The sketch blur one is my favorite and I've been using it for months. I was always frustrated with line art and found it boring since I was just "tracing" my sketch, but now it feels more natural and freeing, and I feel like I play with the line width more.
honestly im so glad i saw this, for most of my digital art ive done the same sort of thing by making my sketch really REALLY light -- like 5% opacity. this is a wayyy better solution and im not sure why i didnt think of it LOL
I just want to say that your content has inspired me to start writing out the plot to a webtoon! You've helped me improve in my art and character design and I'm so thankful for it!
Lavender towne has been my main source of art inspiration since 2018 and omg I don’t think i would have improved as much as i have, or even stuck with art as a career choice
No matter how far you are in art, I think it can always be fun and sometimes even informative(?) trying art tips from fellow artists, even if you have different styles or you're a little skeptical. You might just learn something new 😄
Agreed. Trying out new tips even if you think it might not apply to your art style is very interesting and may produce something unique that you might like and want to incorporate into your style
true! also if you don’t find the art tip useful now, it could be useful for later or other people. & variety is good, it prevents us from getting stuck
The blur one blew my mind! I wanna see more of this, because when I see an art tip on the internet and it doesn't work, I feel lost why everyone can use it so well. It's nice seeing not a super one-sided perspective on these things. The mask one especially drove me nuts lol
Knowing the blur sketch hack would have been so helpful to me ages ago! Still would be now but i do less digital now and my sketching is different. But i used to have really detailed sketches and i would have to line it so many times cause it just never looked as good as the first sketch, the biggest reason i ever got burn out when drawing
10:13 i have a super simplistic style and draw superhero characters with masks, and i can confirm that it is so much harder to place the facial features when you feel 'locked into' a mask. that's been my experience at least, i'm also curious to see if newbies find the mask tip useful!
To answer your question (since I can consider myself a newbie), I tried the mask hack and it really did not help, if anything, it made it worse imo since the face started to feel lopsided with the mask. That's just my experience though, maybe it was helpful for someone else but it certainly wasn't for me lol.
One thing I’ve started doing with my lineart is having a duplicate layer, making the color a brownish red color, setting it multiply, and then blurring it a little bit {like 2%}. I just like it ^^
definitely a nice drawing but I'm fairly certain these are pre-recorded, sped-up and then dubbed over :) If this is her normal speed then her wrists would breaking
The tip about painting faces with colour undertones helped me so much from the time I found it ! I lean rather on semi-realistic, and it blends well, and it applies with non-human skin tones too (I like to draw aliens), it just helps so much !
was literally just checking out ur channel for another video and saw this one after 6 seconds of upload lmao anyways- ur art is super good and you've become an inspiration to many people and me!
I think the mask hack is more helpful when you're doing crazier head angles where you really squash the perspective. When the head is tiled upwards or downwards I think it's normal for people to lose track of where the eyes fit on the skull. Using a simple shape like the mask to plot out the face can help you think about how your eyes are actually within a pit on your face instead of popping straight out. Dips on the face will change a lot as the perspective changes, so for this hack I think you turning the head more would have put it to better use :) Thanks for another cool video Haley! Always gets me thinking about drawing!
i adore the mask hack! ive been drawing for eightish years now, and i use it all the time. it definitely works better if your drawing style isnt as stylized--i feel like with Lilybell her eyes are so big you barely had room on the face for it lmao
I definitely recommend, if you can, making your sketch mostly the construction. Indicate details so you don’t forget them but don’t put everything into your sketch. I personally use a bigger, softer brush for the sketch, and then a small inking tool for the actual lineart
Would you ever consider doing a comprehensive beginners guide to digital art? I'd love to go digital from traditional, but I am so lost & overwhelmed! Love your videos!~♥︎
I always appreciate these types of videos from you. Even if all the tips won't work for me, I feel like once you end up reviewing tips, at least one in each video works so well that I make a big breakthrough. Thank you so much and I look forward to Unfamilare every week!
I know you're probably not gonna see this comment, but I just wanted to say that you've taught me so much about drawing. I remember when I first saw your channel, you were the only creator I really knew of that did drawing-type videos whose art style I enjoyed. You've always been a big source of my inspiration and you're part of the reason I've never stopped drawing. Just wanted to say thanks for that
That is interesting about the color mapping. I did a portrait from a photo recently and noticed the skin had much cooler tones around the chin and warmer tones around the nose and eyes. Including that variation in the face added a lot more dimension and interest to the skin. That tip is really useful!
