I really want to thank Proko because he puts subtitle in his videos making it easier to people who have difficulties to understand oral English. It's really helpful for me !
this comment serves as a guide : 0:20 : The Landmarks 1:25 : Centerline of the Front 2:01 : Centerline of the Back 2:40 : Lateral Landmarks of the Front 3:35 : Anterior Superior Illiac Spine (ASIS) 4:00 : Lateral Landmarks of the Backs 5:13 : The Limbs
dude man I can't quite apply this yet but I can't believe how much better and more confident I got after watching like a total 2 hours worth of your videos.
Please, adopt my Korean subtitle. I have studied English to watch your video. Korean subtitle currently used is just translation results by google. I hope you to use my Korean subtitle. Always thanks for your videos.
@@blacktee31 i found that alot of good artists remember them by shape and function & they don't remember the names 😂 dont put too much effort to stuff names in your head!
So stoked I stumbled upon your Channel Proko! I've been devouring all the Gesture and motion episodes just like how you devoured that doughnut! It's always been a real fuzzy area for me that I never quite understood, but your teaching methods are so clear, concise and entertaining that over the course of 2 days I'm already understanding and seeing great improvements in my own drawings! I know this series is now quite a few years old, but are you still doing the student crits on any of these stages?
Sir: I would lie to thank you for the privilege of your time, your genius and your generousity regarding taking the time, making the time to teach people like me. I am disabled and I value the lessons to no end. Please continue, with respect and gratitude, R
Great video! As not being a native English speaker, even through this one has lots of vocabularies that I've never learned, I can still understand the idea perfectly. Well Done! Love all your videos and a big big thank you!
I just want to thank you for creating this videos :) I wish you are my anatomy teacher. I am about to finish my anatomy class for this semester but unfortunately, things that I learn are from self study (books and your videos!) Thanks again man.... -Fan from the Philippines
Even after studying the figure and illustrating for so many years i am still learning things in your video. Thank you for helping me to improve my techniques.
Stan, As a fellow perfectionist I'd like to point out that your lighting of the skeleton is mirrored that of the models. That being said, your free content is stellar with an excellent production value. Please keep up the excellent educational videos!
This are really helpful videos Thank You. I hope the next video will be completely dedicated to the leg anatomy because i cant for my life draw good looking legs
God damn I wish my school had an art teacher like you. All we have is a couple of women that stand there, tell you to do stuff, and wear badges that say "Art teacher."
Thank you proko! May i have one suggestion? Could you write ,in what order to watch these figure drawing videos? I think this landmark videos should be one of the first videos to watch..i got confused when i started to watch gesture before this..just a thought
These videos are really great, but the figure drawing series price is a bit steep for me. To show some support for all the help I've got from these videos I decided to purchase a pose package, I may buy another one (to have both genders) later on too. I would have liked to buy the premium figure drawing series as well, but 80$ seems pretty steep to me even if the lessons are clearly very valuable; one thing that also keeps me slightly skeptical about buying your courses is that while you're a traditional artist, I'm mainly a digital artist, which means I can't really make much use of some of your techniques (including shading with a pencil, or measuring with the pencil for examples)
Thank you for your support and input. Be careful though that kind of mindset will hold you back from your full potential. Digital, charcoal pencils, and oil paint are just tools. The important thing is learning the concepts, which is the same no matter what tools you use. You can learn how to use a new tool within a few months. The important stuff is what takes decades of experience.
