Power In The Grays

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  • Опубликовано: 18 сен 2022
  • Along side of color temperature I share another amazing tool I've discovered over the years... the uses of color relativity
    Painting called “Early Morning” by Alexandre Jacob
    Music licensed by Artlist.io
    Dear gravity - To Lay Down Everything You've Built
    VESHZA - Null
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Комментарии • 1,6 тыс.

  • @blenderguru
    @blenderguru Год назад +929

    That demonstration at 8:05 is mind blowing. Even though I know color relativity exists, it always surprises me. The fact that a gray can look purple or green by desaturating and just barely adjusting the hue is incredible☺

    • @harshaeranda3321
      @harshaeranda3321 Год назад +5

      hello guru

    • @nkfc
      @nkfc Год назад +2

      ayo guru hey i love ya

    • @phalhappy8612
      @phalhappy8612 Год назад +8

      2 of my gurus are here ❤️

    • @mehmeh8883
      @mehmeh8883 Год назад +11

      Donut guy!

    • @cannotfigureoutaname
      @cannotfigureoutaname Год назад +8

      So true, whenever I want to add a different color to a scene I always end up bringing in something that's way too saturated and far away from what I meant to add, also the way it's explained is truly eye-opening for who's new at this.

  • @elizabethpears307
    @elizabethpears307 10 месяцев назад +40

    I’ve heard many say they don’t want to start with a white canvas. You finally gave the real reason - that it messes with whatever color you’re painting with. That helps do much, thank you.

  • @EFJ56
    @EFJ56 День назад +1

    I learned this by accident as a teenager, while painting a warm yellow scene. :) I kept trying to paint the cold blue shadows I saw and it didn't look right. Inadvertently, I got that blue mixed into my orange on the messy palette. I didn't realise I'd made grey until a smudge ended up on the canvas. And my mind was blown. It looked PERFECT. I suddenly realised I didn't want blue at all for those cold shadows, I wanted a cold yellow-grey, and ~20 years later it's still one of my favourite landscape paintings I've done. Thank you for this excellent video!

  • @SupperGammer
    @SupperGammer Год назад +293

    This reminded me greatly of what my painting teacher told the class all the time. She compared us (Latvians) to the south-west of Europe (like Italy and Spain) and told us that we are lucky to learn painting here because there are so much gray tones. Instead of direct light and bright colours we have overcast days, dull streets, but she always ended with the fact that gray is the most colourful colour there is, gray is every colour. And the moral of that was that we can see more colours that artists in the west so we need to learn to use them. (she also didn't let us use black and when you mix your own black it becomes very colourful)

    • @thomasi.4981
      @thomasi.4981 Год назад +19

      That's a wonderful lesson! I wish I knew about this kind of thing sooner.

    • @schimken
      @schimken Год назад +7

      Oh wow, a fellow latvian :D! I‘ve always found especially the cold seasons in Riga kind of gloomy, but that’s actually an interesting way to describe it.

    • @Selkirkwater
      @Selkirkwater 6 месяцев назад +1

      Took a class where we used only Paynes Gray. Again valuable lessons in finding your image. (watercolour)

    • @SJQuirke
      @SJQuirke Месяц назад

      Nice comment - thanks
      Yes - Grey is Great
      And this video is an eye-openner
      A while ago I realised that the beach I paint (often) is grey - all grey

  • @lilith_inthesea
    @lilith_inthesea Год назад +351

    This is so eye-opening! Knowing the theory is one thing, but seeing it happening in real time as you’re explaining it takes this lesson to another level. Your various real-life anecdotes are also super helpful. Thanks so much!

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад +20

      You are most welcome Lilith!! I'm glad you're finding this helpful

    • @suzygirl1843
      @suzygirl1843 Год назад

      @@LightingMentor So, I hope you review Netflix's Entergalactic artistic style. It's done in the vein of Spiderman: Into The Spiderverse.

  • @_babido
    @_babido Год назад +46

    Literally just discovered this a little while ago in my own experimentation. It's as if the grayer the color is, the less you need to shift the hue. Techniques like this is how you can achieve very dreamy and realer than real vibrant colors, without even making the colors super saturated.

