I remember doing one of these in high school art class. Turns out you can get scratchboards with a variety of under layers. Mine had a metallic silver back layer, which I used to draw my favorite car, a '67 Corvette Stingray. I still have it hanging in my room because it's one of my most favorite things I have ever made.
Am i the only person that thinks Jazza undersells his abilities? His work is amazing, and the heavyhanded style in his pieces fit well with his character
It's better than hyping up something to the point where the result is underwhelming. If your expectations are low, more often than not you're pleasantly surprised. Pessimism is a lifestyle.
Ahhh I don’t even know how many times I’ve heard this. 😅 One teacher just took our erasers away one day to challenge us. Pretty sure he was tired of telling us to stop erasing so much. 😅
It's really nice to see Jazza referencing other creators who know more about the things than him. None of us knows it all and there's no shame in learning from others.
Bless the dudes that edited this for taking out the scratchy sounds!! I didn't known could get so realistic with this!!! There look to be so many techniques and styles that really make things pop!
people talking about how you spoiled the video. Just watch the video before you read the comments. like, did you not expect anyone to discuss the art piece that the artist from the art youtube channel made?
@@redturkey6570 no offence but some people on mobile have the top comment showing under the title, meaning you cant remove it, and me personally cant not read something without blocking it, and it starts to cramp my hand leaving it in the corner
We did scratchboard in high school. How to get the image down without “drawing” it on the paper, is to draw it on tracing paper, then lay the tracing paper on the scratchboard and go over it with a ballpoint pen. It will leave a faint indent that you can use as a guide.
something to keep in mind while using scratchboarding, try to keep your hand off the boar with paper or cloth because the oils in your hand can get on it and make it hard/impossible to scratch in certain areas. for the sketch, i make a lineart on a separate piece of paper then use graphite on the back of it to transfer the drawing. i use color pencil to transfer it because its softer and wouldn't scratch the board. i dont scratch the lineart, i just shade the highlights and use the lineart as a guide.
The artistic journey in a nutshell: Dabble, use what works and avoid what doesn't work, create masterful final result. Well done. I love seeing you work through the rough spots. 👍👍
Absolutely INCREDIBLE! I love that you show the whole process, even the parts where you are discovering the medium and "stumbling" through it but still owning it. Go Jazza!
I remember having those as a kid. There were cute patterns behind the scratch board that I scratched the whole thing to see the full of it, Letting the curiosity get the best of me
That final piece was the epitome of "trust the process". I love watching you go through and explain where your mind is at. Brings me back to when I did my own art and how I couldn't get over the initial "mistake" I would make and stop working altogether. You make me want to attempt to make stuff again. And I can't thank you enough!
I’ve actually used this once! It was during my art class, however we just used X-ACTO knives and didn’t have all the brushes and stuff, I decided to draw a hawk and had an a great time doing it. I would definitely do it again.
9:30 Me: But he’s separated from the rain, like it isn’t impacting him. I wonder if he can- 9:41 Jazza: Last but not least I go around the edges where the rain would hit the surfaces- Me: Ah. Shoulda had faith. 🤦🏻♀️
I really like seeing your work in media that has a lot of 'trust the process' -- I was worried when you first started doing the shading on Batman, but wow that piece turned out great!
Its nice to see more experienced artists scared and unknowing of what to do, forces me to remind myself that its normal and its all good and to dabble.
Jazza is seriously a treasure to this world, I watch his videos and think what can't this man do? But it's because if he wants to know something he has no boundaries with learning it. Inspiration for the masses Jazza keep going!