Proko Thanks for the reply and insight. I already knew most of what you said though, my point was that you may be teaching a few tool-specific techniques (like pencil shading) I can't use since I work digitally, but the main thing that's holding me back is the budget. I tend to get particularly cheapskate when things cost more than 40$, it's a mentality that has evolved from hanging around on Steam too much, but it also has to do with "is a collection of videos really worth this much money?" But for example on tool specific techniques; the measurement video in this series was mostly based around measuring with a pencil which is mostly useless to me as a digital artist. (Then again when working digitally measurement tools are easy to come by) I have a suggestion for the price problem though, you could pull a cheap (but effective) stunt that's commonly used by game publishers and offer the content divided into pieces if one can't afford the whole package (known as DLC in the game world) this way perhaps I may be having problems with the gesture in particular, so I could buy just a gesture package rather than the whole figure drawing package, or in other words "no" package. Then of course (still) offer the full course in one slightly cheaper package than if one were to buy it in pieces. A viable alternative to lowering the actual price. I did not mean I'm skeptical about trying to learn from your videos; far from it! I've learned a ton from them already, and I'm working on a playlist with some of the best beginner level art tutorials around which is littered with your stuff and I personally consider them the most valuable things in my list right next to Rich Graysonn's "How to Draw Better" 1-4 videos. The most valuable info in my opinion is about how to think in planes from the shading video. It's amazing how much easier it is to draw certain things when you understand planes. P.S: Thanks a ton for all these awesome free tutorials, these are outrageously valuable to beginner artists and a great contribution to the art community, I look forward to seeing more and I truly cannot thank you enough :)
Molly Lacoursière You're right, i've never taken a course. Also I don't get your snarky comments at the end, i never claimed to be anything, the list is incomplete but it is a great starting point for someone who doesn't know how to draw. I'm not claiming to be a great or famous artist, hell I only just started a short while ago (this year!), but I'm learning fast and posting the best tutorials I find in that playlist so others can too. If I thought I was so great, I'd be making the tutorials, but I leave that to artists better than myself, like Proko. I don't make the tutorials, I put them together in a list as I find them, and look wide (on youtube that is) I do. There is no best way, but there are certain ways that are more efficient than others, all of which depend on your priorities. My list is prioritizing characters as the most important thing, but it would be useless to an artist that wants to draw atmospheres and environments (as is). You can't argue that Rich Graysonn's draw better videos are an exceptionally good place to start learning to draw, drawing the basic shapes over and over! If you can, I'd like you to point me out a better place to start and I'll gladly check. My logic here that this playlist is one of the best (by best I mean fastest and most efficient) ways to learn drawing is that it in fact is for me and I just started myself, I am following this list myself.
Cestarian Inhabitant There was nothing wrong about anything that you said. You never said that the videos weren't worth what Proko was charging. You just said they were too pricey for YOU and that you wanted to show support as much as you could. I don't know whats the problem with this Molly character.
Hey Stan, i fully decided to improve my drawing skills, and i want to dedicate 4 hours of my day to practice! But my doubt is: Can i do more than one exercise per day? Like do the gesture drawings and then move to the Bean in the same day? i'm kind of lost in that aspect, can you help me with that please?
Stan, when you get deeper into the anatomy will you talk about fat? The books I've read so far (Hampton, Loomis and Bridgman) only talk about muscle and bones.
Haha What I meant is that it's not such a common subject, usually when people talk about anatomy they just talk about bone and mucles. But nice to know you'll do it :)
I paused at 5:00 for research purposes and I noticed that on the female body the sacrum has four points instead three. The fourth point is higher and in the same line as the central lower point of the sacrum. This is due to the form of the female lumbar vertebrae and when the erector spinal starts on females, if you watch careful the model you can see it very clearly. Jokes besides I think this is important to know. Thank you very much for you videos. top content and very well communicated.
The front of the illac crest, the part where the femur connects to the pelvis, the ischium and the interactions between them and the buttocks is a really big headache (for me when portraying action or non standard poses ). Proko doesn't seem to have that problem. Of course, he's been drawing a lot more and has a lot more knowledge than me.
I have a question that I've been curious about for a long time: why do older human proportion guides (like from the 50's and earlier) place the belly button so high on the torso? Some of them have it so high it almost seems to line up with the bottom of the ribcage. It looks very inaccurate to me, and yet I see it on multiple guides from that era, and even on modern guides that most likely used these older guides as reference. I don't think I've seen many people, if any, with belly buttons that high. What's the deal with that? Was that just the physical ideal at that time?
Stan I gotta be honest. I'm having a lot of trouble finding the scapula in the references. Anybody have any tips? Love the classes. I'm a premium member :P
Stan, are you going to teach anatomy? muscles and all of that are difficult to learn from books since they are flat drawings trying to explain something that is three dimensional.
Get full access to the figure drawing course! Learn more at proko.com/f1g437a
I really want to thank Proko because he puts subtitle in his videos making it easier to people who have difficulties to understand oral English. It's really helpful for me !
this comment serves as a guide :
0:20 : The Landmarks
1:25 : Centerline of the Front
2:01 : Centerline of the Back
2:40 : Lateral Landmarks of the Front
3:35 : Anterior Superior Illiac Spine (ASIS)
4:00 : Lateral Landmarks of the Backs
5:13 : The Limbs
Ty
Thanks..this episode got me overwhelmed
There literally is on one else on youtube as informative in drawing anatomy as you, thank you
dude man I can't quite apply this yet but I can't believe how much better and more confident I got after watching like a total 2 hours worth of your videos.
