The ULTIMATE Charcoal Tutorial

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  • Опубликовано: 10 авг 2019
  • Behold: the video nobody asked for but every art student needs. After getting my hands dirty in charcoal for three years at college , I feel like a have a solid understanding of the medium and I wanted to share my knowledge with you all. Kudos to anyone who makes it through the entire 30 minutes in one shot--this video ended up being beefier than I thought it was gonna be! 😅
    Bonus videos that I think tie well with this:
    1) How to sharpen your pencils: • How to Sharpen a Penci...
    2) How to easily draw still lifes and not want to die: • How to Easily Draw Sti...
    Catch me on Instagram, Tumblr, and Etsy @BianaBova
    Music:
    Track: Pink Sky - Amine Maxwell [Audio Library Release]
    Music provided by Audio Library Plus
    Watch: • Pink Sky - Amine Maxwe...
    Free Download / Stream: alplus.io/PinkSky

Комментарии • 159

  • @renzo6490
    @renzo6490 3 года назад +7

    The assumption from the start is that every one hates to use charcoal....that one is “forced” to use it in school.
    Why be so negative?
    Charcoal, as a medium, is no more difficult to adapt to than oils or watercolors.
    Once I understood how to use them, they became a great asset.
    And, it should be noted, charcoal can be used to produce superb final works of art.
    As an alternative to 'toning' your paper with charcoal, you can simply buy toned paper.
    It usually comes in cool tones of blue or gray and in warm tones of tan.

  • @zoridahall4732
    @zoridahall4732 9 месяцев назад +10

    Awesome tutorial, I enjoyed it, I'm a self taught artist..,I started at 59 ,and now I'm 71 years old, and you tube became my best friend ,it taught me everything I need it to know about art ,,you tube has the best instructor's on the planet earth lol,Aaron Blaise is an awesome teacher, he works with charcoal, he worked for Disney doing animation for the lion king ,pocahontas ,practically all the Disney movies that all this yeras now he is teaching on you tube. ,you anything you want to learned from ,, also northern Kentucky University, has free classes, when you get chance whatch those channels, you will learn a lot and it's free, God bless you and keep it awesome tutorial thank you, Zoe

  • @lesliescott9956
    @lesliescott9956 Год назад +6

    When I was about 10 year old at school, my teacher gave me some grey paper, some willow charcoal and white chalk. He gave me a load of bottles and jars and told me to draw. I've never forgot the importance of that early lesson.

  • @aestheticmizo6444
    @aestheticmizo6444 3 года назад +16

    If you already know about charcoal and it's material , you can start from 13:03 you're welcome

  • @Kyomiibrown
    @Kyomiibrown 4 года назад +40

    Re: White charcoal - it depends what paper you are using, I use only toned paper so white charcoal is necessary imho. My tonal range ensures it doesn’t look stark as I mute it down.

    • @BianaBova
      @BianaBova  4 года назад +11

      ^^Okay fair, it does look pretty nice on pre-toned paper

    • @nickmurray7703
      @nickmurray7703 3 года назад +2

      Also sometimes you may want the exact effect she mentions is bad. a cooler tone than your white paper such as snow.

  • @Quigimon
    @Quigimon 3 года назад +5

    I started school for photography and fell totally in love with charcoal, so much so photography took a back seat. Now there is nothing more pleasurable than running willow charcoal across paper

  • @alimarieart
    @alimarieart 4 года назад +5

    I loved using charcoal in my drawing classes at the University I'm attending. We even used them in our painting classes to give a layout for what we are going to paint. My drawing professor had us use white charcoal, and newsprint paper for our drawings. The white charcoal was only used if the object was extremely white. Charcoal was such a fun medium to work with.