Jazza honestly has to be one of the best artist in the world. And I dont mean that in the sense he's any bob ross or picaso. But the fact he has used almost every medium in existance is crazy. From microsoft paint to this, and everything in between its absolutely crazy. I swear whenever i see a medium i want to try, no matter how obscure i look at jazzas page and its there. He does a great job explaining his process in a short time. His discovories mid way through help me improve so much. (Besides my crappy 2 minutes drawn profile pic i made with a mouse)
You took me back to my childhood where we would use crayons to fill a page with color, then color over it with black and then scratch a drawing into the paper to reveal the color! Definitely with less impressive results than yours, but fun. :)
Jazza this is great! Scratch board was my favorite art canvas in highschool and the best way to do a sketch is to do it on a normal peice of paper, then tape that on top of the board and trace its basic outline with a ball point pen so you have a mild outline, also if you do a print off reference do it in black and white much easier to get shading right, hope this helps but you did great on your own!
I love how Jazza started with "I have no idea what I'm doing" and ended with "I... AM... BATMAN!!!" 😁. It's a wonderful time-lapse of the artistic journey. It's also really interesting to see his dabbles and epiphanies alongside his research phase.
Your struggles are more inspiring to us than you may realize, it's not always that we get to see a perceived expert's difficulties and mistakes. And overcoming them like you do, that always leaves me inspired to pick up and try again and again.
You should be able to lightly sketch over it with a 6B sketch pencil or soft charcoal pencil. The sheen of the sketch should be easy enough to see to get a feel for it.
We did these in school, and they were the easiest A ever. Teacher let us trace it. You just take what you want to trace and set it over the board, tape that baby down so it don't move, and outline the major parts with a ballpoint pen. It will leave the smallest indent on the scratch board. There, you have an easy outline, now heavily reference the details.
The biggest reason I like watching your videos is because you challenge yourself. You create art in ways you’ve never done before and you share your experience. Even more you teach us the proper way on how to do as you do. I enjoy and respect you ❤️
This concept of art seems so cool Reminds me of school when we used to colour the page with crayons, then layer black crayon on top and scratch out a drawing
I've learned a lot about myself as an artist by watching Jazza. I didn't realize it, but like Jazza I like to build up on a picture rather than building down. It's probably why baking clay, acrylic painting and puffy paints are my go tos, tho I do like wood burning as well.
If you want to have a sketch on the scratchboard before you start, you can put a photograph on top of the scractboard and trace over the photo which leaves a slight indent in the scratchboard that doesn't scratch away the black.
Ooo what a treat, TTT stream and immediate Jazza video after! I really like the effects you got with the inks! The colour is something I would've never thought of!
I feel like this video perfectly exemplifies Jazza, and art as a whole. When finding something new, you learn it your own way, be it by yourself, help from others, or anywhere in between. Using the knowledge, you test your abilities and see your strengths and weaknesses. Using those to create something new and better than before, pushing through that self-doubt that every artist faces with every piece.
I love seeing you learn to create in different mediums, even when they don't come out picture perfect the point of art for me has always been the joy in creating rather than the end product. and that's exactly why I have been following you, the joy you have in the experience is palpable.
That Batman drawing was epic! It's a testament to your skill as an artist that you can make something so cool in a medium you're unfamiliar with in the timeframe it takes to make one video.
That looks amazing! I hadn’t thought of used steel wool before, that’s so cool! Also a tip if you do it again, you can sketch in chalk or white charcoal and it wipes off :)
I love the fact that if I watch a tutorial fron 4 years ago and one of yesterday you put the same energym emotion and spirit of curiosity. Thank's to you I start to explore my art spirit and start moddeling and sculpting. I use you video to learn new idea , and it helps me a lot. In my family there is nobody who do art so you are like a companion and a theacher. Thank you a lot. From a guy from Italy
The passion for new things is wonderful to see. I understand the hustle hustle, but the infectious positivity and fun, is why you're awesome. Keep at it!
Scratch art is so fun. The kids at my work and I love to do them together. You can actually get paper that's rainbow underneath when you scratch it off. It's also possible to make your own scratch art paper with just colored pencils, poster board, and paint. It's a fun project. I would definitely suggest trying your own and seeing what unique patterns you could make.
