it - lightly go over with a crayon -

  • @rachelfurniss8768
    @rachelfurniss8768 Před rokem +4

    For miniature painting: disposable liquid eyeliner brushes are excellent detail brushes. They’re super handy and you can buy them in bulk really easily.
    Hopping back to the paint and cornstarch hack, add a larger amount of cornstarch to your cheap paint to create a thick paint that will hold shape and/or create texture for bases. Way cheaper than buying texture paints

  • @GS-cg3yn
    @GS-cg3yn Před rokem +134

    I think I enjoyed this woman’s personality as much as her art tips. She made me smile today, and I needed that.

  • @bonniemasterjohn5440
    @bonniemasterjohn5440 Před 2 lety +57

    I use Muphy's Oil Soap to clean brushes with dried on paint. It works great on brushes with water based paints as well as oils.

  • @jlm517rocks
    @jlm517rocks Před rokem +1

    Brilliant!! My hack for gelly roll pens that dry out (the black ones are the worst) is hot water soak in a tupperware with lid on, 10-15 minutes, shake firmly, and dip the tip/nib in koh-i-noor rapidograph calligraphy pen cleaner, cap it wet, shake,again and draw a few strokes. Something in that solution cleans up the dried pen. Repeat the process as it may need to work into the tip... Also store the pens flat or horizontal if stacking them in a cosmetic bag. This works for watercolor brush pens, just a dab, not a full soak, whether felt, synthetic, and plastic nibs, roller balls, tech pens, dip ink, spray nozzles, droppers, pipettes, etc. Also, to ride on the crayola watercolor idea, is using highlighters (water based, re-wettable), and mildliners (archival/permanent when dry) nd the like as a base layer(s) that's translucent/transparent/neon-ish to mix colors or provide a wash.

  • @TheMopardodgegirl
    @TheMopardodgegirl Před rokem +1

    The hack using neon paint to lighten a shade singlehandedly made me smash that like button. . . The cornstarch trick had me hovering over the button though!

  • @benonyum
    @benonyum Před 2 lety +56

    Art hack: I saw a girl using white crayon as a masking fluid for watercolour.And after painting ,she chiped it up and was left pretty white.I found it cool cause usually masking fluids are more expensive than crayons.But they do have more preccision i guess .

    • @sydneyharp1989
      @sydneyharp1989 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah wax repeals water from soaking in. Just can’t paint over it after removing without some of that left wax showing through the color. Did it with a project and its amazing.

    • @wintersprite
      @wintersprite Před 2 lety +2

      It makes sense since crayons can also be used as a resist for coloring Easter eggs.

    • @safala
      @safala Před 2 lety

      Yes! Clear candles work too. Just make sure you don't have to paint anything on it after that.

    • @honoreyoung844
      @honoreyoung844 Před 2 lety +1

      rubber cement alao works as a much cheaper alternative to masking fluid for watercolors or inks… The upside of it over a wax resist is that when you rub it off the surface is still workable😄

  • @ritaharilalchauhan5063
    @ritaharilalchauhan5063 Před 2 lety +66

    As an intermediate artist, I only suggest to stay determined... and for an art hack, if your medium is coloured pencils don't be afraid to do an underpainting of watercolor, markers, pastels, etc. At first it would be hard but with time you'll get habitual and it's super timesaving and effective.
    Hope it helps... 😊

  • @Honeyshelby23
    @Honeyshelby23 Před rokem +3

    I love the whole vibe that you bring to inspire and also share life long quests of “how to” better in the spirit of a collective goal. Keep informing and inspiring!

  • @peggyg9488
    @peggyg9488 Před rokem +3

    You can also take old, dried out Crayola markers - soak the same color in a container. ALL the ink will leach out and you get watercolor paint. Usually it's very weak but it great for beginners to do broad washes for backgrounds. I teach elementary art and I never throw markers away until I get the last bit of color out. Then I let my 1st graders have at it.