  • @lynnjones6386
    @lynnjones6386 3 года назад +3

    This is an amazing tutorial. I'm so glad you explained the reasoning behind everything that you were doing. So many artists assume that their audience has some background knowledge, and I for one do not. I'm just learning and have no background in art at all. Everything I've learned is books, youtube, patreon. You made sense of things I had been told (but no reasoning behind it) and you are a total joy to watch. Checking out your other vids and will subscribe

  • @cosmiic_cat
    @cosmiic_cat 4 года назад +3

    Wow this video came right in time! Helps me a lot as I'm getting into charcoal now. THANKS :)

  • @mylo5347
    @mylo5347 4 года назад +9

    This is almost the exact the same way I was taught charcoal drawing at my university. My only tip would be to mention that charcoal drawings like yours take hours and hours of study and practice before people get to that level. I remember my first semester we drew hundreds of white box still lives 3 hours a day. The next semester we moved onto organic objects. Keep up the good work!

    • @renzo6490
      @renzo6490 3 года назад +2

      The plural of “still life” is “still lifes”.
      We are pluralizing both words, not just the word ‘life’.
      You wouldn’t say The Toronto Maple Leaves, would you?

  • @keila5265
    @keila5265 4 года назад +2

    This is sooo helpful thank u so much, and I love how ur so relatable, u make things so much easier

  • @jenniferhunter1587
    @jenniferhunter1587 4 года назад +1

    Biana, this is an excellent beginner's tutorial. Thank you for taking the time to teach us!!

  • @vincentlukban2500
    @vincentlukban2500 3 года назад +4

    You are amazing! I was so lost until watching your video. I had no idea why my professor told us to fill an entire 18x24 page with vine charcoal, or that I wasn't supposed to use vine charcoal for shading. I was getting so annoyed when the stuff would fall off as soon as I did anything with it... Thanks for your vid! I could watch you all day!

  • @ChristineHudson_CH-Interiors
    @ChristineHudson_CH-Interiors Год назад +1

    Thank you for this. Just what I need to help me understand a bit about charcoal so that I know something before I attend a workshop at the weekend.

  • @wendymclaughlin
    @wendymclaughlin 2 года назад +1

    Thank you very much. I’m taking into to drawing and this helps a lot with learning to use charcoal

  • @andrewabney2129
    @andrewabney2129 3 года назад +4

    I have been drawing and painting for a long time. And I still love charcoal (admittedly charcoal pencils are my least favorite form), it's my favorite drawing media, followed closely by ink.
    Powdered charcoal and a bristle brush is a brilliant laying in tool. A good rough kraft paper is a wonderful surface. A good drawing (or watercolour) paper that has been primed with gesso or size with a little marble or pumice dust also makes a brilliant surface. My other favorites are sanded paper 400 or 600 grit, velour paper, and rough manilla paper. Primed hardboard or Illustration board is great, and it allows you use rubber cement thinner to move the charcoal around in a painterly fashion.
    Like you, I am not a fan of white charcoal. Save for quick sketches, I prefer to work on a toned surface, and need a white. The quality of white in white charcoal varies, but the consistency is always horrible. I prefer a white Conte crayon or pastel. With pastels there are warm and cool whites to choose from. Or for small drawings, I fix the drawing with Spectrafix (casein based in alcohol), and use gouache for the highlights.

  • @lindahitchcock5714
    @lindahitchcock5714 Год назад +1

    This was excellent and you touched on everything, explaining so well. It was more than I imagined I would get in a tutorial. Thank you so much, Biana.

  • @vinsenanda
    @vinsenanda 3 года назад +1

    thank you for the tutorial, super helpful for a newbie!

  • @deepspacenibby
    @deepspacenibby 2 года назад

    Excellent video!!!! This is so helpful. Oh my god. Thank you. 😊

  • @henriquechiaradiafelicio996
    @henriquechiaradiafelicio996 3 года назад +2

    you have a great professor vibe, i love how you teach things :D

  • @vazap8662
    @vazap8662 4 года назад +3

    Amazing. All my questions answered. I started playing around with vine last week and was wondering why it was so hard to shade with it... 😂

  • @kristyn_art
    @kristyn_art 4 года назад +21

    Finally! Someone who agrees about white charcoal!

  • @haybuhay1994
    @haybuhay1994 3 года назад

    this was extremely helpful for me thank you.

