Hello sir,good day. Salute to your work from Asia! Your construction line demo was really remarkable. Iam a Mechanical engineer and I need to draw a lot of things on daily basis. The problem, I have very short time to draw and describe the sketch to my turner and fabricator. I would request and highly appreciate, kindly guide in this regard on practical basis. You are really an asset for new generation,your art should live forever. i am very humble to say,iam ready to be your student specifically in engineering and construction line drawings. Thanks and Regards Arslan
Welcome to the channel Arslan, and thank you for the kind words on my videos! I’m very happy to hear that the content is connecting with you. I receive a lot of suggestion for future videos, and I think yours is a good one. In practical terms, the process would be what I laid out in the complex construction video, just applied to the kinds of objects you draw for your work. I do have plans for more videos on construction drawing, but I am a solo content producer and I do these videos in addition to my other job, so it takes me a while to produce videos, so please be patient :) Thank you for the support and helping the channel grow!
Thanks for the educstional material.. i have a question though, why did you choose to teach perspective material with isometric style of art? wouldnt it be more appropriate to teach this in 2 point perspective or even 3 point?
That’s a great question! I find for some people staring out in drawing, linear perspective (1,2,3 point) is too technical and difficult to wrap their minds around. Isomeric is a more intuitive and easy to grasp concept that allows them to understand the concepts of 3D space and construction. It helps them practice their draftsmanship without having to worry about the different rules of linear perspective. I usually introduce linear perspective about halfway through a school semester, but I have a lot of great linear perspective videos coming to the channel soon!!
Welcome to drawing! I would start with “the 3 dimensions and isometric perspective” , my first Video on the channel. I also have a playlist called “how to draw 3 dimensionally” which puts them in the order I present them in my beginning drawing classes. I hope you find them helpful!
Once you have your construction, you can start to add value or contour. The complex construction video on my site shows the process of adding contours on top of construction, and the light logic and massing videos will introduce the ideas of adding value. More videos on adding value and rendering will be coming out in the future. :)
@@DrawshStudio you are right .Isometric perspective helped me make my linear perspective fundamentals stronger. i keep watching these videos to find out any missing pieces.
That’s a great way to think about it! It’s amazing that renaissance artists were doing this before 3D programs. Glad that construction isn’t scary anymore :)
@@DrawshStudio yeah its amazing how they observe things and yep i can draw perspective now! its not anymore after learning some of your videos really helps a lot!, Thank you!!❤️.
You did a great job on the video! But there is another point that confuses me. For the cup example, you used two coordinate systems when constructing the subject and the handle. How did you determine the angle between each axis to make sure the XY planes of the two systems are parallel? I would be grateful if you could give me an answer.😊
Thank you, happy you liked the video. For the handle, I first chose an X angle that looked correct to the position of the cup. After that I simply used the principle of isometric perspective to keep the axis parallel. If I draw the second angle and it seems to converge with the first, I adjust my line until it is truly parallel and the two lines won’t touch. The same will be true for all other X lines going in the same direction, they must match the initial angle. And then for thenY lines in follow the same idea. I hope that makes sense and answered your question :)
@DRAWSH STUDIO @ANYONE Can I ask why do you use isometric perspective instead of normal perspective when drawing these items? Since isometric perspective don’t converge.
It’s a good question. Isometric is a fast and effective way to do construction and Lay-In of small objects. Linear perspective is a dense and complex topic and not the best to learn in the beginning. But if you are constructing things like cities you need linear perspective.
Astonishing how this video has only 17k views in 3y while other art yt-er have millions of views saying empty rhetoric just to buy there good for nothing art course
Crazy part is that the algorithm doesn't even push this channel, I had to find it on my own through Pinterest. There some great knowledge on this channel.
I am looking for this kind of content for a very long time. Really helpful. Thanks
Awesome, happy you found the channel! Thanks for the comment :)
Man, i was looking for this kind of content for so much time. Thanks 🎉🎉🎉
Welcome to the channel! Glad you find it helpful :)
my eardrums have been shattered but now i know how to do construction stuff thanks
Hopefully it was a good trade off. :)
This was really well explained, and it was fun to watch
Thank you, glad you had fun with it!
Hello sir,good day.
Salute to your work from Asia!
Your construction line demo was really remarkable.
Iam a Mechanical engineer and I need to draw a lot of things on daily basis.
The problem, I have very short time to draw and describe the sketch to my turner and fabricator.
I would request and highly appreciate, kindly guide in this regard on practical basis.
You are really an asset for new generation,your art should live forever.
i am very humble to say,iam ready to be your student specifically in engineering and construction line drawings.
Thanks and Regards
Arslan
Welcome to the channel Arslan, and thank you for the kind words on my videos! I’m very happy to hear that the content is connecting with you.
I receive a lot of suggestion for future videos, and I think yours is a good one. In practical terms, the process would be what I laid out in the complex construction video, just applied to the kinds of objects you draw for your work.
I do have plans for more videos on construction drawing, but I am a solo content producer and I do these videos in addition to my other job, so it takes me a while to produce videos, so please be patient :)
Thank you for the support and helping the channel grow!