  • @GuyFieri-cx4sz
    @GuyFieri-cx4sz 9 дней назад +1

    That technique where you desaturate and pull the color wheel towards the color you want is CRAZYYY!! Keep it up bro that was insane!!

  • @atlanteum
    @atlanteum 2 дня назад

    As a guy who has drawn almost exclusively in pen & ink since he was a kid, and whose favorite artists [excluding Jack Kirby!] overwhelmingly work with muted, desaturated color palettes, I can't thank you enough for the lessons packed into this video. Once you get it - you've got it, like a light going off. [Of course, you still have to decide if it's a warm or a cool light!]

  • @BingusFodder
    @BingusFodder Год назад +125

    I thought I knew color pretty well. It turns out I did not, I just cranked out the most accurate atmospheric color study I’ve ever done. Thank you I didn’t even realize I wasn’t utilizing enough greys.

  • @capajensen5689
    @capajensen5689 Год назад +101

    This video is a game-changer -- this same concept can be used in other mediums too. I struggled a lot with color theory and color matching, especially in the past when I wouldn't take the time to plan out my color palette before starting. Using saturation, value, temperature, etc. to your advantage takes your pieces to entirely new levels.
    So as my mother-in-law tells me now that I'm nearing 40.... "Embrace those greys."

    • @malo-magic-blue
      @malo-magic-blue Год назад +2

      I totally agree! I paint with acrylics and they are very saturated and strong colors - most of the time that´s exactly what I want in my paintings. But I also love the subtlety of grays... Actually I like to combine both strategies in some of my paintings. Happy creating! :-D P.S.: Are you sharing your works on RUclips?

  • @user-tj1yc8ft8m
    @user-tj1yc8ft8m 7 дней назад +1

    I keep thinking "Josef Albers" while watching this. Excellent video.

  • @WillMadeDat405
    @WillMadeDat405 3 месяца назад +5

    In just three videos this guy has changed my whole perspective on art. I went from anxious to intrigued to start digital painting.😂

  • @kamranjoon
    @kamranjoon Год назад +5

    I wish they’d make watching your videos a pre-requisite for any You Tuber before allowing any posts: no cheesy humor, no repeat, no assuming your audience are pros or stupid, no pauses or blanks, no cluttered background, no poor grammar and actual usable real time instruction. Wow. I am in your debt for this. Well done sir. I sincerely hope you teach (literally) since you have the gift. Thank you.

  • @jameelawahlgren
    @jameelawahlgren 4 месяца назад +16

    This video nearly made me cry with relief. I have nearly a decade of painting experience and yet somehow really struggle with subtle hue shifts (I am a childrens book illustrator so I often work with very bright saturated palettes) and I was 100% that person using green and purple on the canvas instead of desaturated yellow. You explained this so simply and effectively, I am in your debt!

  • @justinkinter8651
    @justinkinter8651 Год назад +232

    My God, the value of the information in this video alone can not be overstated. I’m not a digital artist, but this is just such a great lesson that it really doesn’t matter in the slightest. These are the kinds of insider tips, tricks, and secrets that people pay thousands of dollars to learn in their journey to professionalism and you are here on RUclips freely teaching others, thank you sir. I’m going to hunt for a way to compensate you somehow, but at least for now I can subscribe and support your channel. Yes, I am aware I sound like a robot, no I am not a robot and I have not been paid to make these statements. Dammit, now it sounds even MORE like I’m a robot, oh well, just watch the video, you’ll see that I’m not lying lol

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад +20

      Ha! Thank you so much Justin!! I'm so glad this resonated with you. I will be starting a new thing in the new year to offer mentoring to artists if that is something you're interested in to take this even further

  • @liyans1
    @liyans1 Год назад +11

    This is exactly why ‘the dress’ was perceived so differently by people. It was because with no context people had to assume the lighting conditions and therefore the colour of the dress as well. Great video, I found the concept very well explained and illustrated!

  • @Noammats
    @Noammats Год назад +83

    Amazing. As a sound engineer, this was not only teaching me about visual art but reminded me that as a mixing engineer we need to remember that bass and treble are just ornaments and the bulk of the mix lives in the mid frequencies.

