The Fastest Way to Improve Your Art in 1 Hour

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024

Комментарии • 759

  • @RvNovae
    @RvNovae 5 месяцев назад +2645

    For future reference:
    1. Pick one part to learn (e.g. eyes, head, etc.): limit the scope, don't try to do too much at once
    2. Quick analysis: get a feel for the overall structure, break it down into simple shapes, understand what you're looking at
    3. Normal copy (optional): draw a copy while being allowed to look at the reference
    4. Compare-Analyze-Fix
    5. Blind copy: draw a blind copy, remember the lessons you've learned so far, don't feel down when the first blind copy doesn't look good
    6. Compare-Analyze-Fix
    7. Repeat: each repetition usually takes 10-20 minutes, but may vary depending on the complexity of the part you draw; repeat until you think that you've learned enough from this particular artist/artwork
    Compare, Analyze, Fix:
    1. create a duplicate of the reference with 50% transparency
    2. adjust the size of your copy to roughly match the reference
    3. create two duplicates of your copy and line them up next to each other
    4. use a different color and try to find and mark improvement points
    5. fix differences on copy 1 by trace or transform and note down the changes (why did the master do it differently? -> write down your best guess)
    6. fix copy 2 without tracing (only use eraser and brush)
    7. compare your two fixed copies with the original copy and appreciate the improvement

    • @sebastianarevalo9113
      @sebastianarevalo9113 5 месяцев назад +10

      Nope, if you learn only a part, later you will struggling putting all together like eyes.

    • @francis7336
      @francis7336 5 месяцев назад +78

      ​@@sebastianarevalo9113 If you want to memorise a list of items, do you repeat the entire list over and over again or do you memorise small bits first and learn to put them together at the end? Both methods work just fine and which one you choose depends on what you want to practice and what works best for you.
      For example you can draw crap faces with correct anatomy and learn the details later, or you can learn to draw everything nicely individually and learn how to connect them correctly later on. The latter one worked for me, and maybe the fomer worked better for you. People learn differently. Saying "Your approach of studying is wrong bc it doesn't work for me" is really narrowminded imo

    • @dragonslayer-is4ow
      @dragonslayer-is4ow 5 месяцев назад +17

      @@francis7336as a guy who loves playing games I agree practice a thing so much or remember it u will be good at that

    • @blueishbeatrice
      @blueishbeatrice 5 месяцев назад +11

      thank you so much, random commenter! this will save a lot of time since i'm quite forgetful

    • @lukemichael8496
      @lukemichael8496 4 месяца назад +2

      but what if I don't have an artist as an inspiration, is using photo references a problem here?

  • @fatematuzjohra3451
    @fatematuzjohra3451 5 месяцев назад +3727

    I love how Ori just explained how to prepare before your exam and how to make your art better in one video.

    • @JeetKunDrawYT
      @JeetKunDrawYT 5 месяцев назад +152

      this is how I studied for exams and I never thought to apply it to my art💀
      tho with my exams it was
      1- blind copy (recall)
      2- reference copy (review)
      3- blind copy (recall)

    • @anapple6912
      @anapple6912 5 месяцев назад +8

      @@JeetKunDrawYT can you recall even when someone forgot all the basics?

    • @JeetKunDrawYT
      @JeetKunDrawYT 5 месяцев назад

      @@anapple6912 as someone who stopped drawing for 5 years and basically lost all of what I thought was "skill", it was fairly easy to get back the basics by easting myself back into my drawing process

    • @aguyontheinternet8436
      @aguyontheinternet8436 5 месяцев назад +41

      @@anapple6912 I believe one would do a recall first, without grounding themselves in the proper knowledge first, for two main reasons. First, to see what exactly you have for prior knowledge, properly understanding where the biggest and most noticeable holes are, and second, to seriously engage your critical thinking so you can better absorb the knowledge in the review.

    • @fatematuzjohra3451
      @fatematuzjohra3451 5 месяцев назад +3

      Thanks for the tips guys :D

  • @MonoGatar1
    @MonoGatar1 5 месяцев назад +1352

    My dumbself thought I was supposed to put a blindfold and draw blindly for the Blind technique

    • @it-s-a-me-oli
      @it-s-a-me-oli 4 месяца назад +47

      i literally thought the same

    • @sasvkeee._
      @sasvkeee._ 4 месяца назад +27

      wait you arent?

    • @it-s-a-me-oli
      @it-s-a-me-oli 4 месяца назад +15

      @@sasvkeee._ nope, just not looking at the original

    • @Carboy45
      @Carboy45 4 месяца назад +5

      FR

    • @pyechos
      @pyechos 4 месяца назад +8

      that was my thought too. that's why i clicked on the video like : wait a minute

  • @PrimaryStrawberry
    @PrimaryStrawberry 5 месяцев назад +819

    4:02 - I read somewhere that the human brain learns stuff much easier if it has a need too. I applied the same strategy to language learning, its almost like a cheat skill!

    • @alexmccaleb2152
      @alexmccaleb2152 5 месяцев назад +90

      Ohhhh yes. That it does.
      "Needing" something can be simulated too.
      Enriched Wheat Flour: Wheat flour, malted barley flour, folic acid, riboflavin, thiamin mononitrate, reduced iron, niacin.
      Made myself recite potentially meaningless ingredients from bun back in 2021... STILL remember it for no reason. Simulated a need to USE the information every day for that week and a few rehearsals later on.
      Needing Information = Using it regularly for any reason.