  • @Laura.jane.handmade
    @Laura.jane.handmade 4 года назад +2

    This video could not have been posted at a more perfect time! I'm doing an assignment for my Cert IV in Visual Arts & I've chosen to use charcoal for the image. Thank goodness you came along with your helpful video today!

    • @BianaBova
      @BianaBova  4 года назад +1

      So glad I can help! :D

  • @beeeansswtfff4071
    @beeeansswtfff4071 4 года назад +3

    Thank you, this helped so much! Due to the COVID-19 closures I have to do a charcoal still life at home, and it’s my first time using charcoal. 😅

  • @bobbobby2593
    @bobbobby2593 2 года назад +1

    Loved this video and learned a lot. I just wish you demonstrated more

  • @komorebi3803
    @komorebi3803 4 года назад +4

    That's exactly what I stayed for. Thx

  • @tbm7187
    @tbm7187 Год назад

    Excellent information thank you! I like how you present things in a straight forward way.

  • @amanje407
    @amanje407 2 года назад

    I found this video to be really helpful. I was looking for a video to show when to use each type of charcoal and couldn't find a proper helpful video until I came across this one. This was an eye-opener! Thank you so much!! I appreciate your explanations. Have a wonderful day! :)

  • @shannon8315
    @shannon8315 5 месяцев назад

    I love white charcoal on black paper. But I get what you're talking about. It draws your eye to that spot.

  • @jennaeaston1867
    @jennaeaston1867 3 года назад +1

    Thanks for this video! I just got into creating and charcoal called my name but I want sure what to do with it. Your video really helped!

  • @vikkihawkins186
    @vikkihawkins186 2 года назад

    Great video! Thank you so much!

  • @amandafacundo8492
    @amandafacundo8492 3 года назад

    THANK YOU for this video. So helpfu!l

  • @hettasoni2763
    @hettasoni2763 4 года назад

    This is ur first video that I have seen ...n it really really helped me 😊

  • @RAHIWAadeyNayGdiniyu
    @RAHIWAadeyNayGdiniyu 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you!!!!! This is a great vid. You thought me how you use the different types of charcoals!!!
    And your art is exquisite⭐️

  • @rebeccashaw957
    @rebeccashaw957 Год назад

    You are an awesome teacher and also fun to listen to. You talk like we are all friends.

  • @sharonmayo5578
    @sharonmayo5578 4 года назад

    Great info for a beginner like me thank you from the UK.

  • @spirospiridwn4727
    @spirospiridwn4727 3 года назад

    helped me so much !
    Merci mademoiselle :)

  • @Cherem777
    @Cherem777 2 года назад

    Fantastic tutorial. Subscribed!

  • @zoridahall4732
    @zoridahall4732 9 месяцев назад

    Beautiful artistry just took place, very talented, thank you again, Zoe

  • @janngumbiner664
    @janngumbiner664 3 года назад

    Excellent. Very helpful. Thanks

  • @chrishauck2685
    @chrishauck2685 3 года назад +1

    My teacher just tossed charcoal at us and told us go for it, so this was super useful to learn! I wish I had seen this before I had drawn my entire thing in vine charcoal though... oh well, lol.

  • @MissMolly3377
    @MissMolly3377 3 года назад +4

    I took a drawing class just for fun, and because I love to draw/paint. Charcoal was the first thing we did. It was so much fun, I can't believe people would not want to do it, it is just simply fun. I don't really remember using pencils, I think we used compressed and erasers, but it has been a long time. This was a great explanation for this subject. I am just getting back into art and I am looking forward to it.

  • @mickl3073
    @mickl3073 Год назад

    Load of really usefull stuff, thanks

  • @stergiosmimidakis2911
    @stergiosmimidakis2911 10 месяцев назад

    This is a very important video. You've helped me immensely.

  • @mexemsu.g.d.975
    @mexemsu.g.d.975 2 года назад +1

    I've been using graphite forever ,just recently moved into charcoal n wow !! What a different world 🌍😂. This really helped out. Thanx B. And your gorgeous 🥰. 💥👍💥👍

  • @shirleysaidsew1969
    @shirleysaidsew1969 4 года назад

    Presently a junior at MassArt. As someone who had to take studio classes w/charcoal I appreciate this video! Wish I had it back then!