@@DrawshStudio lots of 💕.I wish this deed may lead you to vital success.sir,iam waiting anxiously for future videos.
Thank you so much! Good luck with your projects!!!
I finally found the answer. Thank you
That’s exciting, glad you had a breakthrough!
This helps a lot, Thank you.
Thanks for letting me know and I am really glad it helped!
This is really helping for me , very thanks
I’m happy to hear that, you are very welcome!!
Wow I was looking for this subject for long time, please keep it up.
I’m glad the video was something your looking for! More videos are coming so keep checking back every week!
Thanks a lot!
You are very welcome :)
Thanks for the educstional material.. i have a question though, why did you choose to teach perspective material with isometric style of art? wouldnt it be more appropriate to teach this in 2 point perspective or even 3 point?
That’s a great question! I find for some people staring out in drawing, linear perspective (1,2,3 point) is too technical and difficult to wrap their minds around. Isomeric is a more intuitive and easy to grasp concept that allows them to understand the concepts of 3D space and construction. It helps them practice their draftsmanship without having to worry about the different rules of linear perspective. I usually introduce linear perspective about halfway through a school semester, but I have a lot of great linear perspective videos coming to the channel soon!!
Welcome to drawing! I would start with “the 3 dimensions and isometric perspective” , my first Video on the channel. I also have a playlist called “how to draw 3 dimensionally” which puts them in the order I present them in my beginning drawing classes. I hope you find them helpful!
Once you have your construction, you can start to add value or contour. The complex construction video on my site shows the process of adding contours on top of construction, and the light logic and massing videos will introduce the ideas of adding value. More videos on adding value and rendering will be coming out in the future. :)
@@DrawshStudio you are right .Isometric perspective helped me make my linear perspective fundamentals stronger. i keep watching these videos to find out any missing pieces.
Thanks, glad that it is working! Isomeric is a great way to get comfortable with 3D space, and that will definitely help work in linear perspective :)
THIS IS THE BEST EXPLANATION THAT I EVER LOOKED THANKS BIG, KEEP IN THE SAME SPIRIT
(sorry for my english, i'm from Ukraine)
Thanks so much for taking the time to let me know! I’m happy it was so useful to you!!
Astonishing how this video has 17k views in 3y while other art yt-er have millions of views saying empty rhetoric
Thank you :)
This was so helpful thank you!
Thank you for taking the time to tell me! I love hearing that :)
its like learning blender but 2d
edit:. Thanks for this drawing studio, drawing construction lines is not scsry anymore!
That’s a great way to think about it! It’s amazing that renaissance artists were doing this before 3D programs. Glad that construction isn’t scary anymore :)
@@DrawshStudio yeah its amazing how they observe things and yep i can draw perspective now! its not anymore after learning some of your videos really helps a lot!, Thank you!!❤️.
When you realise you forgot the basics again ! Thank you.
That happens to me yearly I think :) thanks for the comment!
You did a great job on the video! But there is another point that confuses me. For the cup example, you used two coordinate systems when constructing the subject and the handle. How did you determine the angle between each axis to make sure the XY planes of the two systems are parallel? I would be grateful if you could give me an answer.😊
Thank you, happy you liked the video. For the handle, I first chose an X angle that looked correct to the position of the cup. After that I simply used the principle of isometric perspective to keep the axis parallel. If I draw the second angle and it seems to converge with the first, I adjust my line until it is truly parallel and the two lines won’t touch. The same will be true for all other X lines going in the same direction, they must match the initial angle. And then for thenY lines in follow the same idea.
I hope that makes sense and answered your question :)
thank you so much
My pleasure! Thanks for the comment :)
Helo! What books and other studies can we have for a better understanding of this subject besides you? How can I get more about it!
I really like the book “rapid viz”. Also Cura Studios has a wonderful RUclips channel and content. artisapractice.com
Great Job! Lots of Great Info! 😃😀😎
Thanks Dino, I really appreciate it!!
Great job thanks.
My pleasure!
@DRAWSH STUDIO @ANYONE
Can I ask why do you use isometric perspective instead of normal perspective when drawing these items? Since isometric perspective don’t converge.
It’s a good question. Isometric is a fast and effective way to do construction and Lay-In of small objects. Linear perspective is a dense and complex topic and not the best to learn in the beginning. But if you are constructing things like cities you need linear perspective.
Astonishing how this video has only 17k views in 3y while other art yt-er have millions of views saying empty rhetoric just to buy there good for nothing art course
Thank you, I appreciate that. My channel is a quiet hidden corner of RUclips it seems. Still, grateful for the views and support it has received.
Crazy part is that the algorithm doesn't even push this channel, I had to find it on my own through Pinterest. There some great knowledge on this channel.
I completely agree with you! This is the good shit! I'm grateful this guy explains everything so well
Any more videos on this?
I have videos on cross contour, planar drawing, and complex construction which are all related to this concept :)
3 d drawing.
3 dimensional drawing can be easy when we apply these principles.