    • @Laura_cookie-
      @Laura_cookie- 5 месяцев назад +8

      so it will be easy for me to learn how to draw?

    • @corasundae
      @corasundae 4 месяца назад +61

      ​@@alexmccaleb2152 thought this was gonna end in a pun about kneading bread.

    • @alexmccaleb2152
      @alexmccaleb2152 4 месяца назад +23

      @@corasundae LOLZ no pun this time 🤣. Just the fact that the importance has less to do with memory retention as reciting or using the information with spaced repetition.

    • @mayaneko1094
      @mayaneko1094 4 месяца назад +10

      It's less about necessity and more about consequences. Like in school tests, it is necessary to learn everything as good as possible to get a grade as good as possible, but that obviously doesn't turn everyone into someone who gets A+ on everything. The thing that people miss, who get worse grades are often the consequences, since getting anything above D usually makes you pass the classes and less strict parents might not punish you for it (or even worse, you might even form a group with others, making fun of people who're doing too good, that might even happen in drawing groups, where there's only praise, but never critique). However, when you might get punished or rewarded by your parents or you need a specific grade to pass the year, then that might make you perform better
      Same with learning languages. The best results can be achieved, when living in said country, as not being able to speak the language has the consequence of not being able to communicate properly.
      As for studies, universities often work with monetary incentives for the test subjects (usually students, who might have money problems to begin with) to introduce an external motivation to be as productive as possible, thus it ensure, that all testers actually try to perform properly (since making mistakes will actually make you loose money in these cases). So even though these studies imply, that some methods work better than others, you should still be aware, that trying to use it for hobby learning might miss this crucial motivational part about the studies.
      And for drawing the problem is, that when starting out as a hobby, we simply don't have any consequences, as nothing happens when we're bad. Sadly i don't really have any way to give tips on this, as this is a very subjective matter. Everybody needs to find the motivation in themselves and build a habbit around it (or try to get paid for doing good i guess^^)

  • @quietspark8703
    @quietspark8703 4 месяца назад +361

    The fastest way to learn anything is to learn how NOT to do it first. Most people are so afraid of failure that they don't realize that failure itself is the greatest teacher of all.

    • @Hxnn_0
      @Hxnn_0 15 дней назад +1

      I've never understood it that way, thank you

    • @wewo9872
      @wewo9872 8 дней назад +1

      This sentence goes so hard ure so right

  • @APKE
    @APKE 5 месяцев назад +496

    everytime I start to lose motivation ori posts a video and it gives me motivation to continue drawing again

  • @ryuandmi
    @ryuandmi 5 месяцев назад +206

    New artist here! I've been using this method for the past seven days, and tried drawing something from scratch today and I feel like I got a new pair of hands. The techniques and methods I memorized while doing this made the drawing process way faster and I'm way happier about the result than before. Going to binge all of your videos right now. Thank you!

    • @clover3527
      @clover3527 17 дней назад

      Kind of a late reply but it would be interesting to see your art ^^

  • @-jxssie-3894
    @-jxssie-3894 Месяц назад +5

    for peeps out there that use pen and paper to do blind copies, theres a way! first just make a copy looking at the og, then cover it up, making a blind copy based on what you remember. yes, it will be harder, but afterwards, reveal your og copy and note down the differences using your own eye, since it should be quite noticeable (sadly) and repeat! you woukd actually be surprised how much you remember after the third copy! tips: note down even the tiniest differences (like longer hair strands, thicker hair, etc...) hope this helps!❤

  • @asvenlairarcens1061
    @asvenlairarcens1061 5 месяцев назад +228

    For the past week, I've tried to go back to the basics like drawing with circles, etc. but ended up feeling like my art skill are getting worse.
    I just got a notification that ori uploaded a video, It's nighttime but I suddenly feel motivated to draw now.
    Kinda feel exaggerated, but its not. Big thanks!

    • @Badartist888
      @Badartist888 5 месяцев назад +37

      You might be training your eye faster than your hand. This was a problem I had when I first started (not saying you a noob, it could happen any time). I rapidly learned a million problems to spot and so for every 1 thing I improved on I learned 3 errors to spot. It got frustrating and I ended up stopping watching all tutorials. Letting my hand catch up with my eyes. Then once I stopped finding errors I started to learn new things again.

    • @Malcommind
      @Malcommind 4 месяца назад +13

      the circle thing is something I can't seem to ever understand i don't see how ppl draw a circle and a few lines and automatically know how to turn it into a perfect head and body

  • @justsomejojo
    @justsomejojo 5 месяцев назад +76

    I actually kinda did this as a kid (not consciously as practice of course) by copying from my grandpa's dinosaur books (I started out copying but since I didn't always have access to the book, I ended up drawing them "blind" a lot as well) and later the Pokemon artworks from the guidebooks. I did it every day too, since I wasn't all that sporty. Didn't know it was considered a valid method though. That's cool.

  • @heartaura
    @heartaura 5 месяцев назад +159

    Honestly, I was skeptical about how well this would work... but I gave it a go and was making near perfect blind copies after my 4th repetition! And it really did only take an hour!! Gonna try doing this regularly now xD Thanks Ori-Sensei!

    • @rataV7517
      @rataV7517 22 дня назад +1

      In each practice, did you use a different reference?