    • @BianaBova
      @BianaBova  4 года назад

      I s2g my entire channel is just me creating videos that would have helped my past self 😅

  • @stephan1752
    @stephan1752 9 месяцев назад

    There are really good tutorials on charcoal technique on RUclips, made by people who have years of professional experience with the medium and actually know how to use it to its full potential.

  • @curiousorigins
    @curiousorigins 4 года назад +8

    Man, I loved using charcoal... it’s so much quicker than practically anything to build up a range of values. I mean, this is coming from exclusively a graphite pencil artist until I was like 15, so obviously charcoal just like opened a whole world.
    You can get the same sort of look, with slightly more controllable experience and sharper details by using graphite powder and using your kneaded eraser to bring back the whites and regular pencils to bring back the sharp lines. However, you’re then stuck with the metallic shininess of graphite.
    Overall an excellent overview of charcoal techniques. I sort of agree with white charcoal and I sort of don’t. More mixing is required for sure, but if you’re working on a cool white paper... you’re fine. Same with a toned paper. It’s in the mid tone range, if you’re not prepared to do some mixing with white charcoal and black that it’s gonna stick out. Of course if you’re going for high contrast the cool white and warm black is only going to emphasize that. I’ve seen some very excellent charcoal pieces that used that to their advantage.
    Of course it’s all about knowing your tools and how each individual artist wants to use them... so there’s not really a right or wrong here. But you’ve given something for an artist to consider before breaking out the white charcoal.
    Thanks for continually sharing your experience. Hope that you’re enjoying being out of school despite the worries.

    • @BianaBova
      @BianaBova  4 года назад +2

      Thank you for such an informative comment! I'm glad you liked the video and I'll keep your advice in mind next time I create a charcoal piece ;D

    • @curiousorigins
      @curiousorigins 4 года назад

      @@BianaBova Oh, I'm all about sharing information. 😉 Thanks for the informative video and things to think about next time I do the same. 😂

  • @ashleybickham3297
    @ashleybickham3297 3 года назад

    Your hair is hair goals!

  • @Artouple
    @Artouple 4 года назад +2

    Thank you so much! I'm not a professional but I'm a self taught portraitist.

  • @Malakalima
    @Malakalima 4 года назад +22

    Such a helpful video! I'm completely self taught and have never understood really how to use charcoal. This helped it make much more sense. I'm curious, have you used charcoal powder, and if so, what do you think about it?

    • @BianaBova
      @BianaBova  4 года назад +8

      Thank you so much! I've used charcoal powder a few times and I like it for the most part. It's best if you're working on a REALLY large piece and have a lot of ground to cover. I've only ever used it experimentally (like, mixing it with different mediums on canvas or creating texture on pottery), but I've seen people use paintbrushes (I think mostly the foam ones) to make huge gestural marks. It's a fun thing to play with and try out once or twice, but I didn't mention it in this video because it doesn't--to me anyway--feel particularly needed in most pieces.

    • @Malakalima
      @Malakalima 4 года назад +1

      @@BianaBova Got it. Good to know. Thanks for your reply!

    • @renzo6490
      @renzo6490 3 года назад +3

      I have used charcoal powder extensively on quite small work....even portraits.
      I rub a piece of very fine grained sandpaper with soft charcoal to create some powder.
      I,then, apply the powder to my work using a paper rubbing stump.
      It’s possible to get exquisite, subtle shading this way.

    • @rockinbells8351
      @rockinbells8351 Год назад

      @@renzo6490 I just started with charcoal and now have to try this.

  • @MrArchie765
    @MrArchie765 3 года назад

    Thank you for a great tutorisl. Im in love with your mouth!