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад +28

      Oh that's very interesting indeed. I've never though about how this concept applies to sound. Fascinating!

  • @octoBadger
    @octoBadger Год назад +22

    Wow. Every video you create feels like being let in on a mind blowing secret.
    It's like magic to me.

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад +5

      Thank you for the kind words! I'm so glad you find this helpful. My goal for sure is to freely share all the things I've learned through the years that have been like magic to me. I'm glad you're enjoying it

  • @Koontah
    @Koontah Год назад +2

    I had to scrape my jaw off the floor. WHOA!!! Never learned anything like this in college!! THANK YOU!!

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад

      :) Aww thank you Tami! I'm so very glad you found this helpful

  • @butterflyhairclips
    @butterflyhairclips Год назад +29

    I knew what color relativity was but to see your examples and follow along with you makes all the more sense. Watching the "purple and green" part of the painting process actually made my jaw drop. Thank you so much for these videos!!!!

  • @JuanManuelTastzian
    @JuanManuelTastzian Год назад +52

    This is amazing. Both the concept, the theory, how it holds up in practice, and how simple you explain it for everyone to understand. Concise and to the point. This video is gold. Thanks for sharing this! ❤

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад +10

      I'm super glad you liked this. I try my best to make very practical videos. I've seen far too many that just add confusion rather than actually helping, so I strive to make them apply-able

    • @svardm
      @svardm Год назад

      I totally agree. This video is enlightening!🤩

  • @aureutraccoredge6227
    @aureutraccoredge6227 5 месяцев назад +37

    I think this is the first color relativity video I've seen that actually explains the mechanics of _how_ to do it, not just why it happens. Thank you so much, you're a great teacher!

  • @asterac
    @asterac 24 дня назад

    Second major aesthetic mind blow after I discovered tonal relativity in music !!! Thank you for you clarity.

  • @aquabluerose7734
    @aquabluerose7734 6 месяцев назад +3

    This is amazing, I've heard of this concept multiple times but this tutorial on what to DO about it is a game changer.

  • @Zukooooooooo
    @Zukooooooooo Год назад +21

    This is mind blowing! So many color theory videos just barely scratch the surface, or dont go in depth about how you can actually use color temperature in a practical way. You can see the results so clearly here! Thank you so much!

  • @00WatName00
    @00WatName00 13 дней назад +1

    @3:43 as a dental nurse who has to select color shades for the teeth, this reminded me of the same logic on why we have to select it in natural and artificial lighting. And how blue walls help “reset” our eyes, as so they said.

  • @jackal1776
    @jackal1776 9 месяцев назад +1

    Artist Thomas Kinkade used greys like this to make his lights pop all the time. Great technique.

  • @tinigart273
    @tinigart273 6 месяцев назад +3

    I've seen a lot of videos like "top 10 tips for beginner artists" and have always wondered where are the videos with tips for pro artists? We need advice too! And here it is - thank you so much! What a beautiful way to put it, and there is something intricate about the subtleties of color perception that makes this knowledge so precious.

  • @crypticrhea2410
    @crypticrhea2410 Год назад +16

    I never understood color theory or anything like this until I found your videos and now I feel like a whole new world completely opened up for me. Thank you so much for teaching this. I have been struggling with making art and I've wanted to give up but this makes me inspired to keep doing it.

  • @wtsh4796
    @wtsh4796 2 месяца назад +1

    The title should be "how to select color on your digital divice"! Finally I find the Decode of the magic, that answered my confusion since I did digital painting!!!

  • @AstroBoyBen
    @AstroBoyBen 5 месяцев назад +2

    :-) MIND BLOWING! I have seen this exact thing when studying reference paintings for my art, but did not understand what was going on. I was seeing a colour but my colour picker was telling me differently! This is a super powerful tool, thank you!

  • @jirhaelgallo6592
    @jirhaelgallo6592 Год назад +53

    Thank you so much for this!! I've looked at lots videos that teach color relativity but yours is what enlightened me the most. Thank you for doing what you do! I hope the best for you and your channel!