I think the gaussian blur hack might work for us artists who feel like the lineart looks…so plain after you delete the sketch layer, cause once you actually finish your lineart you’ve been sitting/laying there for quite a few minutes, and it looks weird without the sketch underneath because you’ve gotten so used to seeing it behind your lines.
whenever I'm down, struggling with depression and don't feel like drawing, your videos always revitalize my artistic joy ;-; your art makes me feel things, I often find it difficult to feel
6:00 i think it does still count as an art hack since it's not a "drawing skill" hack, it's a composition hack. still counts as an art hack cuz there's more to art than technical drawing skill
Out of all of these tips, I love the blurred sketch one the most! My lineart used to look rather stiff and uninteresting but using that trick def helped a lot.
I think that the point of the "pose" hack isn't about the pose per se, but there is this "technique" that consists of using shapes to help with perspective drawing. That particular explanation wasn't so good but what you're supposed to do is draw the character in a regular angle and fit them inside a shape, then deform the shape to the angle you want and use the first drawing as reference. Adding guidelines inside that shape is super super useful, like in the character joints. It's hard to explain it with words but I hope it can help someone.
I don't normally do lineart (I have my sketch but then straight to colouring and shading to define things without) but I kinda want to do a lined drawing to try out the first trick 👀
Omg! Not only am I exicted to see lilybell again I'm also totally gonna use some of these! Thanks! For the bluring technique I kinda don't think it would help me since my lineart works really weirdly. The sketch acts as a guideline and the lineart process is where I give life to my artwork instead of the sketch, extra floofs to fur or hair are added, (weird looking) hands are finalized, the eyes are given depth.. the blur wouldn't do anything but ill try it
for the blur thing if u miss ur more defined sketches u could duplicate the sketch and lower its opacity and blur the original. that way, u have the original sketch (somewhat) but its still a bit more blurry
Definitely interested in trying the sketch blur tip because god I never want to actually deal with refining any line art. To be fair, you don't HAVE to, I could just keep fiddling with the sketch until I like it and that's just my art style. but there are times when it would be helpful to do more work on line art lol I'm obsessed with that first drawing I love it so much
I WAS SHOCKED TO SEE SO MANY OF MY REFERENCES ON PINTEREST WERE IN THIS VIDEO?? great minds think alike (or maybe it’s just the pinterest recommendations feed)
honestly i think the yellow red and blue face tones tip only goes well for more realistic art styles. especially since their placement is directly dependent on the different structures of the face (the cooler tones falling below the cheekbones and near the chin area dude to things like five o'clock shadow and skin thickness, the warmer tones where the cheeks are, etc.) plus think the colors are vibrant like that for the sake of explanation, it's more showing what the color of the undertones should be
I sometimes use the painter's skintone tip overtop of the normal skintone as an overlay/mask. Theres also a TON of art tips floating around Pinterest too.
I remember learning that mask eye placement hack, I'd completely forgotten it, but I do think I remember it helping get me to the point of freehanding that better
An art tip I learned that I use is that I always hated how stiff and robotic my art was feeling so what I did was did a rough sketch then jumped right into the lineart instead of doing a refining sketch and trying to do perfect line art. Another thing is I would just draw naturally without using any line stabilization/correction and just do line art like I would traditionally it helped me a ton!
I've never done the gaussian blur tip before, but usually when I'm doing traditional art I'll do a normal sketch, take a darker pencil and rough trace the important lines, erase all of that, and then line the outlines left by the darker pencil
This video was very helpful, I can't tell you how many hacks I've been putting off because my art can be very stylized -- But now that I've seen someone else apply it to their equally as stylized art, it's inspired me to try some lf these techniques and add it to my art in the future ∙ Thank you LavenderTowne! If you ever decide on a part 2 with more of these twitter hacks it'd be greatly appreciated!
