Complementary colors. Color mixing with acrylics for beginners.

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  • Опубликовано: 16 дек 2024

Комментарии • 13

  • @anaterezasouza8461
    @anaterezasouza8461 10 месяцев назад +1

    Your videos are the best in the subject, i'm watching them all, thank u so much!!

    • @toon-nagtegaal
      @toon-nagtegaal  10 месяцев назад +1

      You're welcome and thanks for your comment!👍

  • @vincentgoupil180
    @vincentgoupil180 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks for the instructions. Helpful

  • @frasermax
    @frasermax 9 месяцев назад

    Thank you for your videos some really great stuff👍👍

  • @robertwebber8672
    @robertwebber8672 11 месяцев назад

    your videos are fantastic. you demistify. also the humour is pretty good too. Thanks for this. Best R

    • @toon-nagtegaal
      @toon-nagtegaal  11 месяцев назад

      Thanks, I'm glad it's helpful!👍

  • @EggsvsgVsvvsvsv
    @EggsvsgVsvvsvsv 4 месяца назад

    حلو❤

  • @Allie-ck2lj
    @Allie-ck2lj Год назад

    Thank you for this video. You are using Magenta for Primary Red? It doesn't look like magenta on my computer screen.

    • @toon-nagtegaal
      @toon-nagtegaal  Год назад

      My pleasure! If you mean in 1:58 then that's magenta, later on in the video I think I used pyrolle red to dull down cyan. It can look different maybe due to the camera, so don't throw out your screen!😂👍

    • @jondoh587
      @jondoh587 7 месяцев назад

      @@toon-nagtegaal I'm just now learning about mass-tone vs undertone. It's something of a mystery to me how different one paint can look, depending on how thickly it is applied. My primary magenta is a case in point. A cool pink lurks under a pile that seems to look like a warm red. 🤔🧐

    • @toon-nagtegaal
      @toon-nagtegaal  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@jondoh587 I know what you mean, it IS a very weird color!😂😂 And to be clear, I'm absolutely not a scientist in these matters, I just look at what I see happening on my palette, so this is just what I learn from others: normally, we see colors like red, green, and blue because our eyes pick up light and our brains tell us what color it is. Magenta is special because it doesn't really exist as one single color of light. It happens when our brains combine signals from our eyes, like red and blue, to make this special color. So basically, magenta is a color our brains make, even if there isn't any special light that's just magenta. It's kind of like a trick our brains play to complete the color spectrum. In addition (as you observed very well) the pigment is very transparant. So it looks rather different when you apply one, two or three layers. Of course there are more pigments like that (for instance ultramarine blue). In the end, personally the stuff about non spectral colors is too abstract for me, so I just look at my palette and just very practically try things out. Hope it helps! 🎨🎨🎨🎨