Why don't you hang up all your art from these challenges/whatever one your most proud of on the wall in the back? I think that would be a great thing for new viewers to see when watching for the first time.
Or perhaps out in the great white hallway? Or maybe not. Just like many musicians like quiet, perhaps some visual artists need a certain amount of neutral space?
Jazza to 'Sketch' on the scratch paper, you start on plain piece of paper draw what you want there place it over your scratch paper and trace it with a dull pencil or ball point pen. This makes a 'mark' on that paper that that gives you something to follow and it isn't a permanent line....unless you push too hard of course then it leaves a dent but that's a whole different problem.
Hollywoods depicions of dinasaurs have been out of date for a long time now. Based more recent discoveries a good chunk of dinasaurs including t rexes are likely to have fur
The T-Rex had feathers because it is closely related to birds like most dinosaurs. the feathers looked like fuzz because feathers hadn’t “evolved” to what they look like today on modern day birds. I wish Jurassic park and other media hadn’t influenced the public to thinking dinosaurs where featherless.
Why do I feel like Jazza’s uploaded this EXACT video before?? Can I see the future?! I’m not kidding here, I have a serious case of deja vu right now 😮 Edit: I’m just now seeing that this was uploaded 7 MONTHS ago not 7 MINUTES ago…sorry I wasted your time everyone 😅😅😅
Don't sell yourself short with that T.Rex scratching. That was really good. It felt like something I would have on my wall as a kid. I also love how you added feathers (even though modern looks at adult rexs are leaning more on featherless, leaving the adolescent Rexs with the feathers), as it shows that scientific look as well as making it pop more for the art. WELL DONE!
I've been watching you for a couple of years now and no kidding I think this might be my favorite piece of line/sketch work that I've ever seen you do. The effects of that scratchboard are unbelievable and you bring it to life from the page. It's interesting too because like you said it's like a study of light effects, but the process is kind of like "bringing the light forth" from the darkness of the page. Such an interesting concept, this scratchboard.
I used to do those premade scratchboards a ton as a kid. I loved them. Still do, except now I can't find them anymore. It was so relaxing and the shiny end result was real pretty
I think it’s funny when I’m blown away by a piece of art Jazza does and he says it’s not bad. 🤣 Then I think it looks great and he does more artistic voodoo and BAM! It’s even better! Jazza, thanks for sharing your art with all of us and I really enjoy the videos.
these are really good practice at seeing the whitepsace instead of the subject... i learned in high school art class that whitespace is just as important as your actual subject! my teacher included a whole project where we "created" with whitespace, just like these scratchpad sheets but all on our own paper.
MAN! Is there any medium this man can't do??? The answer is no my friend . I have been watching him for a couple a few years now and I am waiting for the moment when I say "Meh." at his artistic prowess but truly I don't see that day coming. Stay Groovy Jazza ✌💖🤗and never stop being the you we've all come to cherrish and love!
I use to draw with this type of medium. There's different tools for textures. My first grade teacher bought me my first pad in 1988. I love art. You are amazing Jazza. I have a glove for my drawing. The black stuff gets everywhere. 😁 My fingers use to be stained with pencil when I was younger. Also, I used colored pastels to paint my drawings with a setting spray. Setting spray is helpful to keep the art piece from fading, it seals the colors to the canvas.
That turned out amazing! I'm literally shocked at how you're able to approach something way out of your comfort zone, experiment, and create something that looks like you've been working with that medium for years!
We used to make our own. Color the background in random colors and shapes, paint over with acrylic black paint, then scratch art revealing the colors underneath.
I love how youre always like "I have no idea what im doing" and then you SMASH every single piece! goodness that batman piece is PERFECT! love it! Keep being so awesome man! Youre really the best
I love these. I did them in high school. I also made my own in elementary school with colored backgrounds! I'd just color in a sheet of paper with colored pencils and then cover the whole thing with black crayon and scratch out cool designs.