    • @heartaura
      @heartaura 13 дней назад +1

      @@rataV7517 I practiced with 1 reference until I felt I could replicate it accurately. Then I'd move to a new one. It can get a little repetitive, but the results are definitely worth it in my experience!

  • @armorkny
    @armorkny 5 месяцев назад +311

    this is gotta be the best kind of sponsor video there is

    • @TopatTom
      @TopatTom 5 месяцев назад +1

      H yeah

    • @TopatTom
      @TopatTom 5 месяцев назад

      h aeyh

    • @vivishii_
      @vivishii_ 5 месяцев назад +34

      yeah i really love how he incorporated the sponsor into the video!! i dont think ive ever seen anyone do it this well haha

    • @octobsession3061
      @octobsession3061 5 месяцев назад +15

      ​@@vivishii_that's how good creator do things. they create not because the sponsor, they create just because they want to. And sponsor come right after
      Love him

    • @Desned369
      @Desned369 5 месяцев назад +8

      It actually feels like he plays/would play the game ngl

  • @_paixi
    @_paixi 4 месяца назад +27

    A concept artist taught me to include blind studies after reconstruction from reference, plus studies for imagining subjects from completely different perspectives and making modifications without reference. It felt impossible at first but it helped me improve a lot when I was starting out.
    I gave up studying though when I hit a plateau and realized a few years later I have visual aphantasia. I was basically just memorizing how to reconstruct specific works methodically, step by step, rather than improving visual memory and having a vivid picture in my mind to work with. Drawing from imagination for me is like going through a complex algorithm in my head I can barely remember anymore and the sense of touch I feel looking at a drawing. Blind people identify things using their hands and that's basically how I work with art in my imagination. For lighting I use my sense of heat.
    This video makes me think I might be able to still improve though by analyzing drawings by feeling them in my imagination first before doing a blind study because then I could be like 'oh yeah, I remember what this part feels like.' I never thought of studying like that before.

    • @cryptid3520
      @cryptid3520 2 месяца назад +2

      oh wow I have visual aphantasia too! so interesting to hear another artist explain their approach with it

    • @AlphaEnt2
      @AlphaEnt2 2 месяца назад +3

      I kinda feel the same, i close my eyes, i can't help myself but see just nothing or a blurry mess. So my drawing skills plateaud at 14 and stopped drawing.
      Now 18 years later, i kinda want to start drawing all over again, but find it very difficult to endure that so many years went by and got stuck in the past.
      (I moved into programming and did few games with other people's art, but now kinda want to make one with my own art, it will be nightmare incarnated, but already did 2 game jams and one of them ended up in third place.)

  • @kaidou-peanut4141
    @kaidou-peanut4141 5 месяцев назад +213

    Babe wake up! Ori-Sensei posted again!

  • @ShrtStfflp
    @ShrtStfflp 5 месяцев назад +41

    Love the work Anders Ericson did and hate how Malcolm Gladwell basically turned his work practically into a meme with the "10,000 hours rule". Glad to see more people going to the source though! great vid!

  • @chienshyonglee7427
    @chienshyonglee7427 5 месяцев назад +73

    Hello ori, I found your videos 4 months ago and have been practicing every day since then and I have improved so much since!

    • @twilightreaperx8382
      @twilightreaperx8382 5 месяцев назад

      perchance a video to see some of your artwork?

    • @chienshyonglee7427
      @chienshyonglee7427 5 месяцев назад

      @@twilightreaperx8382 can't link but my art acc is arcticaviary!

    • @chienshyonglee7427
      @chienshyonglee7427 5 месяцев назад

      @@twilightreaperx8382 art acc is arcticaviary!

    • @chienshyonglee7427
      @chienshyonglee7427 5 месяцев назад

      @@twilightreaperx8382 arcticaviary

    • @dokkin215
      @dokkin215 5 месяцев назад +3

      @@twilightreaperx8382you can't just say perchance

  • @toasteroven8686
    @toasteroven8686 2 месяца назад +5

    I got all pumped up to draw using this method. I realized that I can't even draw a circle the moment I gripped my pencil 😭

    • @zenkailiz
      @zenkailiz Месяц назад

      fr
      this sound crazy but without line tool i can't even do *perfect straight* line 😭

  • @sabrepilot
    @sabrepilot 5 месяцев назад +40

    I accidentally have been doing this and I thought I was crazy for not actively using references, thank you for validating my sanity

  • @jnes3736
    @jnes3736 5 месяцев назад +9

    I feel encouraged when you said having this mental sense about something feeling off when you’re noticing something not correct in your drawing because I recognizing that same feeling too, and it help improve my drawing process.

  • @windowwax
    @windowwax 5 месяцев назад +12

    This is honestly one of my favorite videos for art studies. The method just makes so much since on how it relates to how people retain and study information. Absolutely game changer for me personally!

  • @pyro8632
    @pyro8632 5 месяцев назад +184

    Who else thought you actually had to draw blindfolded, not even looking at the paper/screen? lmao

    • @alienfortytwo
      @alienfortytwo 5 месяцев назад +13

      there's actually a legit exercise that has you copy lines by looking at the reference but not at where you're drawing. it's been a while but it's something like that

    • @medicinemouse7647
      @medicinemouse7647 4 месяца назад +3

      ​@@alienfortytwoblind croquis!!

