I’m not in a position to offer any advice but this reminds me of a personal observation: I am a slow artist both drawing and painting (with or without fussy details). In an attempt to help me do urban sketching, I have done a very quick pen sketch every day fir the past 6 months. I aim to complete inside 15 mins. No paint just ink and cross hatching. It has helped me to only focus on key details and then imply everything else using hatching. It has also helped me to stop being so precious about my drawings and a more free style is starting to emerge.
Almost all artists making RUclips demos use methods they are so familiar with that they can do them in their sleep. I much more appreciate that you are willing to explore processes that are not yet comfortable with and show yourself making discoveries (which I know you are so driven by, as I am). Thank you!
You are an excellent art teacher, have been searching for a beginner watercolor instructor and I’m glad I found you and have stayed here for a while now. Nice to see your wife and family too. I wish to see more of these videos. Thanks.
Every once in a while, you make a video that *nails* whatever problem I'm having with my art at the time, and this is one of those videos! For some reason, I am an extremely detail-oriented person, and my artwork reflects that, to the point of being antiseptic most of the time. I sometimes don't finish drawings because I get so bogged down in the details. Your description of what you're doing to loosen up your style really resonates with me, and I plan to incorporate it into my own art. So, thank you (yet again) for making these videos!
I've learned so much from your videos. You managed to pull me from a really dark place. I was always fussing and focusing on details until glaucoma and multiple eye surgeries dictated otherwise. I thought my art life was over (it kinda was, people stopped calling). I'm on a new art journey because of you and can't thank you enough.
buenas... I'm Pedro, from the south of Brazil... your video is perfect.. it encourages me to move on... I'm an architect with 70 years old... trained in the technical and correct trait... I'm trying to get rid of it all.... the urban sketch is a form of freedom, but it is necessary to filter things... after all, as they say: less is more... and, most of all, the use of china ink, watercolor pencil , the tubes, white gouache, etc... all this is a universe of materials....thanks for your simplicity.
Having been in this area for twelve years, Your rendering of their architecture of the south is just perfect. And your description of your strokes as dots and little lines is dead on. Thank you again for your good teaching.
This challenge for you has always been an obstacle I identify with. I look forward to learning from your style direction and solution. Happy anniversary to you and your wife! ♥
Brenda Swenson... ahhh. Beautiful. Details are not the devil. You do what you do in a beautiful way. Embrace your love of details. It’s ok. Loving this video. Consciously leaving out details..painful.. but your skills and talent can do it,
Well, I'm not abandoning my love of details. I'm just looking for a more accessible and practical way to do urban sketching. Emphasis on the word "sketching." Technical subjects on location can be off-putting.
Ok hopefully you don’t take this as teachy- I’m you. Details. Full blown rendering. That’s me! And I admire all the same artists styles you do! I Joined my local urban sketchers group and wow has it taught me to loosen up. We do a 30 second warm up sketch. Let’s just say -my pen never leaves the paper- and I find myself pleasantly surprised at the outcome. Then we do a 5 minute and a 10 minute. Only then do we delve off into our one hour and a throw down art show on the pavement. I have also found that using a pen that has different pressure thicknesses keeps the time spent on contrasting areas minimal and I’m loving the direction my art is going. Now to convince myself that studio time is valuable also! Lol. Challenge you to do an ornate scene like this in 30 sec, 5 min, etc. Let your naturally skilled ability to draw translate into something fresh!
Thank you so much for showing examples of the style you are pushing yourself toward. I like watching your videos at 'normal' speed, then I often go back and watch it again at a slower setting to really be able to see what you are doing. The concept of drawing detail then leaving some of that behind in the painting portion was very illuminating.
Really enjoyable insight Steve, I am at that same point you are with sketching and admire the work of those you showed, marking them as indicators. look forward to more, regards Paul Apps
Having found you this morning for the very first time, I can't begin to tell you how refreshing it was to listen to you share your challenges with regards towards relaxing or loosening your style. You are obviously a superb artist. Myself, as a beginner find myself struggling toward the very same aim. Your rendering of the famous building in Savannah turned out absolutely beautiful. I am honored to be one of your new subscribers and look forward to seeing all of your tutorials!
I love all of your sketches & paintings. Personally I do prefer the tight & realistic style. But loose is lovely too. Glad you both had a lovely vacation & congratulations on your anniversary. Thank you for all of your tutorials 😊
Happy anniversary to you & your lovely wife 💕 love your channel. You are a great teacher & an inspiration 💖 The artwork came out beautiful 😍 congrats & thanks for sharing.