This video started out as a fun looking craft activity and ended up as some serious mind-blowing art. I had NO idea of the potential of scratch art! 🤯
Hi Sarah! I love your vids!
Same here! Now I gotta look into scratch art myself LOL.
I remember doing one of these in high school art class. Turns out you can get scratchboards with a variety of under layers. Mine had a metallic silver back layer, which I used to draw my favorite car, a '67 Corvette Stingray. I still have it hanging in my room because it's one of my most favorite things I have ever made.
Am i the only person that thinks Jazza undersells his abilities? His work is amazing, and the heavyhanded style in his pieces fit well with his character
It's better than hyping up something to the point where the result is underwhelming. If your expectations are low, more often than not you're pleasantly surprised. Pessimism is a lifestyle.
I think it's just right. He's more of an entertainer than an artist. His skull in the video was pretty bad for example.
@@knottedtwig3289 Alr why don’t we see your art, I’m sure it will be amazing ✨✨
@@waffles8710 I mean, Knotted Twig is right. The Batman piece was way better, and it makes sense that Jazza didn't do perfect immediately.
Dude absolutely slays everything he does
Looks like my art teacher was right for saying: “don’t erase your mistakes, make something new with it”
This will get a lot of likes.
@@That1Knife I feel like it 😅
Ahhh I don’t even know how many times I’ve heard this. 😅 One teacher just took our erasers away one day to challenge us. Pretty sure he was tired of telling us to stop erasing so much. 😅
@Don't read profile photo ok
like bob ross said, Happy little accident
I admit that the final effect surprised me enormously. Brilliant job!
It's really nice to see Jazza referencing other creators who know more about the things than him. None of us knows it all and there's no shame in learning from others.
I do wish he had linked them in the description though, I was curious to see more of some of those videos.
@@doubtful_seer i would guess they would be easy to find
@@AnaOhKay but thats not the point, is it? Didnt he just call out zhc for similar? Love Jazza but this was a missed mark/opportunity.
@@Gryphus82 would say its very different to zhc but i get it
@@Gryphus82 this is not a collaboration it's just a shout out, no need for links
Jazza's really good at "I've never tried this medium before", creates an amazing piece of art.
As a huge Batman comics fan, I gotta say, you NAILED that last one.
@Don't read profile photo bro
I’m not the biggest DC/batman fan but even I got chills seeing the final product
I would’ve preferred a monochromatic red wash over the drawing, like in the movie poster and stuff for the new 2022 movie but this is ok
@Don't read profile photo Allright we won't read it :)
Ok now I'm hooked
Bless the dudes that edited this for taking out the scratchy sounds!!
I didn't known could get so realistic with this!!! There look to be so many techniques and styles that really make things pop!
exactly! i bet it'd be unbearable to watch with the noises!!
I have a mini version of this, they’re really not that scratchy
That final batman piece turned put absolutely stunning!
out*
FUCK IVE BEEN SPOILT
Can you plz not spoil
people talking about how you spoiled the video. Just watch the video before you read the comments. like, did you not expect anyone to discuss the art piece that the artist from the art youtube channel made?
@@redturkey6570 no offence but some people on mobile have the top comment showing under the title, meaning you cant remove it, and me personally cant not read something without blocking it, and it starts to cramp my hand leaving it in the corner
We did scratchboard in high school. How to get the image down without “drawing” it on the paper, is to draw it on tracing paper, then lay the tracing paper on the scratchboard and go over it with a ballpoint pen. It will leave a faint indent that you can use as a guide.
something to keep in mind while using scratchboarding, try to keep your hand off the boar with paper or cloth because the oils in your hand can get on it and make it hard/impossible to scratch in certain areas.
for the sketch, i make a lineart on a separate piece of paper then use graphite on the back of it to transfer the drawing. i use color pencil to transfer it because its softer and wouldn't scratch the board. i dont scratch the lineart, i just shade the highlights and use the lineart as a guide.
