Kim Casebeer “Dramatic Light" **FREE LESSON VIEWING**

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  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024
  • You’ll be amazed at how Kim’s techniques will allow you to overcome the problems that lead to wimpy paintings. You’ll now be bringing in strong light, an exciting feel, and create art that begs people from across a crowded room to come take a look!
    A gift from Streamline Publishing, publishers of Fine Art Connoisseur and Plein Air Magazines, and newsletters Fine Art Today, Plein Air Today, Realism Today and American Watercolor.
    If you like this video, you can see more at at lilipubsorders...
    Today only use this promo code CASEBEER for $30 off.
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Комментарии • 51

  • @bonniebishop2755
    @bonniebishop2755 2 года назад +2

    Loved seeing how she mixed colors. Wish we had been able to see her paint in real time.

  • @KathyBrooksArt
    @KathyBrooksArt 2 года назад +4

    Such a useful demo, learned so much about mixing colors and how to handle values and lay in. Great video!

  • @EulogyfortheAngels
    @EulogyfortheAngels 3 года назад +5

    Just some friendly corrections: transparent colors don't have less tinting strength than opaque colors. Its entirely dependent on what pigment is being used - for example, Pthalo Blue, Pthalo Green, Quinacridone Magenta, and Dioxazine Purple are all transparent/semi-transparent but have high to extremely high tinting strength.
    The Cadmium colors have moderate tinting strength, not high, as there are several opaque/semi-opaque spectrum warm colors with much higher tinting strength like the Pyrrole and Naphthol pigments.

  • @juliedobsonminer1698
    @juliedobsonminer1698 3 года назад +1

    Thank you Kim for showing us your process. I'd love to see how you execute plein air:) Cheers!

  • @pleinaire8698
    @pleinaire8698 4 года назад +2

    WOW!!!! watching Kim mix her colors is a lesson in patience and tenacity!!well done THANK yOU!!

  • @yvonneandreassen8844
    @yvonneandreassen8844 3 года назад

    this was a real learning curve --thanks Kim

  • @Coco2345ful
    @Coco2345ful 3 года назад +2

    Love this video . Her work and explanation in terrific

  • @caroledavis7334
    @caroledavis7334 3 года назад

    I just purchased Kim's video....so happy.....found the video yesterday....what a find !!! Tks Kim!

    • @artschoollive
      @artschoollive  3 года назад

      Thanks for your order, Carole! We look forward to hearing your thoughts.

  • @artieross9537
    @artieross9537 2 года назад

    Hello from beautiful Phoenix, Arizona! 🌵

  • @judithwilliams5185
    @judithwilliams5185 2 года назад

    This has been the most helpful tutorial I have watched and I have watched a lot of them! I especially appreciate the explanation of why you do things a certain way. I have been watercolor painting for almost 40 years but have inherited my moms oils and acrylics which opens a whole new world to me.

  • @ibanez2010
    @ibanez2010 Год назад +1

    I will never how understand how somebody could view ultramarine as warm. It's one of the coldest colors on my palette. It doesn't lean red, it leans violet - there is a big difference.

  • @davidszamborski5308
    @davidszamborski5308 Месяц назад

    Thank you.

  • @sherryboychuk7408
    @sherryboychuk7408 2 года назад

    Thank you Kim I absolutely loved the video !! I learned so much I can't wait to put it in practice!! And thank you so much for the uh huh moment!!!

  • @solydjavaheri3293
    @solydjavaheri3293 4 года назад +1

    Kim, Thank you so much for your exceptional demo! With "one" demo (only) you've demonstrated a lot of methods and fundamentals of painting! (1000,0000+ of WOWsss!). Best Regards.

  • @becooldontfreez
    @becooldontfreez 4 года назад +1

    Wow that was great... it is amazing artists that initial rough sketch and values can lead to such a breath taking painting... even better than the reference photos. I can stand and look at it every day if it was in my living room :). Beautiful!!! Thank you Kim.

  • @sandracarroll6233
    @sandracarroll6233 Год назад

    Thank you for sharing .

  • @BoraMetinSozen
    @BoraMetinSozen 2 года назад +1

    Thank you Kim, have a question that leads to another question! - how do you do your color study so precisely that becomes the color guideline for the actual painting? do you usually paint a couple of small color studies and pick one at the end?

  • @cherylm1982
    @cherylm1982 4 года назад +3

    Fantastic video. Thank you for posting it.

    • @artschoollive
      @artschoollive  4 года назад

      Our pleasure, Cheryl. Happy you enjoyed it. :)

  • @debragag1238
    @debragag1238 3 года назад

    I loved this. Thank you. Funny how her last name is like a case of beer. She’s a real pro. I really did love this video

  • @karenklauber7322
    @karenklauber7322 2 года назад

    Thanks from San Francisco, Ca.