The opening photo of you and your wife is so sweet. You're a lovely couple. I have about the same art background as you do and that is why I am drawn to watercolor in my "old age" (I'm considerably older than you are). It's difficult not to figure out when to stop with detail and to learn to be inaccurate and interesting. Many years behind a drawing table (no computers when I started) taught me to be precise and complete in my art. Now, I want to be lose & leave something to the imagination of the viewer. Thanks for sharing so much of yourself.
Love what you did! I am very familiar with Savannah and have friends who live in the historical district. Haven/t been there since I started painting 3 years ago. Definitely need to go for a visit. I am with you trying to be looser with my work. Thanks for your tutorials.
Yes, if you want details…I’m your girl, I can totally relate to your frustrations of achieving looseness. I too studied commercial art and I am a great value/ contrast copy artist. But…struggle sooo much when it comes to loosening up, I made a plein air set up with my camera tripod to go out and sketch, trying not to labor on details, quick studies. Thank you for your honesty, and explanation of your process of retraining yourself in a different style…dots, dashes and broken lines, and keeping in mind where the color will subtly fill in the needed details. A total change in what my mind was trained to see and do, it’s a real struggle.😌
wow i thought it was just me that struggled with loosening up my work, between you & the comments here i guess not. i started drawing before grade school with a regular pencil with eraser & typing paper i could beg from my mom a piece at a time. i remember working so hard to make everything perfect, till it was picture perfect (in my eyes & others too from what they said) when i got to that point, but then i realized that artists do not use a camera so all that work was for naught because then i had to find a way to loosen up what i had worked so hard to acomplish. i worked for years with not much to show because if i loosened up enough then my work no longer had that look of realism yet be loose enough to not be mistaken for something traced from a photo. i still drew every day but didn't get any improvement till one day someone lent me a paperback that was illustrated & i loved this guys work so i thought i want to draw like that yet i had promised the book back the next day, so i got out my pencils, pens & paper & started copying his work, not tracing it but trying to put each line just like he did, which considering how i had taught myself to draw was simple for me. i drew every picture in that book, gave the book back then started drawing copies of my copies until i had the gist of it. it took me awhile but i got to where his style had slipped to the side & my copies of my copies looked like something i didn't reconize as his other than the subjects & i could move on to just looking at an object & draw it in this new style. it started his style but definitly ended up a mix of his, mine & something else. i know lots of people today call that cheating/plagerism but i never sold, gave any of my copies away or showed them to anyone & today they don't exist anymore. i can't even imagine him seeing any of my working & thinking it's his style at all. what i am suggesting is if you are stuck in a style you no longer want to dominate your work you can easily break it by copying other styles that you want to be able to do but cannot change any other way. copy the style you want to learn until it becomes natural to you then let your own style fill in some of it till it becomes something else that is you. what you are actually doing is changing the way you see things, not just how you draw them. i am not sure this would work for all styles one wants to break out of/into but it did for me & worth a try. it seems that for those wanting to break free of drafting precision this way works & yes i did the whole drafting thing too. 😉 btw steeve, your rendings are super awesome.
I have been trying to loosen up also. As a photo realistic artist, I think because that is what always got me the compliments and no criticism, I have stuck with it. But the older I get the more frustrated I find myself getting at trying for perfection. I am not finding the enjoyment I once did in art, just anxiety and pressure for perfection. Your voice and instruction style has calmed me even with my total failures in learning watercolor I am having more fun. I needed this video for I too am searching for a new style! Thanks!
Thanks. For me new styles can just be more tools in the toolbox. Doesn't mean I will always paint in the same style. In this case I wanted a more practical style for quickly painting technical subjects as you would fine in Urban scenes.
Great job, Steve! I feel the same way about getting it right. I don’t have years of experience doing that, so maybe it will be easier to break out of it but I think you did a great job!
Oh wow ~ urban sketching. That will be fun to watch. I chuckle when you say how you are simplifying because you have a lot of detail in that little painting. The urban sketchers I have seen simplify the scenes so that they can paint very quickly. Most don’t have much time to catch the scene and especially to get the lighting right before the weather and sun changes. I have learned to draw basics and to use my brush to fill in the lines etc. with paint. I know a lot of people that heavily use the pen but I prefer the opposite. I also love to apply the paint and watch it create it’s magic by mingling together. For instance - on the building using two or three different colors to create that magic. That’s beautiful watercolor to me. Some use gouache or acrylic paints too. I’ve never had the desire to use those. I just love Brenda Swenson! She’s one of my favorite artists. I really study her work hoping I can improve on my techniques. I’m excited to watch you on this journey! You are such a beautiful detailed artist. It will be fun to see your work in a looser fashion. Thanks for a fun video. And Happy Anniversary to you and your wife! We celebrate our 43rd next month.
thank you so much for this video. I'm just a beginner, I can use all the encouragement that I can get. I really like your finished result. It gives me enough courage to try it out. just try out, mess up and repeat. It doesn't have to be perfect. I can't draw , but I would love to.