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад

      Aw thank you Jirhael! I'm so glad you enjoyed this

  • @mahiwagangpilipinas8976
    @mahiwagangpilipinas8976 Год назад +18

    I've known about color relativity from books but seeing it here is really mind-blowing. Thanks for sharing your knowledge, man. Would love to watch your next videos. I'll keep coming by.

  • @famminak852
    @famminak852 2 месяца назад +1

    Thank you so much for teaching us, Jeremy. Most of the time I got disgusted by my color choices exactly like 7:15 and I'm so confused and don't know why, but now I know!! Thank you so much!! Finding your channel is one of the highlights of 2024 for me!!! I learned so much from you Jeremy, and Ratatouille is my absolute favorite movie ever, my eyes teared up when you said you worked on the movie..

  • @CrescentUmbreon
    @CrescentUmbreon Год назад +1

    I learned in college painting that gray is the most varied and beautiful thing in so many paintings. Grays can be any color. any temperature, and the interplay between them can add such a luminous quality to a piece.

  • @McCoy_Buck
    @McCoy_Buck Год назад +8

    holy crap, it all makes sense now. what is incredible that you show is, even with all your knowledge and experience - you are still trying to figure out what colors your eyes see and replicate it. I always thought at one point, as an expert/ professional - you just know. thank you so much. I'm not color blind, but figured creatively I was

  • @AlexKellyArtUK
    @AlexKellyArtUK Год назад +11

    Yes! Also there is infinity variety in greys compared to primaries and secondaries or even tertiaries in terms of chroma and that means the potential for subtleties in relative colour harmony is also tremendous. It’s amazing how sensitive human perception is to the subtlest of colour relationships.

  • @JaredWyns
    @JaredWyns 4 месяца назад

    Ahh, I've always referred to/considered this as painting with light but this video explains it far better than I ever have. Thanks for the excellent demonstration & knowledge!

  • @DeanMarsh1962
    @DeanMarsh1962 Год назад +2

    I watch a lot of RUclips on art, for years, and there has been only a few that have altered my view significantly; this is one of them. Brilliant, and thank you for sharing this, really, You didn’t have to, and it is very much appreciated. Best.

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад

      Thank you Dean! I’m so glad you found this helpful

  • @BlackOreoCookie
    @BlackOreoCookie Год назад +14

    I found you last week, and I just wanted to thank you so much! I sometimes don't paint for a while and get super rusty and insecure while painting, but your color study video really helped me to shift my mindset from painting "things" to painting "shapes", making it MUCH easier 😊

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад +3

      Yay! Yes this was a huge mindshift for me and I feel I really want to share it to others too. I'm so glad it helped you!!

  • @RealityRisingArt
    @RealityRisingArt Год назад +3

    I honestly think you've just revolutionised my art forever. Thank you so much for this!

  • @fasdamabuse4715
    @fasdamabuse4715 4 месяца назад +1

    Oh. My. God. 10 minutes after watching this video, I realized that gray in digital is kinda like an opposite color in traditional art!!! AMAZING
    Usually, in traditional art we add, for example, violet to yellow to make it more neutral / less saturated. In digital, we can do the same, by just using shades of grayness....
    This is the main idea between understanding how digital and traditional arts works.

  • @argries
    @argries 6 месяцев назад

    I've tried to find how to actually do this and this is the only one I've found with an explanative demonstration. Thank you so much

  • @nemonomen3340
    @nemonomen3340 Год назад +13

    Is the dress black and blue or gold and white?

  • @TheKatydl
    @TheKatydl Год назад +3

    It's been 2 years since I've had so much motivation to draw again! Thank you for your latest how to videos! Especially the color relativity is one that explains exactly what i have been struggling with without even knowing it. I'll be starting my color studies asap i already picked a few art pieces of your "amazing light" pin board and took a few pictures of props around te house!

  • @ryoujika
    @ryoujika 15 дней назад

    I AM TRULY MINDBLOWN 🤯🤯 Always thought grays are "boring" but wow this changed my mind

  • @LS-kg6my
    @LS-kg6my Год назад +3

    Thanks! This is awesome. I learned this in landscape watercolors. There is a whole world of grays that are created through complementary color mixing. That’s when I finally understood warm and cool grays, as well as the spectrum of gray “color.” Very helpful to have this demonstrated digitally!