    • @vvghostly
      @vvghostly 3 месяца назад +4

      @@alienfortytwoi was just about to mention this, i hated doing it so much in my drawing classes lol

  • @EMO_GRLL
    @EMO_GRLL 4 месяца назад +2

    For anyone skeptical about this method, I just tried it and after about 30 minutes I had so many useful notes and a clear improvement to my sketches.

  • @ItzBrielle
    @ItzBrielle 5 месяцев назад +35

    You're literally the best teacher ever! Your past and this video has made me improve a lot. I'm so glad that you're here to teach us.

  • @awwkieb3864
    @awwkieb3864 4 месяца назад +4

    I have been unknowingly using a very similar method for months when doing studies from real life images, and can definetly say that this sort of "blind copy" aproach has been helpful for me!

  • @cheesypoohalo
    @cheesypoohalo 5 месяцев назад +25

    I'm not even an artist but this was extremely well made- explaining the theory as discovered by experts, explaining how to apply it, then demonstrating yourself following it with plenty of examples. Excellent video, what you've talked about could apply to learning many skills!

  • @dani_drawzz
    @dani_drawzz 4 месяца назад +20

    “I’ve come up with the blind method.” Ericsson actually mentions the blind method in his book.”

    • @supermemobee
      @supermemobee 4 месяца назад +9

      I think it's less "come up with" as in "invent" and more "come up with" as in "searched for it and found it"

    • @Utrilus
      @Utrilus 3 месяца назад +7

      More like "come up with" in the sense of compiling an easy to follow version for art for a video and naming it.

    • @_jeezgg
      @_jeezgg 2 месяца назад

      I can’t find the “blind method”. What’s the actual technique called?

    • @dani_drawzz
      @dani_drawzz 2 месяца назад

      @@_jeezgg idk I’m not the one that found it

    • @dani_drawzz
      @dani_drawzz 2 месяца назад +1

      @@supermemobee it’s misleading 🤷

  • @mata_abuelas_300
    @mata_abuelas_300 4 месяца назад +46

    "There isnt a correct answer in art, but we can find our correct answer" thats so good, i already love this

    • @marselo1316
      @marselo1316 4 месяца назад +4

      theres no correct path to becoming a master, but some paths are definitely shorter than others

  • @CoolPiggy
    @CoolPiggy 5 месяцев назад +14

    This is amazing, I always struggle with doing studies and always looking at the reference doesn't often help me, explained learning better and taught me how to get better at chess as well. Thanks Ori!

  • @rikkasummer2784
    @rikkasummer2784 5 дней назад

    man you are so lucky to have a sensei to guide you draw better
    some people just draw alone

  • @Random_GamesLP
    @Random_GamesLP 5 месяцев назад +27

    Watching Ori‘s videos legitimately makes me angry. Not because i don‘t like them, it‘s the exact opposite, but rather because it makes me mad seeing how incredibly talented some people are and how everything i do seems so pale in comparison. Love your art and love your Videos. They‘ve really helped me improved even though i hate practicing and essentially never do it. Keep this up

    • @cjthegoldenhunter
      @cjthegoldenhunter 5 месяцев назад +10

      It always feels like that. The only choice we have is to improve. There's never failure, but you don't always succeed first thing either.

    • @SukunaYaoi
      @SukunaYaoi 5 месяцев назад +5

      Is it because u do it as a hobby? Because if u are just a hobbyist, personally I draw just because I can and only sometimes I'm in the mood to improve even more. I mostly just draw character designs

  • @anemone02pau
    @anemone02pau 3 месяца назад +1

    This actually works! I used to do this method whenever I feel stuck with my art. Doing this method sparks creativity and the same excitement that I'm looking for when I'm in an art slump ☺️

  • @ShadeJPV
    @ShadeJPV 3 месяца назад +1

    I did this when i noticed that every time i copy an art and i draw anything else i get bettee and better, which exlaplains that Blind Method is actually just your muscle memory combining it with your creativity then Voila! You just created an amazing art without a reference.

  • @nursyahirahrosman3526
    @nursyahirahrosman3526 Месяц назад +1

    Just found your channel today. I can't believe I never did this blind method because I thought I lack imagination...I'm gonna practice drawing now thanks!

  • @zdeloffline
    @zdeloffline 5 месяцев назад +2

    Crazy that we have oridays here, he's one the only few artist that help me improve significantly fast and keeps me motivated to drawing

    • @omekapo
      @omekapo 5 дней назад

      omg your pfp is so cute

  • @maxis2k
    @maxis2k 5 месяцев назад +3

    I was going to say, I wouldn't recommend people just jump into the blind study first. Then you showed both the analysis and reference steps. This is what I stumbled upon myself. Try and draw it once with the reference, then all other steps after that, try and draw it without the reference. Often my second and so on attempts without the reference end up better than the first. Because I'm remembering and actively fixing/changing the mistakes from the reference step. But I still needed to do the first reference step.

  • @edogastxoxo6654
    @edogastxoxo6654 4 месяца назад +157

    you lost me at drawing 3 art within 1 hour

  • @aeipathyarts
    @aeipathyarts 3 месяца назад +1

    i do something similar. i study looking at a reference first, then try to actively recall that and then decide what i messed up in my recall and try again. this might not be as productive or time efficient but it works more comfortably for me and has helped a lot :)

  • @esmeirosanchez3392
    @esmeirosanchez3392 4 месяца назад +3

    no way! you are a genius, i never thought of using active recall in drawing even though it works great in my studies. but now that you show it, it's like how i never thought of it? thanks a lot, i'll make good use of it!