  • @theklak.6209
    @theklak.6209 4 года назад

    thank you for that video!! Could you recommend a special tape? thank you :)

  • @Ana-do6nn
    @Ana-do6nn 4 года назад +8

    Hell yeah I needed this so bad, thank youuu 😭

  • @edouardj.bernard1690
    @edouardj.bernard1690 3 года назад +1

    Loved following you along in the video because you reminded me of some things I was taught in drawing class, and taught me some stuff that I'll be using in fundamental design class. I do have a couple of questions tho, if you ever come back this way again...
    1) Someone mentioned that they didn't like the background music. Meh... it sort of drowned out for me because I was zoned in on your words and actions. But it made me think... Q: Do you find that listening to a certain TYPE of music helps you create, or helps you focus, or helps you put material down on the surface, or helps you to relax, or helps you to... etc.?
    2) We used a spray fixative in drawing class to preserve the surface and stop it from becoming smudged. But I always found that it tended to blur the edges. Q: How do you feel about using it, and are there any recommendations for use, quantity, technique, etc.?
    3) You mentioned three kinds of charcoal in your tool list: Pencil, Vine, and Compressed. I can't seem to find a straight answer on the difference between vine and compressed. Q: Can you give us the simple answer?
    4) Speaking of Vine... Next semester, one of my classes is dedicated to the materials of art and how to create them for ourselves. So we'll learn how to make pigment, how to mix it with oil, or gum-arabic. We'll make our own paper for different media, etc. Have you ever heard of anyone making their own charcoal of differing hardness from different biological materials heated in different ways, etc?
    Thanks for the video. I got a lot out of it, and I'm going to go looking for your other ones.

  • @rosebuckner8416
    @rosebuckner8416 3 месяца назад

    Your delivery was extremely well done. Speaking about the tools, then showing the process was informative making it quite easy to take notes. Thank you Biana!
    One question: Do you suggest a fixative spray to set the final art piece for display?

  • @kimberlypayetta3476
    @kimberlypayetta3476 Месяц назад

    I love charcole!

  • @ApBarr345
    @ApBarr345 3 месяца назад

    True. I don't mind charcoal. Its very simplistic

  • @rookgardenj7397
    @rookgardenj7397 4 года назад +3

    Such a helpful video
    I have been struggling with charcoal for some while and now I think ill try again
    For the next video maybe try to sculpt something like with clay or sculpy it might be cool to ise a new medium
    Your channel is great

    • @BianaBova
      @BianaBova  4 года назад +1

      Thank you! And oh god, I have used sculpy once in my entire life and let me tell you, these hands were not made for 3D 😅 I'll consider it for maybe a fun future vid, but I'm sure it'll be a "what NOT to do while sculpting" tutorial! 😂

  • @sumitabanerjee9742
    @sumitabanerjee9742 2 года назад

    Your art work is very beautiful. Thanks.
    What kind of paper do you use?

  • @lacarito123
    @lacarito123 3 года назад

    Hi! Thank you for this tutorial! I have a question. What is the tape you used, how did it not ruin the paper when you pulled it off?

  • @DrawingIllustrationsAndArts
    @DrawingIllustrationsAndArts 4 года назад

    Nice video! making charcoal dust or buying it would be a better way of applying tone to a page.

  • @pupawupagus
    @pupawupagus 7 месяцев назад

    show me on the doll where white charcoal hurt you 🙃
    serious: thank you for the vid. i really like your teaching style!

  • @tacotruck7995
    @tacotruck7995 3 года назад +1

    I love charcoal

  • @allencampbell1058
    @allencampbell1058 2 года назад

    How do we clean the chamois to reuse for other charcoal drawings? Or do we need to use or buy another pair

  • @norukamo
    @norukamo 3 года назад

    This vid needs more views

  • @eduardobrandaoalves2307
    @eduardobrandaoalves2307 Год назад

    Very nice.

  • @Poprocks146
    @Poprocks146 2 года назад

    Stumbled on this while working on a charcoal piece for Massart lol

  • @soniaolson8233
    @soniaolson8233 3 года назад

    Can you do acrylic paint or do you just do drawing? I loved the video

  • @shs5585
    @shs5585 3 года назад

    i just find you......... and this is the start of an adventure.... great tutorial ...