  • @bodawei425
    @bodawei425 Год назад +9

    Very educative. I would find interesting to see the same process of color relativity applied to the making of an original painting (not trying to reproduce the same hues and values from an already existing painting). The rationale behind the choice of colors is be key for the further improvement of my artwork. Thanks again for this high quality video.

  • @joo7454
    @joo7454 Месяц назад

    This is why my idea of ideal color palette will be like a color wheel but gradually become grey as going toward the center and there's separate handle that control the center value all the way to the black from white.

  • @ajas9490
    @ajas9490 10 месяцев назад

    You are the Bob Ross of digital painters. I am learning to see the world differently through your lessons. THANK YOU.

  • @IndieUSA
    @IndieUSA Год назад +8

    This is brilliant! Thank you for sharing this. Love the story of the red wall in your work on The Incredibles (one of the best animated films of all time), Ratatouille as well. Mind is officially blown with this concept of color!!

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад +2

      Yay! Glad you feel that way. I'm honored :)

  • @harveyspector6131
    @harveyspector6131 Год назад +4

    You have a real gift for explaining a very complex subject. I've now shared this video all my artist friends. I am surprised, though, that so many artists are unaware of Joseph Albers work at the Bauhaus, Black Mountain and Yale that delves very deeply into this same territory. I highly recommend his book, Interaction of Color, published by Yale University Press.

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад

      Thank you Harvey! I am so glad it was helpful and I appreciate you sharing my video too! Yes, that is a great book indeed!

  • @richswanderings1664
    @richswanderings1664 5 месяцев назад +2

    Yes...please do not stop! I'm not a digital artist, but rather a painter. All this still applies! You've given me a new way to think about how to mix my colors. I definitely would have started with a purple and then try to desaturate it. Never would have thought to start with my yellow and desaturate that will moving it "toward" the purple!

  • @mistyamarch
    @mistyamarch 3 месяца назад

    this is the actual first time a “color theory” related video has made sense to me, in a way where my brain actually digested it in a way of being applicable in the future
    wow! ive subconsciously been using more grey tone colors but the was you described this was amazing
    especially the part about blocking the shapes (+colors) out relating to the colorfinding
    as in, it helps you see the colors in relativety, together, and thus you can find the roght tones faster!
    i never understood exactly what blocking in the shapes can be a tool/path for
    and often wound up blocking them in but disregarding the tones or colors (because i thought it was just about shape) and then wound up trying to color certain areas, but later realizing the tones were off when i got to the other side of the image
    this has FINALLY untied that knot for me and made it make sense haha
    thank you!

  • @janemorrow6672
    @janemorrow6672 Год назад +4

    Another incredible video. This is really helping with my oil painting.

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад +1

      Yay! I'm so glad to hear it! Yes, often digital art methods do not translate to physical mediums, but I try to keep it apply-able to many mediums. I'm glad it's helping your oil painting too

  • @waymire01
    @waymire01 3 месяца назад +134

    I paint using actual media not digital, but YT tossed this in my recommended videos. What you are describing is something artists have been doing for hundreds of years.. underpainting, using neutral grey palettes for mixing, use of "mother" colors (selecting one color as a base for mixing everything else on the canvas), and complementary blending (using the complement of a hue to desaturate). Once upon a time art students were expected to master not only color mixing but the representation of light, shadow and form with black and white first, then complementary duos, then various primary trios. Only then were they allowed a larger palette of colors. I feel like too many artists these days are missing the most basic foundational skills and understanding of the science of art in their rush to shortcut the process.

    • @z0z111
      @z0z111 2 месяца назад +3

      This right here. Learn to paint with actual paint. It's everything, the most rewarding.

