In many tutorials, books, etc., I’ve seen the importance of planes for shading, but no one else could explain it so you can see it in objects other than the head. This video does an excellent job explaining it and I hope to implement it in my workflow. Thank you so mucho for sharing.
That’s great, glad this video clarified it more for you. Planes are one of the great tools we have to help us analyze and simplify, I hope you find a way to use it in your work!
Hey, thanks for this video. Loved it. Andrew Loomis said in one of his books that the key to shading is to square the round as much as possible (I paraphrase, but it’s kinda along those lines). I’ve had such a hard time seeing the square (plane changes) in the round. Could you make more of these, where you take different objects and break them down and explain how to see the plane changes? Maybe longer videos. I (and probably other beginner artists) would be grateful. Thanks.
Thanks for sending the message. Loomis was such a great teacher and that’s a great way to think about it. It is definitely something I can expand on in future videos, thanks for the suggestion!
Basically, you want to turn all curved surfaces into flat planes. Starting with as few simple big planes you can, and gradually getting more complex. My other video demonstrates this on a real apple to help conceptualize the complex idea of planes.
Planes are an exercise and a tool. Even tho planes seem complicated, they are simpler than a complex curved surface. Drawing planes is an exercise that teaches us to analyze an object and helps us visualize 3D objects more accurately. Planes are a tool we can use in construction drawing to build complex objects from simpler forms. I hope that makes it more clear. Thanks for the comments!
If you want to cry out of joy from the poetic beauty of analytical construction drawing, I totally agree! If you want to cry from the difficulty of how simple objects can become so complex when we account for the constructive form, I totally agree!
In many tutorials, books, etc., I’ve seen the importance of planes for shading, but no one else could explain it so you can see it in objects other than the head. This video does an excellent job explaining it and I hope to implement it in my workflow. Thank you so mucho for sharing.
That’s great, glad this video clarified it more for you. Planes are one of the great tools we have to help us analyze and simplify, I hope you find a way to use it in your work!
Your Channel is small right now but you make great content.
Thank you Desktus, that’s great to hear. I’m working hard on more content, so keep checking back for new videos each week!
This was super helpful better than my drawing professor!
Thanks you, I am happy it is so helpful to you. Thanks for supporting the channel.
Hey, thanks for this video. Loved it.
Andrew Loomis said in one of his books that the key to shading is to square the round as much as possible (I paraphrase, but it’s kinda along those lines).
I’ve had such a hard time seeing the square (plane changes) in the round. Could you make more of these, where you take different objects and break them down and explain how to see the plane changes? Maybe longer videos. I (and probably other beginner artists) would be grateful.
Thanks.
Thanks for sending the message. Loomis was such a great teacher and that’s a great way to think about it. It is definitely something I can expand on in future videos, thanks for the suggestion!
This is great.
That’s very much appreciated, thanks for taking the time to write :)
Great Job! 😃😀😄
Thanks Dino!
Hello,sir.what is basic logic behind drawing these planes.
Kindly elobrate.
Thanks
Basically, you want to turn all curved surfaces into flat planes. Starting with as few simple big planes you can, and gradually getting more complex. My other video demonstrates this on a real apple to help conceptualize the complex idea of planes.
@@DrawshStudiosir, I want to know why to turn all curved surfaces in plane surfaces.what is the benefit of that ?
Thanks
Planes are an exercise and a tool. Even tho planes seem complicated, they are simpler than a complex curved surface. Drawing planes is an exercise that teaches us to analyze an object and helps us visualize 3D objects more accurately. Planes are a tool we can use in construction drawing to build complex objects from simpler forms. I hope that makes it more clear. Thanks for the comments!
👍
Thank you Shatila! :)
👍👍
Thank you Nebal :)
I wanna cry so badly
If you want to cry out of joy from the poetic beauty of analytical construction drawing, I totally agree!
If you want to cry from the difficulty of how simple objects can become so complex when we account for the constructive form, I totally agree!