I'm very interested to see your new direction, and really like the peek inside your trip. Your wife looks lovely, and the 'lite' meal out delicious. Ty for the instruction!
I totally understand the struggle you describe. I compare it (loosely) to my study of the piano. Because of formal study early on, I struggle to ‘lose the boundaries’ and now I’m starting my watercolor journey. Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
Love this! Just realized yesterday that you are from SC when I fell into your train station demo, which then lead me to this. I live in the green mailbox development on HHI and go to Savannah monthly for my Blick fix. Am looking for urban sketching information as I'm planning a trip to London and the Cotswold district so this was perfect. Thank you for sharing all that you do!
There are plenty of RUclips artists that specialise in loose style urban sketching. I find myself more drawn to the loose style, probably because I don't have any artistic background. However, being an ex-engineer, I do tend to overwork my sketches and paintings. This is something I'm gradually learning to control when to use more detail, and where. A very basic underdrawing, or even none at all, can be a good way to break free of too much detail. Another thing to try, is draw and paint with your other hand! Some artists leave the line work until the end, that way it's just added to enhance certain shapes and edges. The painting is peared down to basic shape, value contrast, focal point and general composition. Having said all that, I love your work, it's very balanced and captures the feel of the subject as well as the details that your training and previous experience has helped you hone to a high level of skill. I'd be pleased to sketch or paint something half as good as yours.
Good stuff Minder Mr Steve. I know exactly what You mean, when I did my School Leaving exams I sketched an early morning market “live “ and freely in pencil and got a good grade. I never drew again for 50 years, after a working life of dotting all the I ‘s and crossing all the T’s my ability to sketch without fear has vanished . I am working on it.
I knew you were a commercial illustrator but I didn’t anticipate the technical detail in the mechanical pieces you showed us. I have mad respect for your skills! ❤️
I was starting to think I must still be bad at art because I can't replicate that loose style so many people seem to do so well. This was a great refresher to see that we can learn a lot by trying, but that it still takes time. Nobody is naturally going to paint a picture like that without any practice!
Love this piece! I was so tickled to watch this video as I've been wanting to include more architectural elements or a house or some building that fascinates me make or just try my hand at urban sketching. I'm not very good at perspective though and will likely have to do take photos at first and then do a good bit of tracing to get the overall structure(s) in proper perspective. Otherwise I do a lot of moderately abstract art with some realism and I love to do florals. So I think the more formal lines & shapes of architectural elements attract me when I feel the need for something with more boundaries. And I love the beauty of old historical homes too..they're so beautiful with so much grace. Thanks so much!
On one of our road trips we visited Savannah one summer. I traveled with my easel setup and had setup in the square opposite of the Mercer house. It's not the best of work but truly a memorable experience. The house tour was also grand.
Steve, it’s so refreshing to hear about the frustrations and challenges of what you’re taking on as a professional artist. I do love architecture, especially historical, but these days I have trouble drawing a straight line. 😳 Maybe non-straight lines will be a part of my style. 🧐 Your example inspires me to try architectural drawing for watercolor again. And best wishes to you and your wife on your anniversary.🎉
I love Brenda Swenson too. I find Delphine Prilloud very interesting. And I hope you went to Fish Haul Beach while in HH. A beautiful place for reference photos.
Haven't dropped in to check paintings out since I left for Savanah to paint the city. Got as far as Rocky Mount and spent 3 days in ICU. And 5 more days on ward. The beginning to the end of mobility. This makes me sad but I appreciate an artists view of that city. Thanks..
Happy Anniversary 🥂 to you & your wife! Savannah is a fabulous city, especially with the architecture, gardens, & parks everywhere. Definitely there’s so much fun to see, do, and a wonderful Plein Air setting. Finding a style to paint has been a bit of a challenge for me as well. I have enjoyed watching your videos and style of painting landscapes and architecture/buildings for years now. This is definitely a wonderful surprise to me that you are challenged by learning a new or different style, in the fact you still make it look so easy on the paper. This was a wonderful, inspirational video. Thanks for sharing this with us.