the undertone in skin stuff is completely subjective. In all things art there's a way to apply something but its finish is completely dependent on the context or parameters of your creative atmosphere. Those colors aren't even set in stone. It completely depends on your lighting and your skin tone as the local light changes the clarity of your actual skin tone and the undertones. I'm black but im more light skin. This technique also simplifies it a bit much in a efficiency way rather than artistic way. That blue will be in your forehead. I am black most darker complexions actually have trace amounts of darker blue going into purples. But it's so feint that you wouldn't make it super visible but it makes the difference. I suggest anyone do more studies on your own skin because hell you can put your eyelids directly onto your arm and see other colors. Skin is a mixture of pigments. For beginners i defintely suggest use of the airbrush so you can get the idea faster than having to also worry about blending in the pigments more seamlessly. That's the real tricky part. The most feint tone is usually the tone you see kind of overlaying your whole skin but its not clear. Mine is red like an indian red(actual color name btw). Would i tell my portrait artist my skin is red. No. But thats the over lay. I've seen pale people with a more green like feint olive green overlay to their skin. Overall trust your eyes and observations. What you see is what you see. a really great exercise is in the morning and night take your arm and move it around the space your in. The values of your colors will change but youll notice that the colors you see still stay the same. But youll also see the slight blue/greens from your veins. The yellows/whites from fats. (lol referencing my own arm and what not but you get what I mean)
I hate lineart when I 1st started digital art, same reason as others bc it doesn't look right and my sketch is better, but now I don't really do super clean sketch anymore. I sketch a guide then I finish it with lineart, now I hate sketching lmao bc I don't repeat steps anymore. So I think the blurring the sketch is the same thing, making the sketch just a guide and not tracing anything that much
In my opinion, the mask is only really valuable for shading like it shows in the picture. I don’t see how putting a mask around the eyes is going to effect placement in a meaningful way, but it *is* really good for showing the dimensions of the eye/brow area
I do the first tip kinda but by accident. I use very soft brushes to do initial sketches, then move on to a slightly more clear one, then a crisp line art brush.
I like the first tip. I do something similar, where I draw with a large brush size and the brush has a low opacity. I also try to make my sketches messy for that reason.
As someone with (less?? Different?) stylized art, the mask thing does kinda help me place the eyes so that their not all wonky with perspectives. Btw I love your video so much they inspire me and help me grow my art
I feel like the first tip is more useful if you have a cartoony, simple art style like the drawing in the tip was. If your art style is more detailed, when you blur the sketch, all that intricate stuff might blur together or disappear. If you're drawing a character you're familiar with or if you have an image reference next to you, I suppose that doesn't matter. But in a cartoony art style, where the shapes are very clear even when blurred, I feel like that tip would work better.
my favorite hack was when i watched a video being like "OML GUYS" and showed that the middle line for the circle usually drawn on the head should be for the brows and not the eyes i've been using it ever since
The mask hack is actually one that took my art to next level, I learned it from on of Ethan Becker's videos and it was a game changer so I'm surprised you & most people in the comments seem to find it not useful. I definitely don't feel locked in the mask while using it but it rather made it so much easier to go into different face angles with ease and with much more accuracy instead of how much second-guessing I used to do before I started using it 😅
holy cow 8:57 is actually so useful for me, typically one eye ends up touching the edge of the face even though the char is like facing 3/4 or somn like that (basically i just tried it (yk 3/4) it really heled place the eye, it kept them in line and not unusually apart like i stated earlier, and since i placed the nose first then drew an outline of a mask really really helped imo) yeah so basically i used the mask more of a guide than actual mask so it didn't really feel like i was "locked into the mask" conclusion: i only tried it once so far but i think it reallly helped, at least when drawing face at 3/4
Decided to try blurring sketch one and making lineart became both much easier and faster :00 (And as a bonus, the brush i use makes color spread out (if that makes sence) a bit which is satisfying to look at) Thanks a lot! :D
I never had the issue of disliking my sketch versus the lineart and I realized it's because I pretty much always use mechanical pencils instead of the thicker and more.. unstable? thats not the right word but idk what is, art pencils and pencils that need sharpened. So my recommendation for if you keep really disliking your lineart is a) draw in pen for a while or b) use a mechanical pencil and see how that goes! Obviously you don't have to do this, but if you need smth to shake some stuff up for you thats what I got lol
Haley is so brave wading through the depths of twitter for us 💀
I agree
Oh my goodness definitely XD tyy haley!
no one ever lived to tell us what happens down there
Fr. I'm happy she got out of there alive.