  • @lemonberry7973
    @lemonberry7973 Před 2 lety +61

    If the paper rips whenever you peel off the washi tape, this is a tip for you :)
    Before placing the tape on the paper you plan to mask off, lightly place the tape on your pants or other clothing to pick up some of the fuzz on the clothing. This takes away some of the stickiness while also having enough to stick onto the paper. Even placing the tape on your arm will pick up some of the oils that will also prevent the tape from ripping the paper. Be careful not to do this too much to the tape or it won’t stick to the paper very well. I don’t know the original source of this tip, but it is not my tip, I just want to share it to those who might need it!
    Hope this helps some of y’all :)

    • @juilikesarkar465
      @juilikesarkar465 Před 2 lety +1

      It is rae's too i remember she told this in one video

    • @tymondabrowski12
      @tymondabrowski12 Před 2 lety +1

      Bad thing about washi tape is that some are just decorative, and have little stickiness to begin with... so it depends on the brand whether it would keep the paper from buckling.

    • @sheenajames856
      @sheenajames856 Před 2 lety +2

      You can even use a hair dryer on heat setting to melt the glue a bit and voila no mess or ripping of paper.

    • @safala
      @safala Před 2 lety +1

      Paper ripping can also be minimized to a great extent if you pull the tape sideways than up, if that makes sense. It would be pulling it parallel to the plane of the paper, not perpendicular, but idk if I made it more or less complicated with this description.

    • @sheenajames856
      @sheenajames856 Před 2 lety

      @@safala Makes complete sense. I actually do them both.

  • @slimshady3578
    @slimshady3578 Před 2 lety +161

    when painting with acrylic use the dark shades first then build up the highlights and detail :)

    • @raineeredman6874
      @raineeredman6874 Před 2 lety +3

      That is helpful

    • @safala
      @safala Před rokem +17

      And the opposite for watercolors! You preserve your white highlights, and go from light to dark.

    • @violetdragon-mo1wf
      @violetdragon-mo1wf Před rokem +3

      Thank u! I have such a hard time with acrylic

  • @EclecticGreyWitch
    @EclecticGreyWitch Před rokem +7

    I love this video, and appreciate the comments as well. I'm saving this one for reference. I don't have the money to buy the quality of art supplies I like, plus as you've shown, sometimes a cheap art hack can be useful with expensive supplies, and can improve cheap art supplies. Thank you for all you do! I love your channel, as well as the ones you tend to group with (like the spectacular Chloe Rose!🌹).

  • @ericsunday_
    @ericsunday_ Před rokem

    Thanks for putting this out Rae

  • @hayleyhayward2745
    @hayleyhayward2745 Před 2 lety +249

    This is exactly what I needed on this cold and miserable Saturday! Thanks for all the tips Rae, looking forward to using some of them!

    • @MAGICALARTWORK123
      @MAGICALARTWORK123 Před 2 lety +2

      Atleast watch the video first.....lol🤣

    • @TonyMiller.13
      @TonyMiller.13 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MAGICALARTWORK123 🧑🏽‍🎨 Yes!! We watched it together, and you were there too......

    • @MAGICALARTWORK123
      @MAGICALARTWORK123 Před 2 lety

      @@yesafied video was posted 4 mins ago when I commented....so probably he didn't watched it. Anyways that was not something that serious! U are over reacting 🙄

    • @microedit337
      @microedit337 Před 2 lety

      Lol sameeeeeeeeee

  • @breemo82
    @breemo82 Před rokem +3

    How did I JUST now find you?!? You're amazing! Your energy and attitude are so magnetic, just love it!! I LOVE art, know a lot of hacks myself and these are fantastic! One hack I use is the make up brush one, but also a pumice stone can add really interesting texture😊

  • @doriscook9106
    @doriscook9106 Před rokem

    Fantastic! Getting ready to head back to school I will share these with my students.