  • @suziemoore1577
    @suziemoore1577 4 года назад +1

    I am in Surrey, UK and enjoying this video very much

  • @ThePattiw
    @ThePattiw 4 года назад +2

    Fantastic!

  • @lisecardinal3879
    @lisecardinal3879 2 года назад

    Hi from Ontario 👋

  • @tariqsiddique1383
    @tariqsiddique1383 4 года назад +1

    Excellent artist n gorgeous demo....love from Pakistan.

  • @eyeonart6865
    @eyeonart6865 4 года назад +3

    Oderless does not mean there are no fumes. You should keep a lid on it until you need it.

    • @MM-fb9fi
      @MM-fb9fi 2 года назад +1

      The fumes, the hydrocarbons, still fill the room but the odor does not. Odorless does not mean harmless. Treat odorless solvent the same as regular solvent. Open a window.

  • @pinotrambler1613
    @pinotrambler1613 4 года назад +1

    Wonderful information! Thank you!

  • @monicacohen2233
    @monicacohen2233 3 года назад

    Thank you!

  • @odisseoulisse3100
    @odisseoulisse3100 4 года назад +1

    Amazing artist

  • @israrmalik1798
    @israrmalik1798 Год назад

    thank for video

  • @guitareputz
    @guitareputz 8 месяцев назад

    i found an artist that video tapes what he is painting ...he now has an exact time/light/atmosphere stamp of his time painting.

  • @theodellava
    @theodellava 4 года назад +1

    Wow 😍😍 thanks for the vid

  • @kathleencarbin2663
    @kathleencarbin2663 4 года назад

    Thank you from North Adams, MA

  • @donnamartell9056
    @donnamartell9056 Год назад

    I'm lookinng for a bumper sticker that says, "I brake for scenery!"

  • @israrmalik1798
    @israrmalik1798 Год назад

    i am from pakistan and that u forthis free video

  • @nvandenhurk
    @nvandenhurk 4 года назад

    Why don’t you use watermixable oilpaint ? In stead of using miniral spirit as medium?

    • @MM-fb9fi
      @MM-fb9fi 2 года назад

      @@sandeshborlikar9822 It is not safe .

    • @MM-fb9fi
      @MM-fb9fi 2 года назад

      Water mixable is not nearly as permanent as oil.

  • @brookstorm9789
    @brookstorm9789 3 года назад

    What size is your canvas, please?

    • @artschoollive
      @artschoollive  3 года назад

      Hi Brook! Kim is using 18x18 single oil-primed linen panel.

    • @brookstorm9789
      @brookstorm9789 3 года назад

      @@artschoollive Thank youFor the info and for all the invaluable sharing!!

  • @annclarke9458
    @annclarke9458 4 года назад

    Thank you Kim, really enjoyed your video. I assume you did the colour study in situ En Plein Air ? Do you pre colour mix the same way in the field?

  • @artistmurlinath
    @artistmurlinath 4 года назад +3

    Great work #artistmurlinath

  • @pongaseapintar3913
    @pongaseapintar3913 4 года назад +1

    Can we look at other César santos vídeo ?

    • @artschoollive
      @artschoollive  4 года назад +1

      Sure. You can check out these free segments here: lilipubsorders.com/products/cesar-santos-secrets-of-figure-painting#lesson
      lilipubsorders.com/products/cesar-santos-secrets-of-figure-drawing#lesson

  • @eyeonart6865
    @eyeonart6865 2 года назад

    13 colors mean to lazy to color mix. Teaching should use limited pallet.

  • @MJ-hl1kk
    @MJ-hl1kk 2 месяца назад

    I pity her students, those that may be young and beginners. How are they going to make sense of so many intermediate steps and so many confusing lines and washes and values and changes, only for her to blur things up again, in the name of 'drawing by wiping out, re-drawing, re-working, working in reverse, pre-work, value-study, under-study' and whatnot. It's a landscape at the end of the day, whose colours are not an exact science!
    Oils, especially the cadmiums, are toxic, as are the various 'helpers' - the mineral spirits, the gels, the solvents that will be required to clean the brushes. Btw, you don't need a big bunch of brushes, and the more 'odourless' the spirits, the more harmful. Thousands of painters have ended up with cancer. Young students will be better advised to take up acrylics, and even better, watercolour. We may have to spend a few months learning the technique, but the freshness of a well-made watercolour, the money and health saved by using more water than paint, not to mention the fact that it does not foul up the environment, including the groundwater, makes it well worth the effort.