As a huge human anatomy fan, I gotta say, you NAILED the second one.
The artistic journey in a nutshell: Dabble, use what works and avoid what doesn't work, create masterful final result. Well done.
I love seeing you work through the rough spots. 👍👍
Love seeing you try new/more unusual art forms lately, Jazza! Your willingness to experiment and learn in a positive way is always fun.
I’ve been wanting Jazza do this this for years since I’ve been working with scratchboard for years myself.
Same I love doing animals portraits 😊
That's really cool :D
You should make videos man I’d love to see more of this type of art
Upload some videos of you work
Absolutely INCREDIBLE! I love that you show the whole process, even the parts where you are discovering the medium and "stumbling" through it but still owning it. Go Jazza!
I'm looking for more videos on this.
Jazza has only scratched the surface.
This needs more likes
Hallo, pun police? This one, right here. Take them away!
*has
@@1amsc0ot3r7 Come on, the video was JUST posted
@@4Rgames tks I guess
I'm honestly jealous of how good jazza is at almost every style of art
I remember having those as a kid. There were cute patterns behind the scratch board that I scratched the whole thing to see the full of it, Letting the curiosity get the best of me
I had those rainbow ones, they were great
I am a kid, and I have those
@Don't read profile photo I already know what’s gonna happen
@@dragonburrito527 Didn't jazza say that this isn't a kids channel?
My niece loves her scratch art books now too.
Jazza: **creates a masterpiece**
Jazza 10 seconds later: I’m not great at it yet
That final piece was the epitome of "trust the process". I love watching you go through and explain where your mind is at. Brings me back to when I did my own art and how I couldn't get over the initial "mistake" I would make and stop working altogether. You make me want to attempt to make stuff again. And I can't thank you enough!
I’ve actually used this once! It was during my art class, however we just used X-ACTO knives and didn’t have all the brushes and stuff, I decided to draw a hawk and had an a great time doing it. I would definitely do it again.
that thumbnail scares me more than any horror thumbnail could dream of doing
Me: „This video is really cool! Nothing can make it better“
Jazza: *draws a beautiful piece of Batman*
Me: „Nevermind“
9:30 Me: But he’s separated from the rain, like it isn’t impacting him. I wonder if he can-
9:41 Jazza: Last but not least I go around the edges where the rain would hit the surfaces-
Me: Ah. Shoulda had faith. 🤦🏻♀️
You doubted the Art god Jazza?!?! 😳
@@chubbyjaydraws I know! 🙈 I am ashamed. 😓🥺
@@AmaraJordanMusic it’s sacrilegious 🤣
This is why you watch the whole video before drawing any conclusions.
@@BluTaiger "Drawing" any conclusions? hehe
Holy smokey scratchboards Batman!! 2 sort of fails (still better than I could do), then a triumph!!
You are awesomely talented Jazza!
Love my dad he's the best
I really like seeing your work in media that has a lot of 'trust the process' -- I was worried when you first started doing the shading on Batman, but wow that piece turned out great!
Thank you for always being honest about your feelings throughout! It's good to reminded that nobody is always confident
Its nice to see more experienced artists scared and unknowing of what to do, forces me to remind myself that its normal and its all good and to dabble.
Jazza is seriously a treasure to this world, I watch his videos and think what can't this man do? But it's because if he wants to know something he has no boundaries with learning it. Inspiration for the masses Jazza keep going!
I loved the way you did the Batman one! The amount of detail in you 3rd try.