  • @anarchohannibalism
    @anarchohannibalism Před 2 lety +28

    In my broke artist days I couldn't afford sketchbooks (and I couldn't ask my parents for more because I filled them up so fast), so my life hack is that I learned how to make my own with just cardboard, printer paper, and twine. No sewing needed! You just fold your paper & cardboard in half, wrap the twine around the spine of your cover, and slide your paper in. It works surprisingly well :)

  • @Tunanunaa
    @Tunanunaa Před 2 lety +62

    I've been using pastels in my college art class and I will say hairspray works just fine for things in your sketchbooks but once you're doing a big piece with lots of detail and layers you'll wanna invest in actual fixative. I'm super cheap and I love saving money, but sometimes you just have to bite the bullet and invest in the good stuff. You're not just spending money, you're investing in the quality of your artwork!

    • @yaralaterveer
      @yaralaterveer Před rokem

      Or just add multiple layers of hair spray. My school has an entire shelf filled with hairspray cans in one of the art supply closets because we use it so often 😅

    • @donnabashline4933
      @donnabashline4933 Před rokem

      Fixative really isn't that expensive and a can lasts a long time. The finish is great and dries instantly.

  • @Allysonhandle
    @Allysonhandle Před rokem

    Thank you!! Wonderful presentation!

  • @randywang218
    @randywang218 Před 2 lety +57

    *ART HACK✏*
    When drawing fine hairs or fur, indent the paper with an empty pen or with an indenting stylus to preserve the highlights!😊 The highlights STAY white even if u layer on top!😁 This is a life-saver for artists that draw realistically that HATE drawing little highlights🖊
    I hope this helps🎇

    • @csdezignsbyclaudiaseigler4468
      @csdezignsbyclaudiaseigler4468 Před rokem

      I agree, it sort of flattens out the surface, making it smoother or slicker… so the fine details don’t ‘sink’ in!

    • @hollylc9914
      @hollylc9914 Před 20 dny +1

      That is my super art hack for color pencils 😁 I once textured an entire drawing with a stylus before adding any pencil color... my kids thought I had gone crazy working so hard on an invisible drawing 😂

  • @swifthazey
    @swifthazey Před 2 lety +359

    Rae, Moriah and Chloe are the holy grails of art CZcams!

    • @isaballs1796
      @isaballs1796 Před 2 lety +16

      I don’t like Moriah. She is just so rich now and she acts like it too

    • @luvnasma
      @luvnasma Před 2 lety +12

      @@isaballs1796 ehh nahh but tbh she has turned a bit diff now

    • @isaballs1796
      @isaballs1796 Před 2 lety +2

      @@luvnasma ikr

    • @prisha3291
      @prisha3291 Před 2 lety +6

      Istggg exactly they r the ONLY THREE art CZcamsrs tht i watch or have subscribed to

    • @prisha3291
      @prisha3291 Před 2 lety +5

      @gamma right him too

  • @annekostecki
    @annekostecki Před rokem +1

    Thank you so much for this! I haven't even watched all of this video yet and it's so helpful.

  • @dianalascruces7461
    @dianalascruces7461 Před rokem

    Happily have used the corn starch tip and loving it, thank you!

  • @karenhenry9374
    @karenhenry9374 Před rokem +41

    If you’re going to use corn starch to make acrylic paint more opaque, you need to use distilled water or mold will form over time. In general when crafting, use distilled water (except when cleaning brushes).

    • @ooohlaa13
      @ooohlaa13 Před rokem +6

      such a good reminder, thanx, because its basically a food ergo the mold.

    • @dedefitzpatrick4092
      @dedefitzpatrick4092 Před 3 měsíci

      Thank you for that! I read it just in time❤

  • @crystaldawn2708
    @crystaldawn2708 Před 2 lety +53

    For the transfer technique Rae mentioned in the video with chalk pastels! - You can use graphite too! Any old pencil will work! ❤️

  • @billlangley9591
    @billlangley9591 Před rokem

    OUTSTANDING, Rae!!!

  • @alethaoneall3019
    @alethaoneall3019 Před rokem +4

    Great hacks! Thank you 💜
    I like using colored pencils on watercolor paper and then blending with baby oil and q-tips. Very vibrant and smooth.