This has been so so helpful. I belong to an urban sketching group and have felt very frustrated with my sketches-straight lines, too much detail etc etc. It is heartening to know that you a professional have also experienced frustration at developing your own style. I will try again and no give up to develop my style. Thank you 🙏🏼
What a great video, thanks for taking us on this journey! I really loved the pencil/ ink sketch stage and was mentally saying “just swipe in some color!” I struggle with this too, as an architect my sketches are always very tight and detailed. I would love to loosen up!
Your artwork is always beautiful, intimidatingly so. I have watched several line and wash videos and found them always too raw until I saw your videos, very inspiring. I may just have a go at it, using your videos as an example.
I'm someone who can't draw, has no artistic talent, barely picks up my art stuff once a month.. but still really wants to learn to use watercolors. This channel always inspires me to try, and to see your process like this is really very helpful. Thanks.
The last half of your first sentence speaks to the first have in a cause-effect way. A friend of mine is fond of saying "The first 2000 sketches are the hardest" and he's right. Until you've got those under your belt, however, don't beat yourself up about not having talent. Of course you don't. You haven't developed it yet. Talent isn't in your genes; it's in your sweat.
Well done, you showed remarkable restraint, and the result is lovely. Do you know the work of Ian Fennelly? He’s a British urban sketcher/watercolourist, and the king of ‘loose’ - I just love his use of colour. I’m British too, but I’ve also been to Savannah and on the historic tram tour - great fun, and it is indeed a beautiful city.
That was just the style I love in urban sketching. I followed a course with Alex Hillkurtz and really enjoyed it. However, still hard not to add too much. Your suggestion of dots and bits of lines helps a lot. I’m inspired again. Thanks Steve.
Happy anniversary to you both. I've watched a lot of your videos and really appreciate them. I marvel at your work, especially when you toss paint on the paper and turn it into something beautiful. I started painting about 3 months ago. I had a chuckle at this video. I understand what your doing with your effort to reduce your technical approach, while I'm trying to increase mine and still working at pronouncing Quinacridone. lol Great video. Thank you.
Thanks. A highly detailed technical approach is completely valid in the right situation. Just not for me while trying to quickly capture a subject on location.
Your work is awesome btw!! I think what could help you to loosen up on the sketching is at a time take the grip of the pencil or the pen higher. It's gonna make you move faster and do more gesture lines. It takes you away from that intricate precision!! Hope it helps a bit!!
Hi Steve, as much of a struggle as this was for you...it turned out to be delightful. Not too much detail and everything in it's proper place. The trick we all face is trying to do that on location in a timely manner. As always I love your work, whether in studio or on location and look forward to your videos.....🤗
I’m not in a position to offer any advice but this reminds me of a personal observation: I am a slow artist both drawing and painting (with or without fussy details). In an attempt to help me do urban sketching, I have done a very quick pen sketch every day fir the past 6 months. I aim to complete inside 15 mins. No paint just ink and cross hatching. It has helped me to only focus on key details and then imply everything else using hatching. It has also helped me to stop being so precious about my drawings and a more free style is starting to emerge.
Ian Fennelly is my favorite urban sketcher. He doesn't worry about being architecturally correct and I love that kind of freedom.
Thankyou!!!
Happy Anniversary! Thanks for all you do for us minders!
Almost all artists making RUclips demos use methods they are so familiar with that they can do them in their sleep. I much more appreciate that you are willing to explore processes that are not yet comfortable with and show yourself making discoveries (which I know you are so driven by, as I am). Thank you!
Unbelievable detail! Beautiful!!!❤
I really enjoyed watching this video as I do all of your videos I really liked the style and your painting
Nice style and beautiful draw. After some years I'm still searching for a style...
Loosening up your style while retaining that realism and just knowing when to say that's enough is hard. Thank you for another great video.
Agreed. Especially when you've been in the habit of taking your time and not holding back on the detail and realism...for years. Thanks Michael!
I love how this came out. TFS
You are an excellent art teacher, have been searching for a beginner watercolor instructor and I’m glad I found you and have stayed here for a while now. Nice to see your wife and family too. I wish to see more of these videos. Thanks.
just fantastic - really a push in the right direction for sure. just amazing. I love thiswork,
This painting/sketch is so beautiful. To me, it's a masterclass work..👍👍👍
Beautiful piece! Thank you for the detailed explanation.