    • @davo-ju6er
      @davo-ju6er 2 месяца назад

      I think you mean actual physical medium or you could have just said 'real paint' buy hey no biggie .
      What i'm saying is I feel like these days too many people want to comment just for the sake of trying to puff their chest out a little , show how 'smart' they are or are just always salty about something. Once upon a time people hand wrote letters & sent them on ships as it was the only way to get a message to someone overseas . Now look at you with your techno electro typing machine with moving pictures i hope you mastered the fundamentals of computer programming , electrical engineering etc before slamming your dirty monkey paws down on the keyboard .
      If you haven't & just wanted to rush & shortcut the process ..... i get it , who's got time when the horse needs feeding & you gotta make candles so you can read this letter .

    • @lunchlunchYT
      @lunchlunchYT 2 месяца назад +48

      Thank God the master came down from the mountains to chastise us plebeians looking to learn the foundations for not having learned the foundations.

    • @room2growrose623
      @room2growrose623 Месяц назад +3

      I remember my older sister, who is a fine artist, her first year in university, doing gradation panels for every color endless squares on giant boards of every gradation and shade. I said, “this is art school?” She said, “yes, bf we can actually paint we have to learn how to develop tones and colors. 🤯

    • @JaredMau
      @JaredMau Месяц назад

      We should be thankful for the time of day this messias of tradition and class has taken out of his day to lecture us on the importance of not having fun in art. How dare us lunatics try and paint before having written a scientific thesis on at least 3 of the fundamentals required to even lift a brush. Or... dare I say it... using digital means to practically canibalise the masters that came before us who now surely must be turning in their graves, now that art is accessible to the common plebs and no longer requires you to be of higher blood to even afford the paint like in the good old days.
      ​@@lunchlunchYT

  • @ghoul_Boo
    @ghoul_Boo 5 месяцев назад +1

    I CANNOT Thank You ENOUGH for making this video. You DO NOT KNOW how long I've been searching how to do this, I'll never forget the help you've given me honestly I could cry right now.
    Also huge thanks to RUclips for giving this in my recommendation page cause I wouldn't have ever found it on my own

  • @qlitchd
    @qlitchd 8 месяцев назад +2

    I have kind of started with color relativity without knowing. I asked a person how they know how to choose the color that they would like to look cool on the warm spit and they said that they desaturated the base color. So I tried that too for the shading of an illustration. And the difference it creates and the way it all looks so much more harmonizing and belonging together as a whole picture is CRAZY. Thank you SO much for that video!

  • @apokalipsff2687
    @apokalipsff2687 Год назад +2

    Yesterday I watched one of Marco Bucci’s lessons on ambient occlusion (ambient light, bounced light, occlusion shadow) and this video complemented it like a charm
    It really does make sense that the colours aren’t exactly what we think they are, because of the way light and colour work
    For example the trees, they are dessaturated and kind of a mix between orange and green, because the green trees are getting hit by the ambient light (which is orange) in this case, which makes them look warmer than the regular green we assign to plants but cooler than the usual sunset orange
    Our eyes aren’t tricking us, but our brains are, because most of our senses identify things based on how they look/feel in relation to another of the same nature (scale, texture, value, hue, pitch, object temperature, pressure, smell, etc)

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад +3

      Indeed! Yes, Marco's videos are amazing! He is actually a friend of mine and we worked together on some projects almost 15 years ago. Small world! Keep creating my friend!

  • @80_cake
    @80_cake 26 дней назад

    This video CHANGED MY LIFE! I struggled to understand certain color theories & this has me making more realistic art. Thank you thank you soooo much!!!! ❤❤❤

  • @Val_Play
    @Val_Play 8 месяцев назад +2

    IT IS AMAZING! YOU ARE AMAZING!
    For ~5 years I am finally get this idea of color relativity! I always struggle with that and never understand how exactly it's working! Thank you so much for opening my eyes! ♥

  • @ideasshowering
    @ideasshowering Год назад +2

    Do a detailed series of this mate - Here on RUclips - it's a wonderful way for us aspiring filmmakers to learn something new! Go King!

  • @avantinkug
    @avantinkug Год назад

    Wow wow wow!! This tip has totally changed my painting career by far. God blesse you🙌🏾

  • @Sharpened_Spoon
    @Sharpened_Spoon 4 месяца назад

    Yeah, my mind blew. So many times I’ve tried to go right to the colour I think I see. Thanks for this!