Jazza honestly has to be one of the best artist in the world. And I dont mean that in the sense he's any bob ross or picaso. But the fact he has used almost every medium in existance is crazy. From microsoft paint to this, and everything in between its absolutely crazy. I swear whenever i see a medium i want to try, no matter how obscure i look at jazzas page and its there. He does a great job explaining his process in a short time. His discovories mid way through help me improve so much. (Besides my crappy 2 minutes drawn profile pic i made with a mouse)
You took me back to my childhood where we would use crayons to fill a page with color, then color over it with black and then scratch a drawing into the paper to reveal the color! Definitely with less impressive results than yours, but fun. :)
Jazza this is great! Scratch board was my favorite art canvas in highschool and the best way to do a sketch is to do it on a normal peice of paper, then tape that on top of the board and trace its basic outline with a ball point pen so you have a mild outline, also if you do a print off reference do it in black and white much easier to get shading right, hope this helps but you did great on your own!
You could almost turn the glowy bits by the skull into candles. Also, the paper looks shiny underneath but it could just be lighting.
I love how Jazza started with "I have no idea what I'm doing" and ended with "I... AM... BATMAN!!!" 😁. It's a wonderful time-lapse of the artistic journey. It's also really interesting to see his dabbles and epiphanies alongside his research phase.
When i saw the thumbnail my hand instantly curled up. I used to have these with patterns but was never able to complete it 😂
Your struggles are more inspiring to us than you may realize, it's not always that we get to see a perceived expert's difficulties and mistakes. And overcoming them like you do, that always leaves me inspired to pick up and try again and again.
I remember drawing on this things as a kid
you should do the ones with coloured sheets underneath the black stuff
Yes
I'd love to try this but I always have to make multiple sketches and trace them with my lightbox so I doubt I could create anything decent... 😅
you could do sketches on seprate pieces of paper, then transfer it
You should be able to lightly sketch over it with a 6B sketch pencil or soft charcoal pencil. The sheen of the sketch should be easy enough to see to get a feel for it.
@@quarterlifecrisisstudio4265 Yes, a white charcoal pencil might do the trick.
@Don't read profile photo please shut up for the love of god
We did these in school, and they were the easiest A ever. Teacher let us trace it. You just take what you want to trace and set it over the board, tape that baby down so it don't move, and outline the major parts with a ballpoint pen. It will leave the smallest indent on the scratch board. There, you have an easy outline, now heavily reference the details.
The biggest reason I like watching your videos is because you challenge yourself. You create art in ways you’ve never done before and you share your experience. Even more you teach us the proper way on how to do as you do. I enjoy and respect you ❤️
This concept of art seems so cool
Reminds me of school when we used to colour the page with crayons, then layer black crayon on top and scratch out a drawing
I've learned a lot about myself as an artist by watching Jazza. I didn't realize it, but like Jazza I like to build up on a picture rather than building down. It's probably why baking clay, acrylic painting and puffy paints are my go tos, tho I do like wood burning as well.
Okay, I literally made little ‘trading cards’ out of this kind of scratch board last week in my art class. This is so cool!
If you want to have a sketch on the scratchboard before you start, you can put a photograph on top of the scractboard and trace over the photo which leaves a slight indent in the scratchboard that doesn't scratch away the black.
Ooo what a treat, TTT stream and immediate Jazza video after!
I really like the effects you got with the inks! The colour is something I would've never thought of!
I feel like this video perfectly exemplifies Jazza, and art as a whole. When finding something new, you learn it your own way, be it by yourself, help from others, or anywhere in between. Using the knowledge, you test your abilities and see your strengths and weaknesses. Using those to create something new and better than before, pushing through that self-doubt that every artist faces with every piece.
Jazza: "I am no expert"
Me: "Are you sure?!"
That looks unreal! So good I don't have words to describe it...
I love seeing you learn to create in different mediums, even when they don't come out picture perfect the point of art for me has always been the joy in creating rather than the end product. and that's exactly why I have been following you, the joy you have in the experience is palpable.
You need to somehow make this a sellable print!! Way to go! Looks bloodily brilliant mate 🔥 100% Epic
That Batman drawing was epic! It's a testament to your skill as an artist that you can make something so cool in a medium you're unfamiliar with in the timeframe it takes to make one video.