Every once in a while, you make a video that *nails* whatever problem I'm having with my art at the time, and this is one of those videos! For some reason, I am an extremely detail-oriented person, and my artwork reflects that, to the point of being antiseptic most of the time. I sometimes don't finish drawings because I get so bogged down in the details. Your description of what you're doing to loosen up your style really resonates with me, and I plan to incorporate it into my own art. So, thank you (yet again) for making these videos!
Happy Anniversary!
Glad to see your wife is up and about.
I love your sketchbook illustrations!
I've learned so much from your videos. You managed to pull me from a really dark place. I was always fussing and focusing on details until glaucoma and multiple eye surgeries dictated otherwise. I thought my art life was over (it kinda was, people stopped calling). I'm on a new art journey because of you and can't thank you enough.
Fantastic!
I actually like your attention to detail and think you are very talented. Thank you for sharing your skills with us. Erica from South Australia
buenas... I'm Pedro, from the south of Brazil... your video is perfect.. it encourages me to move on... I'm an architect with 70 years old... trained in the technical and correct trait... I'm trying to get rid of it all.... the urban sketch is a form of freedom, but it is necessary to filter things... after all, as they say: less is more... and, most of all, the use of china ink, watercolor pencil , the tubes, white gouache, etc... all this is a universe of materials....thanks for your simplicity.
Having been in this area for twelve years, Your rendering of their architecture of the south is just perfect. And your description of your strokes as dots and little lines is dead on. Thank you again for your good teaching.
I *love* the Snoopy shirt!
My mind is blown by your work. If I can become half the artist you are I'd be over the moon - just stunning.
Loved this video, thank you for sharing your thoughts and process.
This challenge for you has always been an obstacle I identify with. I look forward to learning from your style direction and solution. Happy anniversary to you and your wife! ♥
Really good, the eye does fill in the gaps,, I must try saying this as I work. Thankyou.
Beautifully done
Great well written book as is your work great to see!
Brenda Swenson... ahhh. Beautiful. Details are not the devil. You do what you do in a beautiful way. Embrace your love of details. It’s ok. Loving this video. Consciously leaving out details..painful.. but your skills and talent can do it,
Well, I'm not abandoning my love of details. I'm just looking for a more accessible and practical way to do urban sketching. Emphasis on the word "sketching." Technical subjects on location can be off-putting.
Ok hopefully you don’t take this as teachy- I’m you. Details. Full blown rendering. That’s me! And I admire all the same artists styles you do! I Joined my local urban sketchers group and wow has it taught me to loosen up. We do a 30 second warm up sketch. Let’s just say -my pen never leaves the paper- and I find myself pleasantly surprised at the outcome. Then we do a 5 minute and a 10 minute. Only then do we delve off into our one hour and a throw down art show on the pavement. I have also found that using a pen that has different pressure thicknesses keeps the time spent on contrasting areas minimal and I’m loving the direction my art is going. Now to convince myself that studio time is valuable also! Lol. Challenge you to do an ornate scene like this in 30 sec, 5 min, etc. Let your naturally skilled ability to draw translate into something fresh!
I love this!
Those are great ideas to try out, thanks.
This is my favorite style. The one that I want to master. You’ve done a wonderful job. It is lovely.
Appreciate your approach and discussion on this. Also appreciated seeing some of your past commercial work.
Steve you should check out Peter Sheeler, he is one of my favorite quick sketch and water color artists!
Beautiful!! I can’t wait to see more!
I hope you film painting that heron. What a great subject.
Thank you so much for showing examples of the style you are pushing yourself toward. I like watching your videos at 'normal' speed, then I often go back and watch it again at a slower setting to really be able to see what you are doing. The concept of drawing detail then leaving some of that behind in the painting portion was very illuminating.
Really enjoyable insight Steve, I am at that same point you are with sketching and admire the work of those you showed, marking them as indicators. look forward to more, regards Paul Apps
Love this, and I love your style.
Having found you this morning for the very first time, I can't begin to tell you how refreshing it was to listen to you share your challenges with regards towards relaxing or loosening your style. You are obviously a superb artist. Myself, as a beginner find myself struggling toward the very same aim. Your rendering of the famous building in Savannah turned out absolutely beautiful. I am honored to be one of your new subscribers and look forward to seeing all of your tutorials!
Welcome aboard!
I love all of your sketches & paintings. Personally I do prefer the tight & realistic style. But loose is lovely too. Glad you both had a lovely vacation & congratulations on your anniversary. Thank you for all of your tutorials 😊
Thanks. Not changing my style really. Just want a more accessible and practical style for urban sketching.
Happy anniversary to you & your lovely wife 💕 love your channel. You are a great teacher & an inspiration 💖 The artwork came out beautiful 😍 congrats & thanks for sharing.