    • @SammL.aka.MydnyteShadows
      @SammL.aka.MydnyteShadows Před rokem +1

      Do other oils work or is it just baby oil that works? Thank you for this great hack!

    • @alethaoneall3019
      @alethaoneall3019 Před rokem

      @@SammL.aka.MydnyteShadows I haven't tried anything else, but it would be fun to experiment.

  • @loati94
    @loati94 Před 2 lety +165

    Art tips I find useful, even though they are already known
    If the tip of the color pencil gets blunt but you don't want to sharpen it because there's still a lot left, use sanded paper and it gets pointy again.
    Whenever I do that with my charcoals or graphite I save the powder in a container and I can use it to tone paper for a future drawing.
    With the same clear gesso ( mine is liquitex):
    If you want to tone your canvas but you have to prime it first, mix gesso with acrylic paint and you can choose whatever color base you want and prime at the same time.
    Using clear gesso makes any paper into a friendly surface for sofpastels
    You can practice oilpaint in any paper if you prime it with gesso first.

    • @leslietarkin5705
      @leslietarkin5705 Před rokem

      Thank you for the color pencil tip. I never thought to save the powder.😬

    • @barbielockett5839
      @barbielockett5839 Před rokem

      Thank You for all your tips..first time 👀..Love Barbie

  • @arnekgriswold9059
    @arnekgriswold9059 Před 2 lety +30

    For watercolor, do all your line art/drafting with watercolor pencils! Make sure you have similar colors to what you need in the finished painting and the line art disappears, no erasing.

    • @violetdragon-mo1wf
      @violetdragon-mo1wf Před rokem +2

      I recently realized my fancy colored pencils are watercolor after all! Thanks, I will definitely use this!

    • @VentuKiel
      @VentuKiel Před rokem

      This makes total sense, but I never ever connected those dots, so a BIG thank u

  • @LoveIsL.A.M.E.
    @LoveIsL.A.M.E. Před rokem

    Thank you so much for the corn starch tip!

  • @dewystar5523
    @dewystar5523 Před rokem

    Love this video! Thanks for sharing!!!!

  • @MillenniWolf
    @MillenniWolf Před 2 lety +37

    During my time in art school I made myself a light box, which is pretty much a budget light table, so I could trace my art when I was working between mediums. It’s super cheap and easy to make and all you need is two things: a clear box & some stick-on lights. For the box you can pretty much find them at any store where they sell those clear plastic store bins. You can buy whatever size you like, but I bought one that was a medium size so that I could an 8.5x11 paper on it. Then go to your local hardware store, or the lighting section at your local Target or Walmart, and buy yourself a set of pressable lights that you can stick to surfaces. Usually people buy these kinda of lights to stick to walls in their homes, so they’re fairly easy to come across if you look around. I bought mine from Home Depot for like $15. The ones I like are the ones that can stick to things and are turned on and off by pressing down on them. Though I’ve also seen versions of these lights that come with a remote to turn them on and off. Either way, get what you like more and then all you gotta do is stick the lights in the box, turn em on, put the lid on the box, and there you go! Now you’ve got a light box that only cost you like $20 to make and is fairly easy to store :D

  • @goldenwillow3002
    @goldenwillow3002 Před 2 lety +48

    Random little thing I've picked up, when blending pencil/graphite, you can use a glasses cleaner over your finger. It works really well to get a smooth finish, and your finger won't get covered in graphite.

    • @goldenwillow3002
      @goldenwillow3002 Před 2 lety +9

      @kuyswe Wait you mean the solution/liquid people spray on their glasses? I'm talking about the little cloth squares

    • @goldenwillow3002
      @goldenwillow3002 Před 2 lety +1

      @kuyswe ah ok! Glad to have that "cleared" up (pun intended)

    • @lei_draw
      @lei_draw Před 2 lety +1

      @kuyswe haha same

  • @kellykreig5510
    @kellykreig5510 Před rokem +3

    Love love your channel! Another thing that looks really cool is if you draw a picture with crayons then go over it with marker of the same color. It gives it a really different look.