That looks amazing! I hadn’t thought of used steel wool before, that’s so cool! Also a tip if you do it again, you can sketch in chalk or white charcoal and it wipes off :)
I love the fact that if I watch a tutorial fron 4 years ago and one of yesterday you put the same energym emotion and spirit of curiosity.
Thank's to you I start to explore my art spirit and start moddeling and sculpting.
I use you video to learn new idea , and it helps me a lot.
In my family there is nobody who do art so you are like a companion and a theacher.
Thank you a lot.
From a guy from Italy
Thought this would kill my ears but i’m about a minute in and this is fine actually
The passion for new things is wonderful to see. I understand the hustle hustle, but the infectious positivity and fun, is why you're awesome. Keep at it!
Draw a moon night cover with this technique!
Scratch art is so fun. The kids at my work and I love to do them together. You can actually get paper that's rainbow underneath when you scratch it off. It's also possible to make your own scratch art paper with just colored pencils, poster board, and paint. It's a fun project. I would definitely suggest trying your own and seeing what unique patterns you could make.
I love the sculptures you do can you do some more eventually?
I loved the kits for kids when i was younger, it had the design on it for you to follow and the backdrop was always shiny or colourful
Imagine if he used his finger nails for the whole video.
I get NES batman vibes looking at this image. The color washes definitely help sell a "restrictive color pallet" type of feel! Love it!
Why don't you hang up all your art from these challenges/whatever one your most proud of on the wall in the back? I think that would be a great thing for new viewers to see when watching for the first time.
Or perhaps out in the great white hallway? Or maybe not. Just like many musicians like quiet, perhaps some visual artists need a certain amount of neutral space?
@@Voirreydirector I like that idea too.
Jazza to 'Sketch' on the scratch paper, you start on plain piece of paper draw what you want there place it over your scratch paper and trace it with a dull pencil or ball point pen. This makes a 'mark' on that paper that that gives you something to follow and it isn't a permanent line....unless you push too hard of course then it leaves a dent but that's a whole different problem.
That T-rex looks realistically fuzzy even though as far as I've seen T-rex's aren't fuzzy 😂
Hollywoods depicions of dinasaurs have been out of date for a long time now. Based more recent discoveries a good chunk of dinasaurs including t rexes are likely to have fur
@@ravelaurence6676 It makes sense and that's what I was expecting, although seeing it that way when I'm used to them without fur is weird.
Tyrannosaurus were somewhat fuzzy, but not to this degree
@@Just_A_Baryonyx yes that's what I would agree with
The T-Rex had feathers because it is closely related to birds like most dinosaurs. the feathers looked like fuzz because feathers hadn’t “evolved” to what they look like today on modern day birds. I wish Jurassic park and other media hadn’t influenced the public to thinking dinosaurs where featherless.
I am so old that I remember using scratch board in middle school in the 1980s.
That Batman was AWESOME!
Why do I feel like Jazza’s uploaded this EXACT video before?? Can I see the future?! I’m not kidding here, I have a serious case of deja vu right now 😮 Edit: I’m just now seeing that this was uploaded 7 MONTHS ago not 7 MINUTES ago…sorry I wasted your time everyone 😅😅😅
What I’ve always done with these is sketched on paper then traced over into the scratch paper/board! It leaves a nice indent to follow!
I actually cringed thinking Jazza will draw using his nails just by scratching on a chalkboard.
My spine got tied into a knot while thinking about that
ikr
Don't sell yourself short with that T.Rex scratching. That was really good. It felt like something I would have on my wall as a kid. I also love how you added feathers (even though modern looks at adult rexs are leaning more on featherless, leaving the adolescent Rexs with the feathers), as it shows that scientific look as well as making it pop more for the art. WELL DONE!
Take a second to imagine the sound of it if it was a chalk board
Ugh..
I had no idea you could take this beyond just simple line art doodles! Thanks for this!