Gorgeous!
The opening photo of you and your wife is so sweet. You're a lovely couple. I have about the same art background as you do and that is why I am drawn to watercolor in my "old age" (I'm considerably older than you are). It's difficult not to figure out when to stop with detail and to learn to be inaccurate and interesting. Many years behind a drawing table (no computers when I started) taught me to be precise and complete in my art. Now, I want to be lose & leave something to the imagination of the viewer. Thanks for sharing so much of yourself.
Love what you did! I am very familiar with Savannah and have friends who live in the historical district. Haven/t been there since I started painting 3 years ago. Definitely need to go for a visit. I am with you trying to be looser with my work. Thanks for your tutorials.
Yes, if you want details…I’m your girl, I can totally relate to your frustrations of achieving looseness. I too studied commercial art and I am a great value/ contrast copy artist. But…struggle sooo much when it comes to loosening up, I made a plein air set up with my camera tripod to go out and sketch, trying not to labor on details, quick studies. Thank you for your honesty, and explanation of your process of retraining yourself in a different style…dots, dashes and broken lines, and keeping in mind where the color will subtly fill in the needed details. A total change in what my mind was trained to see and do, it’s a real struggle.😌
Wow! This is beautiful! I know this house. Your drawing is even more beautiful than the actual house!
wow i thought it was just me that struggled with loosening up my work, between you & the comments here i guess not. i started drawing before grade school with a regular pencil with eraser & typing paper i could beg from my mom a piece at a time. i remember working so hard to make everything perfect, till it was picture perfect (in my eyes & others too from what they said) when i got to that point, but then i realized that artists do not use a camera so all that work was for naught because then i had to find a way to loosen up what i had worked so hard to acomplish. i worked for years with not much to show because if i loosened up enough then my work no longer had that look of realism yet be loose enough to not be mistaken for something traced from a photo. i still drew every day but didn't get any improvement till one day someone lent me a paperback that was illustrated & i loved this guys work so i thought i want to draw like that yet i had promised the book back the next day, so i got out my pencils, pens & paper & started copying his work, not tracing it but trying to put each line just like he did, which considering how i had taught myself to draw was simple for me. i drew every picture in that book, gave the book back then started drawing copies of my copies until i had the gist of it. it took me awhile but i got to where his style had slipped to the side & my copies of my copies looked like something i didn't reconize as his other than the subjects & i could move on to just looking at an object & draw it in this new style. it started his style but definitly ended up a mix of his, mine & something else. i know lots of people today call that cheating/plagerism but i never sold, gave any of my copies away or showed them to anyone & today they don't exist anymore. i can't even imagine him seeing any of my working & thinking it's his style at all. what i am suggesting is if you are stuck in a style you no longer want to dominate your work you can easily break it by copying other styles that you want to be able to do but cannot change any other way. copy the style you want to learn until it becomes natural to you then let your own style fill in some of it till it becomes something else that is you. what you are actually doing is changing the way you see things, not just how you draw them. i am not sure this would work for all styles one wants to break out of/into but it did for me & worth a try. it seems that for those wanting to break free of drafting precision this way works & yes i did the whole drafting thing too. 😉 btw steeve, your rendings are super awesome.
I have been trying to loosen up also. As a photo realistic artist, I think because that is what always got me the compliments and no criticism, I have stuck with it. But the older I get the more frustrated I find myself getting at trying for perfection. I am not finding the enjoyment I once did in art, just anxiety and pressure for perfection. Your voice and instruction style has calmed me even with my total failures in learning watercolor I am having more fun. I needed this video for I too am searching for a new style! Thanks!
Thanks. For me new styles can just be more tools in the toolbox. Doesn't mean I will always paint in the same style. In this case I wanted a more practical style for quickly painting technical subjects as you would fine in Urban scenes.
As always amazing and very informative.
Great job, Steve! I feel the same way about getting it right. I don’t have years of experience doing that, so maybe it will be easier to break out of it but I think you did a great job!
I love Brenda Swenson ❤
I love it!
Oh wow ~ urban sketching. That will be fun to watch. I chuckle when you say how you are simplifying because you have a lot of detail in that little painting. The urban sketchers I have seen simplify the scenes so that they can paint very quickly. Most don’t have much time to catch the scene and especially to get the lighting right before the weather and sun changes. I have learned to draw basics and to use my brush to fill in the lines etc. with paint. I know a lot of people that heavily use the pen but I prefer the opposite. I also love to apply the paint and watch it create it’s magic by mingling together. For instance - on the building using two or three different colors to create that magic. That’s beautiful watercolor to me. Some use gouache or acrylic paints too. I’ve never had the desire to use those.