That was A LOT of information there! Going to have to rewatch this one...
Please, adopt my Korean subtitle. I have studied English to watch your video. Korean subtitle currently used is just translation results by google. I hope you to use my Korean subtitle. Always thanks for your videos.
He listen and added Korean
yup, I'll do it just for you! and everyone else watching...
Ok comrade
BH Art ok товарищ
Is there a way to simplify this? I'm a lot confused by all the different names of the bones.
@@blacktee31 i found that alot of good artists remember them by shape and function & they don't remember the names 😂 dont put too much effort to stuff names in your head!
@@hesher4360 I'll try and keep that in mind. Thanks
Your helping me incredibly with my anime, I've never been this great at art. I should have definitely studied anatomy like this a while back!
so how is it bro after 7 years???
Yeah how far did you come yet?
How u doing with that anime bruh? ? ?
@@wilsonclaire3352 io wanna know too
Hows the anime going my man hit us up
"and finally, the pubic bone"
And that, my friends, is when I stopped touching my friend
@OccupieD Something for becoming something more I hope ?
Right in the best part?
Why doesn't this have millions of views? The explanation is really good and clear, and actually useful!
Your videos are too amazing! Ive seen no one on youtube breat anatomy down as good as you. Keep up the great work!
So stoked I stumbled upon your Channel Proko! I've been devouring all the Gesture and motion episodes just like how you devoured that doughnut! It's always been a real fuzzy area for me that I never quite understood, but your teaching methods are so clear, concise and entertaining that over the course of 2 days I'm already understanding and seeing great improvements in my own drawings!
I know this series is now quite a few years old, but are you still doing the student crits on any of these stages?
Sir: I would lie to thank you for the privilege of your time, your genius and your generousity regarding taking the time, making the time to teach people like me. I am disabled and I value the lessons to no end. Please continue, with respect and gratitude, R
Great video! As not being a native English speaker, even through this one has lots of vocabularies that I've never learned, I can still understand the idea perfectly. Well Done! Love all your videos and a big big thank you!
This is a great way to draw the figure! I've been doing it for some time now, thanks for sharing it.
amazing summary of the essential anatomical landmarks that many figure teachers don't know or can't explain this clearly and simply! thank you!
I just want to thank you for creating this videos :) I wish you are my anatomy teacher. I am about to finish my anatomy class for this semester but unfortunately, things that I learn are from self study (books and your videos!) Thanks again man....
-Fan from the Philippines
@Anthony Maisonave Good point!
This is by far theist helpful guide I've ever seen.
Thank you for all of your videos. You're part of the reason the internet is amazing.
Even after studying the figure and illustrating for so many years i am still learning things in your video. Thank you for helping me to improve my techniques.
Stan, As a fellow perfectionist I'd like to point out that your lighting of the skeleton is mirrored that of the models. That being said, your free content is stellar with an excellent production value. Please keep up the excellent educational videos!
I absolutely love your videos! You make me laugh while learning. Thank you so much!
5:48
Jesus, no wonder I can't draw knees. I always just thought I was too stupid to figure it out. Apparently not.
4:45 - That's why I like your lessons, Stan)
proko the god
go and cheak
seus vídeos de 7 anos atrás são como ouro pra mim
There are things I looked up every week, One is Mr. Prokopenko's new tutorial vids :)
1:13 that guy looks like he came straight outta renaissance painting
yeah lol
쇄골사이 목의 골ㅡ. 복장뼈 ㅡ치골
뒷쪽은 척추 (3방향으로 나뉨 각각 휘어짐 다름)
주요표지들: 쇄골 (어깨) 골반앞뼈 .겨드랑이
뒷면표지: 목.날개뼈.7번경추. 엉덩이 삼각형
팔다리: 관절 굽히면 삼각형임.
손목뼈는 회전
무릎.정강이뼈 발목뼈
고관절뼈
This are really helpful videos Thank You. I hope the next video will be completely dedicated to the leg anatomy because i cant for my life draw good looking legs
I've got your theme song STUCK IN MY HEAD.
Great videos. Thank you so much.
learning and getting spooked both at the same time
Thanks again! Amazingly simple and yet so complete! Your my hero!
loving these videos. informative without overwhelming you. me likely.
Invaluable. Thank you! Perfectly done video.