One of my favorite things about Jazza is that he doesn’t get how good he is, he’s so modest about his talent
I've been watching you for a couple of years now and no kidding I think this might be my favorite piece of line/sketch work that I've ever seen you do. The effects of that scratchboard are unbelievable and you bring it to life from the page.
It's interesting too because like you said it's like a study of light effects, but the process is kind of like "bringing the light forth" from the darkness of the page.
Such an interesting concept, this scratchboard.
I love how for the batman you put cool tones in the front and the warmer colors in the back to make the foreground pop, wonderful work!
I always found watercolor to be the easiest way to color scratchboard. It's also great for scanning in and digitally coloring as well!
The rain is so well done. Your best rain effect yet
I used to do those premade scratchboards a ton as a kid. I loved them. Still do, except now I can't find them anymore. It was so relaxing and the shiny end result was real pretty
This was badass. I really love the effects and texture it gave with crosshatching. 🙌
Jazza I’m really thankful for your channel and the 10-20 minutes of joy you bring
I haven't started yet and can tell it will bring back memories of those rainbow bookmarks you make in elementary school :)
I'd love to see you do more of these videos with the scratch board. Its so awesome! Now I wanna try!
That Batman ‘scratch’ after the colour wash, looks dope! Love it, got me inspired to try working with a scratch board. It looks fun. 👍🏼
I think it’s funny when I’m blown away by a piece of art Jazza does and he says it’s not bad. 🤣 Then I think it looks great and he does more artistic voodoo and BAM! It’s even better! Jazza, thanks for sharing your art with all of us and I really enjoy the videos.
these are really good practice at seeing the whitepsace instead of the subject... i learned in high school art class that whitespace is just as important as your actual subject! my teacher included a whole project where we "created" with whitespace, just like these scratchpad sheets but all on our own paper.
I remember doing this in art class with a simple toothpick, and it was really fun, and it came out really cool.
Scratch board is awesome. You can always use transfer paper on it, and you can refill areas with ink and different colors too
MAN! Is there any medium this man can't do??? The answer is no my friend . I have been watching him for a couple a few years now and I am waiting for the moment when I say "Meh." at his artistic prowess but truly I don't see that day coming. Stay Groovy Jazza ✌💖🤗and never stop being the you we've all come to cherrish and love!
Love the final picture. You can make anything look easy.
I use to draw with this type of medium. There's different tools for textures. My first grade teacher bought me my first pad in 1988. I love art. You are amazing Jazza. I have a glove for my drawing. The black stuff gets everywhere. 😁 My fingers use to be stained with pencil when I was younger. Also, I used colored pastels to paint my drawings with a setting spray. Setting spray is helpful to keep the art piece from fading, it seals the colors to the canvas.
That turned out amazing! I'm literally shocked at how you're able to approach something way out of your comfort zone, experiment, and create something that looks like you've been working with that medium for years!
Major goosebumps 😳
Well.. Not really since he’s not showing the sound, but even LOOKING 👀 at it gives me goosebumps.
We used to make our own. Color the background in random colors and shapes, paint over with acrylic black paint, then scratch art revealing the colors underneath.
I LOVE that you're right into it, no long af intro
I haven’t watched Jazza in over a year and wanted to come back. Was not disappointed 💙AMAZING job
Love when you do an art medium you haven't used its so inspiring to see a professional remarkable artist do something new and fun!
Oh the color really reconfirmed the comic book appeal!! Beyond awesome 👏🏻
I love how youre always like "I have no idea what im doing" and then you SMASH every single piece! goodness that batman piece is PERFECT! love it! Keep being so awesome man! Youre really the best
Damn you Jazza, you make everything look so easy!
I love these. I did them in high school. I also made my own in elementary school with colored backgrounds! I'd just color in a sheet of paper with colored pencils and then cover the whole thing with black crayon and scratch out cool designs.