  • @meronyach.
    @meronyach. 5 месяцев назад +1

    To this day, I still find it funny when people say you can't draw from imagination. This video debunks that pretty well, I feel, considering that the best way to learn fast, is basically the same as drawing without a reference.

  • @ChristianJovenGarcia
    @ChristianJovenGarcia 5 месяцев назад +4

    I'm studying engineering in college, and the way you described "studying the masters" is quite literally how I study for my Calculus 3 Exam right now
    I'm no artist but take it from me that learning like this works!

  • @美咲MisakiJP
    @美咲MisakiJP 3 месяца назад +3

    Thank you for Japanese subtitles!
    It helps.
    アートと物事の見方を改善するのを手助けしてくれてありがとうございます!これらを心に留めておくよ。

  • @BlackMita
    @BlackMita 4 месяца назад +1

    Tried it just now. God it's brilliant. I'd just adjust to not do "parts" (eg: eyes, hands, ...) but "big general shapes" and then practice dividing things up in "remember-able" ways (eg: the big piece's HALFWAY point is where the neck ends, this finger starts A THIRD of the way from such and such) etc.

    • @Utrilus
      @Utrilus 3 месяца назад

      Lol, I bet you have aphantasia too. That sounds a lot what I've been doing this week.

  • @Rleosd.
    @Rleosd. 4 месяца назад +2

    Thank you, Ori. I've made massive progress since watching your last videos. I'm finally starting to understand the small improvements that I need to make and how to fix and learn from my mistakes. This guide will help me improve even more! Most importantly I'm actually starting to have fun finally.

  • @FirstRecords204
    @FirstRecords204 4 месяца назад

    i have to thank you for this tutorial. one thing that's really liberating is the idea that we can select "masters" based on who appeals to us personally. in retrospect, it's obvious, but it makes it easier to have the will to practice when i'm able to say "I want to learn to draw like this"

  • @artnino
    @artnino 5 месяцев назад +3

    Thank you so much! I just tried the blind method and it makes the studying way more fun too! Maybe because you can see the improvement a lot sooner.

  • @Skyeleafe
    @Skyeleafe 5 месяцев назад +11

    Ive been waiting for this!

  • @kiranreilly4916
    @kiranreilly4916 4 месяца назад +1

    Nothing inspires confidence in an art teacher like seeing their content filled with 90s clip art

  • @blodhthringa
    @blodhthringa 2 месяца назад

    In my art classes at university, we started every class with blind drawings as well as blind contours (looking at and drawing the reference's "bones" if you will without looking at our drawing until we are done). Not only does it teach you to recall the information, but it relaxes your brain and acts as a "warm up" to move into more strenuous, detailed drawing.

  • @kirbyx2573
    @kirbyx2573 5 месяцев назад +4

    Ori your art is quite literaly what got me to start drawing difitaly. Especialy your Laplus art got me wanting to draw as well. Thank you yet again for another helpfull video Ori!

    • @kirbyx2573
      @kirbyx2573 5 месяцев назад +1

      Edit here, I Messed up writing digitaly lol.

  • @cavemann_
    @cavemann_ 5 месяцев назад +2

    I have narrowed down on a similar method, so seeing someone else advertise it actually gave me a boost of confidence. Thanks bro.

  • @solo.3283
    @solo.3283 5 месяцев назад +1

    The way you use your other field of interest for studying art is pretty clever. This made me remember on how calligraphy class taken by steve jobs helped have apple earn their beautiful font

  • @claystate
    @claystate 5 месяцев назад +2

    the transparent overlay comparison reminds me a lot about the metric scott young used to improve at drawing portraits in 30 days, i recommend finding his post about it if you havent seen it before
    very cool video and love that more learning theory is being applied here :)

  • @wisprs_gaming
    @wisprs_gaming 4 месяца назад +1

    This was an incredible demonstration. Love how you put studies in but not only just putting them in, you demonstrated the why and you made it entertaining. So good. Subbed.

  • @chjikou
    @chjikou 2 месяца назад

    omg your art improves so much just by the pass of a few months, you are really incredible 😭😭

  • @john-bm4du
    @john-bm4du 5 месяцев назад +16

    Looks like a cool method, though as an aphantasic artist, ill probably have to keep the blind stage to very localized areas or principles (like gesture, colors). I dont think it would be productive for me to try to copy a whole peace from memory. Imma give it a try tho

  • @sillyypupp
    @sillyypupp 4 месяца назад +1

    I find my reference and print it out, and then draw a circle with a line down it and start making a head over the reference so I know how the artist did it, if you don’t have a printer screenshot your reference and import it into ibis paint X

  • @niiru.san.
    @niiru.san. 5 дней назад

    16:17
    Dude! I first heard that a decade ago from Neil Gaiman's speech about making good art to a batch of art graduates!
    I kept that quote in a special place in my heart and mind. Glad I heard that from you of all people. That caught me off guard lol

  • @marcusaurelius647
    @marcusaurelius647 4 месяца назад +1

    This video was one of those that made me first think its probly stupid clickbait but ended up being deep and thought provoking 👍

  • @darkercore8185
    @darkercore8185 5 месяцев назад +1

    just picked up a job working 60 hours a week, I really needed this.