  • @carolablackburn2818
    @carolablackburn2818 Před rokem +1

    You can also wash your brushes used for acrylic paint, with a little bit of vinegar and dish washing liquid... it cleans and leave them soft. A trick to blend pencil colours or graphite smoothly is to apply a thin layer of soft pastel as a base on your paper.

  • @suegeorge8694
    @suegeorge8694 Před 2 lety +50

    I have used the crayon coloring hack since the late 80's. It really does make the color look smooth and saturated. Just make sure that when you get to the outline, to scrap in towards the colored area. I always used a paperclip to scrape with.

  • @DyzziiFizz
    @DyzziiFizz Před 2 lety +103

    If you're a lefty and use spiral Sketchbooks: put the spiral on the right. Go back to front like a Manga. It helps a LOT. It is so much more comfortable and lets you flow so much easier. Happy drawing all ❤️

    • @alexisjohnson1445
      @alexisjohnson1445 Před 2 lety +5

      I have never thought of doing this, its so smart!

    • @DyzziiFizz
      @DyzziiFizz Před 2 lety +5

      @@alexisjohnson1445 Thank you! Took nearly 18 years for me to figure that little trick out! 😅

    • @suzannebeyer5369
      @suzannebeyer5369 Před 2 lety +3

      Been doing that in my school notebooks and sketchbooks forever. Hated spiral notebooks as a little kid!

    • @x-mess
      @x-mess Před 2 lety +4

      Or use it horizontally 😊

    • @DyzziiFizz
      @DyzziiFizz Před 2 lety +1

      @@x-mess that definitely works if you're doing landscapes and such! But I was more towards if you need it vertically but yes! That works too!

  • @AngelaJsaca
    @AngelaJsaca Před měsícem

    This is awesome love the hair spray fixative. You cracked me up. Thx love 💕

  • @shirleyferst8012
    @shirleyferst8012 Před rokem

    Thank you so .much for sharing your art hacks. Loved them

  • @Tunanunaa
    @Tunanunaa Před 2 lety +146

    For all you digital artists out there: If you wanna create a patterned cloth like plaid, paisley, etc but you don't wanna deal with the headache of drawing it to align with the folds here's what you do:
    draw whatever pattern you're using flat (or use an image or brush texture). adjust it to be a bit bigger than the area that you want to cover on all sides. Then use a liquify tool or something similar to make it conform to the shape of the drawing underneath. I use Procreate and I use a mixture of the push, pinch, and expand tools for the best outcome. Then all you do is erase the excess, add your shading, and you're done!
    This also works well for t shirt graphics, writing on a banner, tattoos, anything you can think of! I've never seen this hack anywhere else and it's saved me sooo much time and frustration

    • @NHarts3
      @NHarts3 Před 2 lety +2

      Omg that's brilliant

    • @MoshCat13
      @MoshCat13 Před 2 lety

      Whaaaaaaaa I'm SHOOK

    • @AwakeLazarus
      @AwakeLazarus Před 2 lety +10

      a ceramic deviled egg platter makes an amazing painters pallet. you can find them at the dollar store, goodwill and online stores.

    • @heswatchnu
      @heswatchnu Před rokem

      @@AwakeLazarus so do plain syrofoam egg cartons.

  • @ellie-angel9254
    @ellie-angel9254 Před 2 lety +328

    A warning for anyone using hairspray: It will likely yellow over time! If it's just your sketchbook and you're fine with it yellowing, don't worry about it, but if it's a very precious piece of art, you might want to splurge on a can of the more expensive fixative if you can!!

    • @sometimessnarky1642
      @sometimessnarky1642 Před rokem +13

      Yeah....I learned this the hard way.
      :(

    • @ellie-angel9254
      @ellie-angel9254 Před rokem +16

      @@sometimessnarky1642 Sorry to hear that! Maybe some white watercolor or white ink would help to bring the paper closer to it's original hue?
      If you do buy a fixative, I wouldn't worry too much about the price - I bought a can of it in 2019 and still use it to this day, so one can will definitely last you a long time!!