Ikr, that place is a hell scape
The sketch blur one is my favorite and I've been using it for months. I was always frustrated with line art and found it boring since I was just "tracing" my sketch, but now it feels more natural and freeing, and I feel like I play with the line width more.
honestly im so glad i saw this, for most of my digital art ive done the same sort of thing by making my sketch really REALLY light -- like 5% opacity. this is a wayyy better solution and im not sure why i didnt think of it LOL
Huh I might try that my scheches get pretty refined so might be interesting
I have been using my airbrush as my sketching tool and it works to the same effect and really makes drawing easier and more enjoyable 🍓🍓
I'll have to try that out! I use Paint tool Sai so I'd have to use a blur tool in a different software, but I shall try that at some point
@@Flareontoast Sai V2 actually has a blur tool (and it has more features in general, so it's worth downloading imo)
2:48 you could definitely try this on one of your next “cartoon artist tries realism” videos!
She did it before
@@SparklyTootsEN yes, the comment or says this
I just want to say that your content has inspired me to start writing out the plot to a webtoon! You've helped me improve in my art and character design and I'm so thankful for it!
Hope it goes well!! :D
By "web tool" did you mean "Webtoon"?
@@bluelfsuma yup! Autocorrect will be the death of me one day
@@SwanSongsDiary Damn autocorrect! *shakes fist at sky*
Make sure to say the name when you make it ☺️
Lavender towne has been my main source of art inspiration since 2018 and omg I don’t think i would have improved as much as i have, or even stuck with art as a career choice
Wow. Just wow. Congradulations!
same, she inspired me to experiment with stylisation and it has gotten me SO far!
@@r3nnn._ exactly! Developing your own style is inevitable ESPECIALLY if you draw inspiration from other artists
The facial color blocking hack would be so cool to try on your yearly realism challenge!
I CANNOT EXPRESS MY ABSOLUTE ADORATION OF HALEY'S STYLE AND COMPOSITION- HOW DOES SHE DO IT?!
No matter how far you are in art, I think it can always be fun and sometimes even informative(?) trying art tips from fellow artists, even if you have different styles or you're a little skeptical. You might just learn something new 😄
Trying weird art hacks is actually really good for you and many have become a part of my style so going out of your shell really does work ✨
Agreed. Trying out new tips even if you think it might not apply to your art style is very interesting and may produce something unique that you might like and want to incorporate into your style
true! also if you don’t find the art tip useful now, it could be useful for later or other people. & variety is good, it prevents us from getting stuck
The blur one blew my mind!
I wanna see more of this, because when I see an art tip on the internet and it doesn't work, I feel lost why everyone can use it so well. It's nice seeing not a super one-sided perspective on these things. The mask one especially drove me nuts lol
Knowing the blur sketch hack would have been so helpful to me ages ago! Still would be now but i do less digital now and my sketching is different. But i used to have really detailed sketches and i would have to line it so many times cause it just never looked as good as the first sketch, the biggest reason i ever got burn out when drawing
10:13 i have a super simplistic style and draw superhero characters with masks, and i can confirm that it is so much harder to place the facial features when you feel 'locked into' a mask. that's been my experience at least, i'm also curious to see if newbies find the mask tip useful!
To answer your question (since I can consider myself a newbie), I tried the mask hack and it really did not help, if anything, it made it worse imo since the face started to feel lopsided with the mask. That's just my experience though, maybe it was helpful for someone else but it certainly wasn't for me lol.
I haven't tried it yet but I don't think it'll work for my artstyle
i always get so excited when i see you use your characters from the "professional character design" video :DDD
One thing I’ve started doing with my lineart is having a duplicate layer, making the color a brownish red color, setting it multiply, and then blurring it a little bit {like 2%}. I just like it ^^
I love how she is just casually talking while sketching that masterpiece on the first “tip” ✨😭🔥
definitely a nice drawing but I'm fairly certain these are pre-recorded, sped-up and then dubbed over :) If this is her normal speed then her wrists would breaking
The tip about painting faces with colour undertones helped me so much from the time I found it ! I lean rather on semi-realistic, and it blends well, and it applies with non-human skin tones too (I like to draw aliens), it just helps so much !
was literally just checking out ur channel for another video and saw this one after 6 seconds of upload lmao
anyways-
ur art is super good and you've become an inspiration to many people and me!
I think the mask hack is more helpful when you're doing crazier head angles where you really squash the perspective.
When the head is tiled upwards or downwards I think it's normal for people to lose track of where the eyes fit on the skull. Using a simple shape like the mask to plot out the face can help you think about how your eyes are actually within a pit on your face instead of popping straight out.