Thank you proko
God damn I wish my school had an art teacher like you. All we have is a couple of women that stand there, tell you to do stuff, and wear badges that say "Art teacher."
EXXACCTLLY BROOO AAA
That was genuinely informative, thank you.
Great info man. wonderful stuff
Thank you proko! May i have one suggestion? Could you write ,in what order to watch these figure drawing videos? I think this landmark videos should be one of the first videos to watch..i got confused when i started to watch gesture before this..just a thought
i think my brother is touching his friend's landmarks rn so watching this lecture on high volume and full attention was really good
+1 for eating a donut in this video.
Very helpful 👏🏽
JEEZ this is so helpful.
Another great one. Loving it :)
Seriously, though. You are a blessing.
These videos are really great, but the figure drawing series price is a bit steep for me. To show some support for all the help I've got from these videos I decided to purchase a pose package, I may buy another one (to have both genders) later on too.
I would have liked to buy the premium figure drawing series as well, but 80$ seems pretty steep to me even if the lessons are clearly very valuable; one thing that also keeps me slightly skeptical about buying your courses is that while you're a traditional artist, I'm mainly a digital artist, which means I can't really make much use of some of your techniques (including shading with a pencil, or measuring with the pencil for examples)
Thank you for your support and input. Be careful though that kind of mindset will hold you back from your full potential. Digital, charcoal pencils, and oil paint are just tools. The important thing is learning the concepts, which is the same no matter what tools you use. You can learn how to use a new tool within a few months. The important stuff is what takes decades of experience.
Proko Thanks for the reply and insight. I already knew most of what you said though, my point was that you may be teaching a few tool-specific techniques (like pencil shading) I can't use since I work digitally, but the main thing that's holding me back is the budget. I tend to get particularly cheapskate when things cost more than 40$, it's a mentality that has evolved from hanging around on Steam too much, but it also has to do with "is a collection of videos really worth this much money?"
But for example on tool specific techniques; the measurement video in this series was mostly based around measuring with a pencil which is mostly useless to me as a digital artist. (Then again when working digitally measurement tools are easy to come by)
I have a suggestion for the price problem though, you could pull a cheap (but effective) stunt that's commonly used by game publishers and offer the content divided into pieces if one can't afford the whole package (known as DLC in the game world) this way perhaps I may be having problems with the gesture in particular, so I could buy just a gesture package rather than the whole figure drawing package, or in other words "no" package. Then of course (still) offer the full course in one slightly cheaper package than if one were to buy it in pieces. A viable alternative to lowering the actual price.
I did not mean I'm skeptical about trying to learn from your videos; far from it! I've learned a ton from them already, and I'm working on a playlist with some of the best beginner level art tutorials around which is littered with your stuff and I personally consider them the most valuable things in my list right next to Rich Graysonn's "How to Draw Better" 1-4 videos. The most valuable info in my opinion is about how to think in planes from the shading video. It's amazing how much easier it is to draw certain things when you understand planes.
P.S: Thanks a ton for all these awesome free tutorials, these are outrageously valuable to beginner artists and a great contribution to the art community, I look forward to seeing more and I truly cannot thank you enough :)
Molly Lacoursière You're right, i've never taken a course.
Also I don't get your snarky comments at the end, i never claimed to be anything, the list is incomplete but it is a great starting point for someone who doesn't know how to draw. I'm not claiming to be a great or famous artist, hell I only just started a short while ago (this year!), but I'm learning fast and posting the best tutorials I find in that playlist so others can too. If I thought I was so great, I'd be making the tutorials, but I leave that to artists better than myself, like Proko. I don't make the tutorials, I put them together in a list as I find them, and look wide (on youtube that is) I do. There is no best way, but there are certain ways that are more efficient than others, all of which depend on your priorities. My list is prioritizing characters as the most important thing, but it would be useless to an artist that wants to draw atmospheres and environments (as is).
You can't argue that Rich Graysonn's draw better videos are an exceptionally good place to start learning to draw, drawing the basic shapes over and over! If you can, I'd like you to point me out a better place to start and I'll gladly check.
My logic here that this playlist is one of the best (by best I mean fastest and most efficient) ways to learn drawing is that it in fact is for me and I just started myself, I am following this list myself.
Cestarian Inhabitant There was nothing wrong about anything that you said. You never said that the videos weren't worth what Proko was charging. You just said they were too pricey for YOU and that you wanted to show support as much as you could. I don't know whats the problem with this Molly character.