  • @SirFency
    @SirFency 5 месяцев назад

    this is probably one of the best things about color I have ever learned.

  • @IndependentFckr
    @IndependentFckr 6 месяцев назад

    Composition of original painting is a pleasant golden ratio.

  • @ollieoriollie3114
    @ollieoriollie3114 10 месяцев назад

    I want to put this video on the altar and pray to it every day

  • @magnolia2
    @magnolia2 Год назад +1

    Jeremy, you beautiful genius! Thank you for sharing your wisdom.🤩 Thank you Kelsey for interviewing and introducing us to him.❤🎉

  • @KillianProse
    @KillianProse Год назад

    Clicked on this video because the image in the thumbnail used to be my wallpaper, ended up stumbling across a brilliant channel, and you helped me understand why I liked that painting so much

  • @c0sm1cb0y
    @c0sm1cb0y 6 месяцев назад +2

    gray = value > color
    one advice for the beginners, try to train your eyes to see in values and not in colors and all of these things will start to make more sense to you, in the meantime you can open a grayscale copy of your document to see your values as you paint, (photoshop users go to the WINDOWS tab > Arrange > New window for "your piece name" then go to the VIEW tab > Proof setup > custom > dot gain 20%(this is the best option to work in gray scale in PS) also the command for switching between gray and colors(rgb) is ctrl + Y (you can edit it if you want to assign another shorcut to check your values) REMEMBER! ALWAYS CHECK YOUR VALUES, if your values are right, you can put any color you want and your painting still gonna looks good!
    sry for my english!
    VALUES > COLORS! 🧐

  • @annanzul2862
    @annanzul2862 Месяц назад

    We learned about color change in art school, but I never understood the extent to which I could use it on my canvas. Thanks!

  • @jeng5591
    @jeng5591 6 месяцев назад +1

    This demonstrates a concept I read about in James Gurney's Color and Light but I never grasped how it worked. Thankyou so much for this. It's going to make a huge difference in my painting.

  • @bleachedout805
    @bleachedout805 Год назад

    I subbed within the first minute. The practical advise and the quick explanations with real life parallels are so masterful. Not only are you a great artist but a great teacher!

  • @bodawei425
    @bodawei425 10 месяцев назад

    I never get tired of watching this video again and again. There always something more to learn. Many thanks.

  • @johncollado1151
    @johncollado1151 8 месяцев назад

    You have a way of teaching this so one can actually understand it. I'm in a color situation right now that I'm going to try and apply this too to see if can solve an issue I am having. Thanks again.

  • @oyaoya4979
    @oyaoya4979 5 месяцев назад

    Wow I'm not even being dramatic when I say this video is life changing I dont think I'll ever be able to see color the same way again! can't wait to try out this approach

  • @220dramaqueen
    @220dramaqueen 4 месяца назад

    Man I love this video, I just keep coming back to it and every time I do I pick up another invaluable, mind blowing tidbit of information. Thank you so much for sharing so much value with us!

  • @kenselayre
    @kenselayre 5 месяцев назад +1

    This video was such an eye opener for me. As a beginning watercolor artist, I struggle with color mixing and found your explanation of color relativity profoundly helpful! I look forward to exploring your other videos.

  • @luyistork5854
    @luyistork5854 Год назад

    This is one of the most helpful videos I've seen about color usage in art! You have a real gift in teaching and making your demonstrations really impactful. Thank you

  • @Yami-gv6uk
    @Yami-gv6uk Год назад

    when i cant eye the colors i just give up eyedrop colors from the reference, watching this vid is so helpful thank you

  • @joybarber6974
    @joybarber6974 5 месяцев назад

    Thank you so much! I think about all the time I spent mixing colors to make shades and tints and I never learned this! Very exciting!

  • @rem-kira2225
    @rem-kira2225 11 месяцев назад +1

    1 minute in and I'm already mind blown! Thank you so much for making these videos, you're amazing. Love the way you explain these incredibly useful concepts

  • @jordanthompson1302
    @jordanthompson1302 Год назад +1

    Best explanation of color relativity I’ve seen so far, and the demos are great! Please keep posting videos like this! Thank you!