    • @lynclarke6184
      @lynclarke6184 Před rokem +4

      Input sheets of kitchen roll in between the pages.

    • @lillianalevizopoulou3779
      @lillianalevizopoulou3779 Před rokem +10

      I think it pretty much goes without saying that you use hairspray on trials and experiments and not on something precious or for a client

    • @NCWildHeART
      @NCWildHeART Před rokem +2

      Get that fixative!

  • @mijotwentyseven3935
    @mijotwentyseven3935 Před rokem

    WOW! Great video, Rae! Tfs. I had to subscribe. Great stuff!

  • @Creole_Lady
    @Creole_Lady Před rokem

    Great tips! Thank you! 👩🏽‍🎨🎨🖌️

  • @sammaranth
    @sammaranth Před rokem +219

    hi Rae! regarding trick with acetone and acrlic paint: be carefull when using this trick on cheap brushes because those sometimes have brisletles glued with glue that is disolvalbe by acetone (may have happened to me few times ^^'). what you can use instead is rubbing alcochol or even ethanol. it's not as fast as acetone but will do the trick

    • @lifeisbutadreamsodreamon
      @lifeisbutadreamsodreamon Před rokem +11

      Exactly... I paint on resin so this kind of hack is standard stuff. But sometimes you (i do!) sometimes forget that everyday stuff in one hobby translates well into other hobbies / mediums

    • @SkylarMixtape
      @SkylarMixtape Před rokem +7

      As well as, if the bristles of the brush are synthetic it could dissolve the bristles.. - could

    • @NatNat4Tally
      @NatNat4Tally Před rokem +11

      Rubbing alcohol is my remedy for everything. Getting ink out, removing paint, removing certain stains like hair color to name a few.

    • @amandanelson87
      @amandanelson87 Před rokem +1

      That's what I was thinking

    • @kriffler
      @kriffler Před rokem +6

      Hand sanitizer does an incredible job! I went through and cleaned all of my brushes a while back and they are like new

  • @haybaybiloxi
    @haybaybiloxi Před 2 lety +14

    Added benefit for using Crayola markers as watercolor: the COOLEST part is that you can then paint over the marker with BLEACH! It totally removes all of the pigment from the page, and it only works with marker.

  • @yvonnewalter4142
    @yvonnewalter4142 Před rokem

    Thanks sooo much! Always appreciate learning something new! Great tips!💜

  • @Upper_echelon_exotics
    @Upper_echelon_exotics Před 28 dny +1

    I'm still new to working with clay but if anyone is newer than me and didn't know....dental tools are the best for making small details in clay. I haven't tried it with air dry clay yet but I bet it works for that too. I've been using it for polymer clay 😊

  • @mistingwolf
    @mistingwolf Před 2 lety +50

    When I used crayons as a kid, I would always employ that color-on-scrape-off technique. I guess i never really considered it an art hack!
    So here's another one of a similar vein: Color with a colored pencil, then erase for a nice fade effect. You can recolor over it with another color too, if you don't want a heavy saturation in your mix.

    • @nofocus9329
      @nofocus9329 Před rokem +3

      I did too, because I just hated the way crayon looked. I also used to put the tip of the crayon in melted candle and apply to paper (when I could get away with it---not all adults were super thrilled with my little trick)

    • @Hmmm3656
      @Hmmm3656 Před rokem +2

      I did both of those as well! Kinda messed up some of my erasers on the second one but apparently those can be washed 😂

  • @sleepy_meena
    @sleepy_meena Před 2 lety +56

    I used the crayon hack lots as a kid in art class. I was genuinely surprised to find out that a lot of people didn't know about it.

  • @tammy6955
    @tammy6955 Před rokem

    Hi, I am loving these tips! They are very helpful! Thank you for sharing! 😊