I just love Brenda Swenson! She’s one of my favorite artists. I really study her work hoping I can improve on my techniques.
I’m excited to watch you on this journey! You are such a beautiful detailed artist. It will be fun to see your work in a looser fashion.
Thanks for a fun video. And Happy Anniversary to you and your wife! We celebrate our 43rd next month.
thank you so much for this video. I'm just a beginner, I can use all the encouragement that I can get. I really like your finished result. It gives me enough courage to try it out. just try out, mess up and repeat. It doesn't have to be perfect. I can't draw , but I would love to.
I like your brush. Impressively pointy.
I'm very interested to see your new direction, and really like the peek inside your trip. Your wife looks lovely, and the 'lite' meal out delicious. Ty for the instruction!
Ahhh
I totally understand the struggle you describe. I compare it (loosely) to my study of the piano. Because of formal study early on, I struggle to ‘lose the boundaries’ and now I’m starting my watercolor journey. Thanks for sharing your thoughts.
This is the art I wish I could conquer. Thank you for this lesson and input. Another beginner and it is refreshing watching and listening to you.
Beautiful!!
Love this! Just realized yesterday that you are from SC when I fell into your train station demo, which then lead me to this. I live in the green mailbox development on HHI
and go to Savannah monthly for my Blick fix. Am looking for urban sketching information as I'm planning a trip to London and the Cotswold district so this was perfect. Thank you for sharing all that you do!
Very cool!
There are plenty of RUclips artists that specialise in loose style urban sketching. I find myself more drawn to the loose style, probably because I don't have any artistic background.
However, being an ex-engineer, I do tend to overwork my sketches and paintings. This is something I'm gradually learning to control when to use more detail, and where.
A very basic underdrawing, or even none at all, can be a good way to break free of too much detail. Another thing to try, is draw and paint with your other hand!
Some artists leave the line work until the end, that way it's just added to enhance certain shapes and edges. The painting is peared down to basic shape, value contrast, focal point and general composition.
Having said all that, I love your work, it's very balanced and captures the feel of the subject as well as the details that your training and previous experience has helped you hone to a high level of skill. I'd be pleased to sketch or paint something half as good as yours.
Really beautiful!
Good stuff Minder Mr Steve. I know exactly what You mean, when I did my School Leaving exams I sketched an early morning market “live “ and freely in pencil and got a good grade. I never drew again for 50 years, after a working life of dotting all the I ‘s and crossing all the T’s my ability to sketch without fear has vanished . I am working on it.
I knew you were a commercial illustrator but I didn’t anticipate the technical detail in the mechanical pieces you showed us. I have mad respect for your skills! ❤️
Thank you for the lovely pictures, loved the heron. Still intend to try your accidental pen and watercolour sketches.
Please do!
I was starting to think I must still be bad at art because I can't replicate that loose style so many people seem to do so well. This was a great refresher to see that we can learn a lot by trying, but that it still takes time. Nobody is naturally going to paint a picture like that without any practice!
Love this piece! I was so tickled to watch this video as I've been wanting to include more architectural elements or a house or some building that fascinates me make or just try my hand at urban sketching. I'm not very good at perspective though and will likely have to do take photos at first and then do a good bit of tracing to get the overall structure(s) in proper perspective. Otherwise I do a lot of moderately abstract art with some realism and I love to do florals. So I think the more formal lines & shapes of architectural elements attract me when I feel the need for something with more boundaries. And I love the beauty of old historical homes too..they're so beautiful with so much grace. Thanks so much!
Thanks Steve very helpful to think of it in terms of dots dashes and scribbles.
Beautiful and very inspiring! Thank you.
On one of our road trips we visited Savannah one summer. I traveled with my easel setup and had setup in the square opposite of the Mercer house. It's not the best of work but truly a memorable experience. The house tour was also grand.
Love this video, plus loved all the examples you showed from your sketchbooks
Steve, it’s so refreshing to hear about the frustrations and challenges of what you’re taking on as a professional artist. I do love architecture, especially historical, but these days I have trouble drawing a straight line. 😳 Maybe non-straight lines will be a part of my style. 🧐 Your example inspires me to try architectural drawing for watercolor again. And best wishes to you and your wife on your anniversary.🎉
Thanks Nancy!
I love Brenda Swenson too. I find Delphine
Prilloud very interesting. And I hope you went to Fish Haul Beach while in HH. A beautiful place for reference photos.