  • @NoahtheGameplayer
    @NoahtheGameplayer 26 дней назад

    Anyway, my approach to drawing a character involves two main steps.
    First, I create a stickman version of the character or pose I'm trying to draw.
    Then, I use shapes to help reconstruct and refine the character's body, essentially building it around the stickman framework.

  • @Sucart12
    @Sucart12 4 месяца назад +1

    I've been doing a less extensive version of the Blind Method you described here for these last couple of months now so this is awesome to see. It really works guys! Ive imporved more than i have in years combined (this isnt even an exaggeration, when you practice right you grow right)
    I'll definitely follow your tips with a more critical analysis like note taking though, very helpful, thank you!

  • @ghosttiger38
    @ghosttiger38 5 месяцев назад +77

    Honestly I've always disliked the idea of reviewing your notes until you have memorized it. It's literally brute force. Nothing smart about that. Work smart, not hard
    I mean still work hard but yk

    • @poffzy
      @poffzy 5 месяцев назад +10

      Working hard in a smart way 💪💪

    • @Fiona-se3db
      @Fiona-se3db 4 месяца назад +6

      Yea but i hate having to try and remember notes, it takes alot of time and i always wrack my brain just to remember it 😭 (i dont have the best memory)

    • @artunblock9433
      @artunblock9433 4 месяца назад +2

      Work smart not hard
      I'm just a lazy person...😅

    • @perkstonshambles1734
      @perkstonshambles1734 18 дней назад

      ​@@Fiona-se3dbI'm not trying to offend anyone, but some of the smartest things tend to be overlooked as being "stupid". Things like anatomy require memorization, and there are ways to make active recall better. It's not brute force to review your notes, it is what works if you pair it with something else, like relating the material you're learning to something that interests you, or immersing yourself in situations where the knowledge you're learning needs to be applied. In my opinion one of the best ways to improve is to study 20% theory and 80% practice, and perfect practice comes from a combination of necessity and consistency. If you're learning how to draw good looking hands, this method works amazingly because you'll remember exactly how to draw good looking hands through muscle memory and by coming up with your own ways to recall effectively or to attain a desired outcome.

  • @anxiousdemon
    @anxiousdemon Месяц назад

    I think this method is great for not only learning but just improving your memory as a whole because like the active recall method, you're not just trying to replicate what you're looking at, but your brain is trying recall and recreate it from your own head. And in doing so it leaves more of an impact on you. It's like having a live model to draw in front of you, and then they just walk away but you still have to recreate their body shape, the pose they were doing, the lighting that was cast onto them ect. It leaves a greater impact on your brain and therefore it's easier to learn and carry over into your own art

  • @Lemural
    @Lemural 4 месяца назад +4

    THIS! In all my years of creating art, if I’ve used a reference at all, it would have been a quick glance once and then I’d draw from memory. As a result, drawing just feels natural for me. I’ve had so many people tell me that they can draw, just not without a reference, and this is perfect practice for them.
    Side note, I also test this way, end up acing most tests/exams without actually putting much effort reviewing. Who knew being lazy paid off?

    • @happy_crustacean7104
      @happy_crustacean7104 4 месяца назад +1

      It also feels naturally to me too but man does this help alot

  • @DennisCNolasco
    @DennisCNolasco 4 месяца назад +2

    I’ve been experimenting with efficient learning methods and will tweak my methods with what you’ve shown here. And thanks for the book recommendation, it’s one I have yet to look into!

  • @keithrowsell6847
    @keithrowsell6847 25 дней назад

    Excellent advice, no matter how many years I already have in the industry I'm using this approach now to get the hang of model sheets quickly. Thanks a lot!
    Just a small critique of your heads. The fundamentals here will help since it's apparent the ear could be shifted further screen right in your studies. and the back of the skull needs enlarging to make sense of the eye positions. At the moment, because you are having to guess what's under the hair, it makes the eyes look like they are too far apart.
    Best of luck on your road to success and thanks again.

  • @raikaresha5906
    @raikaresha5906 22 дня назад +1

    ngl this made me realize I've always been doing the "active recall" method because I'm lazy lol. I thought this was a lazy way to draw by making mental notes and do it by memory every time I draw. I rarely draw so it does confuse me why I'm still able to draw, AND have improvement in my art despite drawing like literal 1-2 times a month. Also, these 1-2 art are finished art. Knowing that I rarely draw, I make sure that every time I start an art I finish them to cover my lack amount of drawing (basically quality over quantity). I don't even consider my wips as my art lol and would usually just immediately scrap them.

  • @robinfox4440
    @robinfox4440 4 месяца назад +3

    This is honestly the most definitive guide on how to study I've ever seen. It validates so much of what I was doing earlier (copying and analysing) but some people, even teachers, would tell me not to do it because "tracing and copying is bad" (I only traced for the initial analysis as in your video). Where was this approach so many years ago when I needed it! In any case, I'm glad it's here now. Thank you for this

  • @FyodorWillLive11
    @FyodorWillLive11 4 месяца назад +1

    Why did this get my grades and art skills up, congrats on another sub

  • @BelltailWC
    @BelltailWC 4 месяца назад +44

    youtube is my art school lol

    • @Kbruce03
      @Kbruce03 3 месяца назад +4

      Agreed especially cause I'm broke

  • @DrexSho
    @DrexSho 5 месяцев назад +3

    I've always wanted to do art. Yet for how silly it sounds, I somehow feel like I'm too old to start, even though I'm only 22. And I used to draw so much when I was 16. Thanks for your videos.