Pamela Merrick Don't worry, I don't take it personally. Thanks :)
great vid stan!
One of my best,,,Best one yet Explain
Hey Stan, i fully decided to improve my drawing skills, and i want to dedicate 4 hours of my day to practice! But my doubt is: Can i do more than one exercise per day? Like do the gesture drawings and then move to the Bean in the same day? i'm kind of lost in that aspect, can you help me with that please?
+João Vicente Camargo yup. Mix it up. Keep it interesting and challenging.
Proko Thank you so much and happy new year!
@@joaovicente5168 so....
2 years. Did you get good or did you get bored/frustrated and didn't improve much.
Realy curious
VERY helpful. Thanks!
Very helpful!
Outstanding. You are great!!
thank you the subtitle help a lot
thank you so much for this
awesome vid !
muy bueno, very nice, wanderfull. tank you Proko!
this was supper helpful
Would love to see this, especially on endomorph characters.
Uncensored version? Like on patreon?
great job love you
謝謝 很有幫助
Thank you for your great job... Love it
really great!!
Stan, when you get deeper into the anatomy will you talk about fat? The books I've read so far (Hampton, Loomis and Bridgman) only talk about muscle and bones.
Haha What I meant is that it's not such a common subject, usually when people talk about anatomy they just talk about bone and mucles. But nice to know you'll do it :)
thank you so much now when i draw my human structure it look alot better
Ty!
Dear proko, thanks of advising drawing human body by MICHAEL HAMTON.
Scott Rogers Peck "Atlas of the human anatomy for the artist" has a whole chapter talking about fat, age and ethnic variations in anatomy :)
Really like your lessons, very clearly.
Interested to know where you're from?
I watched this while I was half asleep and I swear to god I saw equations at 6:17
Stan, is the premium content gonna be available as DVD (or bluRay) in the future?
Oh my god this is amazing 。you are legend
may science bless you
Thanks, I'll check it out;
i wait this long time!!!!
I paused at 5:00 for research purposes and I noticed that on the female body the sacrum has four points instead three. The fourth point is higher and in the same line as the central lower point of the sacrum. This is due to the form of the female lumbar vertebrae and when the erector spinal starts on females, if you watch careful the model you can see it very clearly.
Jokes besides I think this is important to know.
Thank you very much for you videos. top content and very well communicated.
Gracias MAESTRO
You described your original comment perfectly!
I just wanna know, who names these body parts
Agradeço pra quem legendou esse vídeo pra PTBR
The front of the illac crest, the part where the femur connects to the pelvis, the ischium and the interactions between them and the buttocks is a really big headache (for me when portraying action or non standard poses ). Proko doesn't seem to have that problem. Of course, he's been drawing a lot more and has a lot more knowledge than me.
I LOVE YOU. :) Thank u!
Awesome video. I am also a art instructor.
I have a question that I've been curious about for a long time: why do older human proportion guides (like from the 50's and earlier) place the belly button so high on the torso? Some of them have it so high it almost seems to line up with the bottom of the ribcage.
It looks very inaccurate to me, and yet I see it on multiple guides from that era, and even on modern guides that most likely used these older guides as reference. I don't think I've seen many people, if any, with belly buttons that high. What's the deal with that? Was that just the physical ideal at that time?
i download ALL your video
Stan I gotta be honest. I'm having a lot of trouble finding the scapula in the references. Anybody have any tips? Love the classes. I'm a premium member :P
As legendas em PT BR tão sensacionais kkskks parabéns à quem fez
eu fiz, de nada kkkkkk
1:06 would a random kid on the street work?
I hear sirens
Are these tutorials available without the music?
Nope!
Sir when i buy the premium stuff, is it only for a month or permanent?
Stan, are you going to teach anatomy? muscles and all of that are difficult to learn from books since they are flat drawings trying to explain something that is three dimensional.
I am reading Hampton's Book, and he talk about landmark too.
Dose anyone know a good art book for learning Skeltons I’m poor I can’t afford 100+ for lessons
God bless you. :')
아니ㅋㅋㅋㅋ 오프닝 음악까지 자막으로 표현했네
What is a micro landmark please?
how many months or years will it take for me to improve if I am to practice 3-5 hours a day?
Well how are you doing?
@@xholoxc014 average. Not really focusing much on drawing for now
@@aqirarin4657 Can i see your progress after 3 years?
@@gnd8264 most of my arts are in my Tumblr or twitter, but the recent one I have posted was on may
@@aqirarin4657 What is you account