Dips on the face will change a lot as the perspective changes, so for this hack I think you turning the head more would have put it to better use :)
Thanks for another cool video Haley! Always gets me thinking about drawing!
i adore the mask hack! ive been drawing for eightish years now, and i use it all the time. it definitely works better if your drawing style isnt as stylized--i feel like with Lilybell her eyes are so big you barely had room on the face for it lmao
HI LAVENDERTOWNE!!!!❤❤❤
I definitely recommend, if you can, making your sketch mostly the construction. Indicate details so you don’t forget them but don’t put everything into your sketch. I personally use a bigger, softer brush for the sketch, and then a small inking tool for the actual lineart
You are one of the most inspiring artists to me! Yo motivate me to create art, even if it feels nagging, and in the end, im always glad that I did.
Ok I will be using the sketch one because my line art is *suffering*
Would you ever consider doing a comprehensive beginners guide to digital art? I'd love to go digital from traditional, but I am so lost & overwhelmed! Love your videos!~♥︎
I always appreciate these types of videos from you. Even if all the tips won't work for me, I feel like once you end up reviewing tips, at least one in each video works so well that I make a big breakthrough. Thank you so much and I look forward to Unfamilare every week!
I will say that the blue chin gives the appearance of a 5 'o Clock shadow that I really like.
I know you're probably not gonna see this comment, but I just wanted to say that you've taught me so much about drawing. I remember when I first saw your channel, you were the only creator I really knew of that did drawing-type videos whose art style I enjoyed. You've always been a big source of my inspiration and you're part of the reason I've never stopped drawing. Just wanted to say thanks for that
Im excited that Lavender’s using her new ocs more often
twitter has the best art feedback i think, so i’m excited
I am literally holding the exact plush in your pfp
Thank you for sacrificing your sanity for us ❤
That is interesting about the color mapping. I did a portrait from a photo recently and noticed the skin had much cooler tones around the chin and warmer tones around the nose and eyes. Including that variation in the face added a lot more dimension and interest to the skin. That tip is really useful!
I think the gaussian blur hack might work for us artists who feel like the lineart looks…so plain after you delete the sketch layer, cause once you actually finish your lineart you’ve been sitting/laying there for quite a few minutes, and it looks weird without the sketch underneath because you’ve gotten so used to seeing it behind your lines.
whenever I'm down, struggling with depression and don't feel like drawing, your videos always revitalize my artistic joy ;-; your art makes me feel things, I often find it difficult to feel
6:00 i think it does still count as an art hack since it's not a "drawing skill" hack, it's a composition hack. still counts as an art hack cuz there's more to art than technical drawing skill
5:24 YES! I remember seeing this on Pinterest and I remember getting so confused over it. Thank you for clearing this up!
i love how she just gets straight to the point💗
Out of all of these tips, I love the blurred sketch one the most! My lineart used to look rather stiff and uninteresting but using that trick def helped a lot.
I think that the point of the "pose" hack isn't about the pose per se, but there is this "technique" that consists of using shapes to help with perspective drawing. That particular explanation wasn't so good but what you're supposed to do is draw the character in a regular angle and fit them inside a shape, then deform the shape to the angle you want and use the first drawing as reference. Adding guidelines inside that shape is super super useful, like in the character joints. It's hard to explain it with words but I hope it can help someone.
Immediately clicked when I saw the notification, love your videos. ♥
These tips are so fergalicious 😻
I don't normally do lineart (I have my sketch but then straight to colouring and shading to define things without) but I kinda want to do a lined drawing to try out the first trick 👀
Omg! Not only am I exicted to see lilybell again I'm also totally gonna use some of these! Thanks!