    • @Tajem
      @Tajem 5 месяцев назад +4

      I’m 35 and 96 days in. It’s never too late

  • @risingghost2809
    @risingghost2809 2 месяца назад

    hey, just wanted to say, i tried the blind method and saw improvement almost right away, thank you so much. Still have a long way to go before I'm as good as a lot of the artists on here, but hey, there is a light at the end of the tunnel, and for once its not a train.

  • @Piemasta9000
    @Piemasta9000 4 месяца назад +1

    great video, new sub here!
    I have been drawing on and off for the last 25 years. I have VERY slowly improved over that time. this video is the first time I have seen something that I can actually use to get better that will work for me. even in 1 hour of trying this I noticed things that I would not have ever figured out myself. thank you

  • @Hopischwopi
    @Hopischwopi 5 месяцев назад +1

    Never heard of this until now but will try it! I can also recommend to go through old art and throw away some things. I recently moved and I am slowly working through a lot of old sketches, drawings I did especially while studying. It's nice to see what I did good back then and where I improved. It doesn't make you better necessarily but it gives a mental boost of confidence that there is and will be improvement that is even more apparent in the future ☺️.

  • @aroidaaric
    @aroidaaric 4 месяца назад +2

    TIL I've been doing the blind method when doing my master studies lol! It's because I'd pull up the original on my phone, which kept timing out and darkening, so I'd try to commit the section I was working on to memory and reproduce that in my sketchbook. Whenever I finished a section I'd check the original and compare. thanks phone lol

  • @blueblimp
    @blueblimp 5 месяцев назад

    I've used approaches for music, math, and programming, and it works well. I think the key reason it helps is that you have no hope of remembering what to do unless you actually understand the original properly. You have to pay very careful attention and reduce everything to principles, or you'll be partway through the copy and have no idea what to do next.

  • @selfhurtbae
    @selfhurtbae 5 месяцев назад +1

    Ok I get your point, I bought a tablet two months ago and I will try this method for a month, then i will post a video or a series of screenshots of my results. Good luck to me and thank you!

  • @exiaax
    @exiaax 5 месяцев назад +1

    this has to be why i get better at art not drawing anything for two months but actively studying methods and trying to memorize the different techniques. Its not faster than drawing actively but it still works for me in terms of remembering useful patterns like rendering and anatomy.

  • @RyokoVT
    @RyokoVT 5 месяцев назад +5

    Careful with the 10,000 hours thing! That figure has been thrown around a lot without the full context of the study.
    Specifically, this study watched subjects that were already at the top of their field; expert violinists specifically. It found that at that level of performance, 10,000 hours were necessary to go from expert to master, thanks to diminishing returns.
    I find the 10,000 hours rule to be unhelpful in any other context, because it not only creates a giant, seemingly insurmountable beast for people to climb over when they're just starting out, but it's also just not true. Don't get me wrong, spending 10,000 hours doing anything, you'll probably get really good at it. But you don't *need* 10,000 hours to get good at art.

    • @teguhsan1465
      @teguhsan1465 23 дня назад

      I spend 5 yrs drawing and still cant draw figure. It takes years and I hope this will work for me. I learn by watch RUclips

  • @jakkuwolfinsomnia8058
    @jakkuwolfinsomnia8058 5 месяцев назад +1

    This is actually the most fun way to learn too because you’re trying to learn how to draw something you love. And then you see what it should be vs what yours is and then you can see and say “ah right I need to improve how I draw boobs, ah my hand drawing sucks I need to practice hands” and since you love what you’re trying to draw it’s motivating to get closer to the real thing

  • @Londronable
    @Londronable 4 дня назад

    I love how you explained it but it really seems that, and this also applies to gaming(e-sports), you want to spend as much time as possible reviewing/changing yourself.
    So here you want to draw fast, so you don't spend as much time drawing, which has limited teaching possibilities, and instead spend time in your review mode, looking what you can do better.

  • @Kitbread_kid
    @Kitbread_kid 3 месяца назад +1

    I didn't expect this to be a technique, i was using this for years because i draw in a phone in spray paint the only thing i have in mind is my memory 😮

  • @F3rnzzz
    @F3rnzzz 4 месяца назад +3

    Thank you so much!! I feel like I learned so much from you! I want to improve on lighting and shading so I can't wait to try this process for my improvements ♡♡

  • @CapitaineNautilus
    @CapitaineNautilus 10 дней назад

    Thanks for coming up with this method and sharing it with us.

  • @BigLoafJae19
    @BigLoafJae19 4 месяца назад

    i spent so long in a hole of confusion with improving my art but thanks to you you simplified it enough for my small brain to understand

  • @kainaris
    @kainaris 4 месяца назад +1

    This is the best art tutorial I've ever seen in my life. It just makes sense.

  • @kyoodo
    @kyoodo 4 месяца назад +12

    0:05 is that a reference to ch4nge by giga lmao

  • @LinuxPiano
    @LinuxPiano 5 месяцев назад

    the idea of "blind copy" itself isn't the first time i've heard of it, but I think you bring up some really good points regarding the specifics;
    you say it's okay to make a normal copy of it before attempting the blind copy, which reaaaally made things click for me. Its was just way too hard before when I tried it lol, will be continuing to try this out over the next few days, thanks!!