  • @ArtHampton
    @ArtHampton Год назад

    Unbelievably informative. I've been wrestling with color for over a decade and this video is SO helpful! Thank you sir.

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад

      Yay! I'm so very glad you found this helpful!

  • @davpea1
    @davpea1 6 месяцев назад

    Man, what I’ve learned during this video is priceless. I’ve followed you since your gnomon dvd on color all those years ago. I think you’re the best man. Thank you.

  • @stefihallstrom4066
    @stefihallstrom4066 9 месяцев назад

    I almost cried because of how much this knowledge changed my perspective on both creating and viewing art. Alexander Jacob's piece looked like any old (well done) painting at the start, but by the end it felt like a master piece of the study of color relativity.

  • @robertocecere2893
    @robertocecere2893 6 месяцев назад

    Great video demonstrating colour relativity! Just one due note as a neuroscientist: all you say happens in the eyes, actually happens in the brain. The eyes only contain photoreceptors, whereas the neurons in our brain process that visual information and ‘build’ the images we see. If a person suffers from a lesion of the posterior areas of the brain or the fibers that carry information from the eyes, that person will be blind in the presence of perfectly functioning eyes/retinas. We see with our brain, the eyes are just like cameras :)

  • @esceii
    @esceii Год назад +1

    this was so incredible and fascinating!!! Don’t t worry too much about the length of your videos, they are so educational and helpful I appreciate every second!!

  • @tenzinsamphel5950
    @tenzinsamphel5950 Год назад +1

    One of the most important tutorials I've seen this year. In 17 and a half minutes you've impacted my images tremendously. Thank you sir.

  • @shrug_shrugsly
    @shrug_shrugsly 6 месяцев назад

    I'm always a big fan of the color theory videos. This one, more specifically the ones done on your channel by you, is/are particularly well-done, informative, and in-depth. Thank. you so much!

  • @sondertoons9743
    @sondertoons9743 5 месяцев назад +1

    Holy shit this video was mind blowing. I could watch you color pick for hours, that was incredible! Definitely gonna incorporate this into my color studies. Thank you so much ❤❤

  • @biggie-cheese5647
    @biggie-cheese5647 Месяц назад +1

    This is the only color theory video that made sense to me, thx

  • @GarrisonFall
    @GarrisonFall 5 месяцев назад

    Wow!
    I've been playing with colour for years. I've learned about the theory of colour relativity but your video has given me more insight into the 'hows and whys' than I've ever gained from books. Thanks!
    This is your first vid I've watched. I'll be looking at your others starting, right... now!

  • @cowboy124aa3
    @cowboy124aa3 2 месяца назад

    I've been painting for years and I've always noticed that something was missing or with my colors and why i could never really get that one right color match. This has opened my eyes to new possibilites. Thanks for the great videio, I look forward to watching more of them!

  • @devbites77
    @devbites77 Год назад

    My eyes are blown away! Feels like I've learned a gem of knowledge I'll use going forward. Thanks so much.

    • @LightingMentor
      @LightingMentor  Год назад

      Yay! I'm so glad you found this helpful Rick!

  • @MattTaylorMotion
    @MattTaylorMotion 6 месяцев назад

    You painted a desaturated orange on the canvas and it was green! It was green! The way I see the world has been irrevocably changed. Thank you so much.

  • @stephaniejoy1500
    @stephaniejoy1500 8 месяцев назад

    These videos are so helpful! You have a gift for explaining it really well and the visuals help a bunch!

  • @viaviaviavia
    @viaviaviavia Год назад +2

    "even this green is orange" this is wild

  • @XpRnz
    @XpRnz 6 месяцев назад

    I've learned about this in art school, it's actually called 'Simultaneous contrast'. It's the phenomenon by which the same color can show different types of hues depending only on the colors surrounding it. Cheers for the extensive indepth explanation!

  • @dukenecromancer245
    @dukenecromancer245 Год назад +1

    Your videos are just amazing! I subscribed and i totally believe you deserve waaay more subs! Can't wait to see this channel grow, the explanations are some of the clearest I've heard and the videos are super easy to follow especially since they're real time and not about perfection. It makes it much easier to understand and relate to when done in this rough way 🌟