For the bluring technique I kinda don't think it would help me since my lineart works really weirdly. The sketch acts as a guideline and the lineart process is where I give life to my artwork instead of the sketch, extra floofs to fur or hair are added, (weird looking) hands are finalized, the eyes are given depth.. the blur wouldn't do anything but ill try it
for the blur thing if u miss ur more defined sketches u could duplicate the sketch and lower its opacity and blur the original. that way, u have the original sketch (somewhat) but its still a bit more blurry
Definitely interested in trying the sketch blur tip because god I never want to actually deal with refining any line art. To be fair, you don't HAVE to, I could just keep fiddling with the sketch until I like it and that's just my art style. but there are times when it would be helpful to do more work on line art lol
I'm obsessed with that first drawing I love it so much
I like sketching with the airbrush so the first tip does work, at least for me to the same affect. Great vid 🍓
the ads for the physical copy of unfamiliar always remind me that i'm too broke to buy it ✌
Nice art style! Looks cool
I WAS SHOCKED TO SEE SO MANY OF MY REFERENCES ON PINTEREST WERE IN THIS VIDEO?? great minds think alike (or maybe it’s just the pinterest recommendations feed)
honestly i think the yellow red and blue face tones tip only goes well for more realistic art styles. especially since their placement is directly dependent on the different structures of the face (the cooler tones falling below the cheekbones and near the chin area dude to things like five o'clock shadow and skin thickness, the warmer tones where the cheeks are, etc.) plus think the colors are vibrant like that for the sake of explanation, it's more showing what the color of the undertones should be
You sound so calm and it really nice to watch
I mean this in the least wired way possible, I want to eat your art style. It’s just so cute and pretty
Basically, good poses = foreshortening
And foreshortening = THE BIGGEST PAIN I HAVE EVER EXPERIENCED IN MY ENTIRE EXISTENCE
you're literally my biggest inspiration, I've been watching ur vids for so long and ILYYYY!!
I sometimes use the painter's skintone tip overtop of the normal skintone as an overlay/mask. Theres also a TON of art tips floating around Pinterest too.
The Gaussian blur one is interesting! I think I’ve been unintentionally doing this by sketching with a soft pencil brush
I remember learning that mask eye placement hack, I'd completely forgotten it, but I do think I remember it helping get me to the point of freehanding that better
An art tip I learned that I use is that I always hated how stiff and robotic my art was feeling so what I did was did a rough sketch then jumped right into the lineart instead of doing a refining sketch and trying to do perfect line art. Another thing is I would just draw naturally without using any line stabilization/correction and just do line art like I would traditionally it helped me a ton!
I've never done the gaussian blur tip before, but usually when I'm doing traditional art I'll do a normal sketch, take a darker pencil and rough trace the important lines, erase all of that, and then line the outlines left by the darker pencil
I definitely wanna play more with these tips, these sound very fun to try out
i love underpainting all of my portraits. it just adds a little extra dimension and not to mention spice
Lavendertwon is one of the best artist!
Shes so good!!
This video was very helpful, I can't tell you how many hacks I've been putting off because my art can be very stylized -- But now that I've seen someone else apply it to their equally as stylized art, it's inspired me to try some lf these techniques and add it to my art in the future
∙
Thank you LavenderTowne!
If you ever decide on a part 2 with more of these twitter hacks it'd be greatly appreciated!
the undertone in skin stuff is completely subjective. In all things art there's a way to apply something but its finish is completely dependent on the context or parameters of your creative atmosphere. Those colors aren't even set in stone. It completely depends on your lighting and your skin tone as the local light changes the clarity of your actual skin tone and the undertones. I'm black but im more light skin. This technique also simplifies it a bit much in a efficiency way rather than artistic way. That blue will be in your forehead. I am black most darker complexions actually have trace amounts of darker blue going into purples. But it's so feint that you wouldn't make it super visible but it makes the difference. I suggest anyone do more studies on your own skin because hell you can put your eyelids directly onto your arm and see other colors. Skin is a mixture of pigments. For beginners i defintely suggest use of the airbrush so you can get the idea faster than having to also worry about blending in the pigments more seamlessly. That's the real tricky part. The most feint tone is usually the tone you see kind of overlaying your whole skin but its not clear. Mine is red like an indian red(actual color name btw). Would i tell my portrait artist my skin is red. No. But thats the over lay. I've seen pale people with a more green like feint olive green overlay to their skin. Overall trust your eyes and observations. What you see is what you see.
a really great exercise is in the morning and night take your arm and move it around the space your in. The values of your colors will change but youll notice that the colors you see still stay the same. But youll also see the slight blue/greens from your veins. The yellows/whites from fats. (lol referencing my own arm and what not but you get what I mean)
I hate lineart when I 1st started digital art, same reason as others bc it doesn't look right and my sketch is better, but now I don't really do super clean sketch anymore. I sketch a guide then I finish it with lineart, now I hate sketching lmao bc I don't repeat steps anymore.
So I think the blurring the sketch is the same thing, making the sketch just a guide and not tracing anything that much
wow i love the inverted eye chararcter, shes so unique
YAY! New video! I’ve been waiting a while for this.