  • @Iupen
    @Iupen 3 месяца назад

    This guy legit just taught a life lesson, this works with much more than just art...

  • @carlosleyva-calistenia6400
    @carlosleyva-calistenia6400 5 месяцев назад

    I'm learning to draw and I'm bashing my head because I didn't think about this before.
    I learned this principle in a quick learning course a decade ago and I promptly used it to make people stronger faster than before.
    It works not only for mind things, but it also works wonders for "mindless" things, like any kind of physical training.
    Thanks for this!

  • @ItsMe-zb6hd
    @ItsMe-zb6hd 5 месяцев назад +1

    i just knew that i can learn art using that method. cuz i already use the review method and i felt that its really hard to improve. and btw i use this method every time there's academic study, thanks ori for remembering me this method again

  • @IzakiAkanami
    @IzakiAkanami 5 месяцев назад

    Ori-sensei singlehandedly taught me more over the past year than people who gave me advice in 5 years

  • @Tyxaar
    @Tyxaar 4 месяца назад +1

    Just here to say your voice and accent are really lovely and calming and made me smile while listening to this. Like I dunno what about it, it's just generally pleasant. :D

  • @nakkipatukka123
    @nakkipatukka123 5 месяцев назад +2

    Apparently I've been using active recall all the time since I forget to look at reference for more than once. I haven't done the 3x reproducing thing though...

  • @alphabetkingssrb9700
    @alphabetkingssrb9700 4 месяца назад

    THE ONE PERCENT!!!
    THE ONE PERCENT IS REAAALLL!!!!
    (I can see the improvements, thank you! To anyone who is on the fence about this, take it slow until you feel comfortable. Regardless you really should use this, it's amazing. I'll be putting this into my routine now.)

  • @stormycatmink
    @stormycatmink 4 месяца назад +1

    I actually stumbled upon almost this same method while trying to figure out why I wasn't getting consistent results when I draw (like most of the time it was terrible, but 1 out of 10 times I was drawing stuff I couldn't believe was my art). However, I would argue that doing the normal, not-blind method first is essential.
    If you go back to the original study about best study methods, remember, all those students _took the class_ first. It wasn't the first day of the class and they were being tested. If you don't do the study eyes open, you have no memory to recall for your blind study. If you do have that memory, then the study isn't really teaching you new skills, it's just forcing you to understand those skills you already subconsciously learned by looking at artwork. Remember, the blind method was all about students recalling thing they already learned, and reinforcing those skills by iterating on the memory and correcting where they are flawed, then repeating again. I think the reason it seems like it's not necessary to do it eyes open first, is probably because if you're an established artist, you have years (decades, maybe) of skills and intuition for that 'just know when the head is off'. New artists don't have that yet.
    Taken from the perspective of someone who's only just now discovering say, anime for the first time, doing the first study method eyes open is absolutely essential. Skipping that will just lead to frustration and not learning much at all. They don't know what a proper head should look like, or how to draw an eye at all. There's a reason you take the class to learn before you take the exam.
    But in the end, this method works wonderfully. It wasn't until I figured this out and started doing a few of these studies, that suddenly people said I now had my own style of art, and was getting consistent results. So yes, copying and learning the style of artists you like is how you actually create a style of your own.

    • @Utrilus
      @Utrilus 4 месяца назад

      If someone has no skills and does blind first they'll simply discover how little they know. Then they do the reference study and tracing and improve.
      The blind part seems like a memory check, how much do you remember and know to do right. And then copying with reference and tracing show where you went wrong. They have the most to learn if they see they know nothing. With the astrix that they don't quit after the blind one and continue to the tracing and reference studies.
      Besides the video as a solution to what you describe, narrow the focus even further. Not the body, not the face, but rather the eyes. Just one part of a character.

    • @Utrilus
      @Utrilus 3 месяца назад

      As I rewatch the video his first step was doing a tracing, then a reference study, and after that he starts doing blind. 5:56 So in a way he's silently agreeing with you. And I misunderstood when I first read what you wrote.
      It's surprising how many of his suggestions and instructions I forgot right away. I followed this video only in the barest sense
      I went and drew a character blind first, tracing next, reference. Repeat a few times. It works really well. By the third try I got super close to the original drawing blind.
      The first was like a child drew it pretty much everything was wrong and I only started noticing it when I put a traced copy next to it. But in that it was really easy to figure out how to fix things by comparing.
      I'll try to better follow his instructions here on out. Perhaps that'll be even better.

  • @Chicenk
    @Chicenk 5 месяцев назад +1

    4:05 makes sense, since just looking at it til you remember it for later isn't actually learning it-

  • @streackerm
    @streackerm 21 день назад +1

    What’s funny is I naturally thought of learning art this way but didn’t have the words to put to it

  • @ReiH2
    @ReiH2 5 месяцев назад

    This guy really from not knowing anything about anatomy to actually insane artist and teacher fr
    Peak character improvement

  • @Type_Usernamehere
    @Type_Usernamehere 3 месяца назад +2

    I was originally trying to search up "How to draw hair" But accidentally forgot the "Hair" part and I found this more helpful. Thank you.
    But one question? How would I take about this method on Paper? Is it a similar process or is it something more for Digital?

    • @teguhsan1465
      @teguhsan1465 23 дня назад

      The process applies to all media