Haven't dropped in to check paintings out since I left for Savanah to paint the city. Got as far as Rocky Mount and spent 3 days in ICU. And 5 more days on ward. The beginning to the end of mobility. This makes me sad but I appreciate an artists view of that city. Thanks..
Please do more Urban Sketching tutorials!! This was a great video.
Happy Anniversary 🥂 to you & your wife! Savannah is a fabulous city, especially with the architecture, gardens, & parks everywhere. Definitely there’s so much fun to see, do, and a wonderful Plein Air setting. Finding a style to paint has been a bit of a challenge for me as well. I have enjoyed watching your videos and style of painting landscapes and architecture/buildings for years now. This is definitely a wonderful surprise to me that you are challenged by learning a new or different style, in the fact you still make it look so easy on the paper. This was a wonderful, inspirational video. Thanks for sharing this with us.
Happy Anniversary to you both!
This has been so so helpful. I belong to an urban sketching group and have felt very frustrated with my sketches-straight lines, too much detail etc etc. It is heartening to know that you a professional have also experienced frustration at developing your own style. I will try again and no give up to develop my style. Thank you 🙏🏼
Lovely to see you and your family having a fun vacation. I loved the drawing & painting, I think you nailed that looser, less detailed style!
What a great video, thanks for taking us on this journey! I really loved the pencil/ ink sketch stage and was mentally saying “just swipe in some color!” I struggle with this too, as an architect my sketches are always very tight and detailed. I would love to loosen up!
Mashallah nice 👌
Your artwork is always beautiful, intimidatingly so. I have watched several line and wash videos and found them always too raw until I saw your videos, very inspiring. I may just have a go at it, using your videos as an example.
I found this really interesting. Great food for thought. Thank you!
I'm someone who can't draw, has no artistic talent, barely picks up my art stuff once a month.. but still really wants to learn to use watercolors. This channel always inspires me to try, and to see your process like this is really very helpful. Thanks.
The last half of your first sentence speaks to the first have in a cause-effect way. A friend of mine is fond of saying "The first 2000 sketches are the hardest" and he's right. Until you've got those under your belt, however, don't beat yourself up about not having talent. Of course you don't. You haven't developed it yet. Talent isn't in your genes; it's in your sweat.
I looooove your work. Thank you 💕 subscribed
It came out very nice. It's hard to simplify such ornate structures. You did a superb job!
Inspiring Steve
Such beautiful work - thanks so much for sharing it.
Thank you for another great video. I try to loosen up and find I can’t! I'll try it again after watching this!
Well done, you showed remarkable restraint, and the result is lovely. Do you know the work of Ian Fennelly? He’s a British urban sketcher/watercolourist, and the king of ‘loose’ - I just love his use of colour.
I’m British too, but I’ve also been to Savannah and on the historic tram tour - great fun, and it is indeed a beautiful city.
Beautiful sketch, Steve! Happy Anniversary to the both of you xo :)
That was just the style I love in urban sketching. I followed a course with Alex Hillkurtz and really enjoyed it. However, still hard not to add too much. Your suggestion of dots and bits of lines helps a lot. I’m inspired again. Thanks Steve.
Happy anniversary to you both. I've watched a lot of your videos and really appreciate them. I marvel at your work, especially when you toss paint on the paper and turn it into something beautiful. I started painting about 3 months ago. I had a chuckle at this video. I understand what your doing with your effort to reduce your technical approach, while I'm trying to increase mine and still working at pronouncing Quinacridone. lol Great video. Thank you.
Thanks. A highly detailed technical approach is completely valid in the right situation. Just not for me while trying to quickly capture a subject on location.
This really struck a chord with me… I so desperately try to loosen up and find I just can’t!
Your work is awesome btw!!
I think what could help you to loosen up on the sketching is at a time take the grip of the pencil or the pen higher. It's gonna make you move faster and do more gesture lines. It takes you away from that intricate precision!! Hope it helps a bit!!
Happy Anniversary 😍.
This was very helpful.
The "dots and dashes" approach makes a lot of sense to me!
Thank you for your channel!
Hi Steve, as much of a struggle as this was for you...it turned out to be delightful. Not too much detail and everything in it's proper place. The trick we all face is trying to do that on location in a timely manner. As always I love your work, whether in studio or on location and look forward to your videos.....🤗
Love your work. Wish I could get these results.
Thanks! I've been there too and said the same. Keep at it!
This is really helpful. This is something I’ve been struggling while sketching outside, thank you so much.