In my opinion, the mask is only really valuable for shading like it shows in the picture. I don’t see how putting a mask around the eyes is going to effect placement in a meaningful way, but it *is* really good for showing the dimensions of the eye/brow area
I do the first tip kinda but by accident. I use very soft brushes to do initial sketches, then move on to a slightly more clear one, then a crisp line art brush.
5:33 "We all like to look at faces."
A not inconsiderable fraction of the internet: "FEET PICS."
You give me so much inspiration and get me excited to draw
I like the first tip. I do something similar, where I draw with a large brush size and the brush has a low opacity. I also try to make my sketches messy for that reason.
As someone with (less?? Different?) stylized art, the mask thing does kinda help me place the eyes so that their not all wonky with perspectives. Btw I love your video so much they inspire me and help me grow my art
I feel like the first tip is more useful if you have a cartoony, simple art style like the drawing in the tip was. If your art style is more detailed, when you blur the sketch, all that intricate stuff might blur together or disappear. If you're drawing a character you're familiar with or if you have an image reference next to you, I suppose that doesn't matter. But in a cartoony art style, where the shapes are very clear even when blurred, I feel like that tip would work better.
my favorite hack was when i watched a video being like
"OML GUYS"
and showed that the middle line for the circle usually drawn on the head should be for the brows and not the eyes
i've been using it ever since
The queen has posted!
The mask trick looks useful for my style, so thanks for sharing!
These tips seem super helpful :00 also awesome video 💖💖
I love love love lily bell and I’m so happy to see here in a video again
The mask hack is actually one that took my art to next level, I learned it from on of Ethan Becker's videos and it was a game changer so I'm surprised you & most people in the comments seem to find it not useful. I definitely don't feel locked in the mask while using it but it rather made it so much easier to go into different face angles with ease and with much more accuracy instead of how much second-guessing I used to do before I started using it 😅
AHH YES I was just thinking about your videos!! Ty, and you've been a huge inspiration for me for years 💜
Lavender toowwwwne ur art styles improved so much
I will for sure try the skin one! Have been struggling with my drawings looking weirdly flat because of the skin recently.
I tried the lineart hack and I think that I'm going to change my way of working to use it so thank you for showing me this hack
Hellooooo lavender!! I love your videos so much!!!
My favorite PROTIP is the "Draw a circle, then draw the owl"
I love your art I can't help but see it andabsolutely loved your poison drawings
Eye masking is also something used in animation to control contortion and map a change of expression.
holy cow 8:57 is actually so useful for me, typically one eye ends up touching the edge of the face even though the char is like facing 3/4 or somn like that (basically i just tried it (yk 3/4) it really heled place the eye, it kept them in line and not unusually apart like i stated earlier, and since i placed the nose first then drew an outline of a mask really really helped imo)
yeah so basically i used the mask more of a guide than actual mask so it didn't really feel like i was "locked into the mask"
conclusion: i only tried it once so far but i think it reallly helped, at least when drawing face at 3/4
this video was released on my birthday, best birthday gift ever!! :)
Us traditional artists never get any love 😞😞
i shouldn't be watching this because i have a test tomorrow and i shouldn't be staying up any later than 8:30 when i have a test but oh well
i suppose i could be considered a beginner and the mask thing really helps in certain very specific situations
OMG BOOK STORES!? GIRL WTH OMG WOW THIS IS WHY U INSPIRE ME SO MUCH UR SO SUCCESSFUL 🎉
wowza new lavendertowne video!! Woop woop!
Decided to try blurring sketch one and making lineart became both much easier and faster :00
(And as a bonus, the brush i use makes color spread out (if that makes sence) a bit which is satisfying to look at)
Thanks a lot! :D
Hi lavender town I love ur art and u r such an inspiration for me
Me: doesn't sketch and does everything on a single layer*
i'm definitely trying out the skin color underpainting one later, and maybe the sketch blur one too
I never had the issue of disliking my sketch versus the lineart and I realized it's because I pretty much always use mechanical pencils instead of the thicker and more.. unstable? thats not the right word but idk what is, art pencils and pencils that need sharpened. So my recommendation for if you keep really disliking your lineart is a) draw in pen for a while or b) use a mechanical pencil and see how that goes! Obviously you don't have to do this, but if you need smth to shake some stuff up for you thats what I got lol
The first guy lavender drew is so pretty
You are my fav yter maybe fav person on the Internet!❤❤ btw unfamiliar is my fav book ever no joke