  • @jocelynbrown3660
    @jocelynbrown3660 3 года назад +1

    Hi, I'd love to try to draw along with your tutorial, could you possibly share an image of your finished drawing for me to use as a reference? Thanks for a great tutorial :)

  • @benlahsseneali8221
    @benlahsseneali8221 Год назад

    Wooôo très beaux vase ❤

  • @YenneY01
    @YenneY01 3 года назад

    How do you remove any loose charcoal powder from yr drawing?
    You blend it with a stump or brush but there's a bit of loose powder.
    I like your way of teaching. Very nice.
    Ps I like white charcoal.
    I'm doing a leopard's head on dark cream paper to give the eyes colour.
    But leopards have white on their faces . So I'm using white charcoal as well as black.

  • @cohencohen54
    @cohencohen54 2 года назад

    Please share the brand name of the tape you used. All the ones I’ve used so far have torn the paper!

  • @pejee1117
    @pejee1117 Год назад

    But can we use charcoal powder for background or for the first layer instead of vine charcoal? Please notice me

  • @luisAntonio-wi9rq
    @luisAntonio-wi9rq 3 месяца назад

    Three years of study to do this? Oh god!

  • @religionofskatee3537
    @religionofskatee3537 4 года назад +1

    Can’t the downsides of using vine charcoal be mitigated by spraying your drawing with fixative?

  • @Artsoulcreater
    @Artsoulcreater Месяц назад

    Super ❤❤❤

  • @pejee1117
    @pejee1117 Год назад

    also what's the difference between willow and vine? in terms of function or what (i don't really know the right term hehe lol). Thank youuuuu please notice me

  • @brandyplayzzyt9345
    @brandyplayzzyt9345 Год назад

    Is there anything you can spray to seal a finished drawing, so it doesn't smear later on?? 🤔 🙂

    • @heatherg4286
      @heatherg4286 Год назад +1

      Hi yes there is. You can buy both workable(for pictures you want to continue working on later) and permanent fixative in spray cans. In Australia Micador is one brand but there are others. They will slightly change the appearance of some drawings darkening them a bit.

    • @brandyplayzzyt9345
      @brandyplayzzyt9345 Год назад

      @@heatherg4286 Okay, thank you so much!! 🙂

  • @barbararivera2380
    @barbararivera2380 Год назад

    ❤️

  • @edzejandehaan9265
    @edzejandehaan9265 2 года назад

    Nothing wrong with with using vine charcoal for shading imo. The solution to the problems you describe is pretty obvious; use a fixative...

  • @groovemileage3756
    @groovemileage3756 3 года назад +1

    Really enjoyed your instruction and learned a couple of new things, but please find a less distracting background music loop.

  • @pavelsgaming3761
    @pavelsgaming3761 3 года назад

    you are good

  • @nightstar1219
    @nightstar1219 4 года назад +3

    Mid-tone in background is a huge supprise to me.

  • @greekveteran2715
    @greekveteran2715 2 года назад +3

    Is it me, or all the artists are beautiful both inside and outside!?

  • @alyzzzea1864
    @alyzzzea1864 4 года назад +2

    God you’re so good at explaining thank youuuu ❤️❤️❤️

  • @ThtGirlElle
    @ThtGirlElle 3 года назад

    FML I hate cross hatching! Hahaha!! My anthem!!

  • @sanjavukovic169
    @sanjavukovic169 3 года назад +3

    I'm so sad! Yet another great video ruined by background music! ☹️😫😭😱Why, oh why do that to a perfectly good tutorial full packed if info that would otherwise be joy to watch? Please post this again but in clean version, please? 🥺

    • @renzo6490
      @renzo6490 3 года назад +1

      I agree totally!
      Annoying and distracting background music has marred many otherwise excellent videos.
      And, it’s completely unnecessary!

  • @wood2be
    @wood2be 4 года назад +12

    Enjoyed the content but that music is so repetitive it’s obnoxious!

    • @tbm7187
      @tbm7187 Год назад

      Turn on the CC and turn down the music! That's what I do

  • @ruckayar4858
    @ruckayar4858 4 года назад

    I noticed that you don’t use fixative. Is that just your personal preference or is there a reason for this ?

    • @BianaBova
      @BianaBova  4 года назад +3

      Oh, good question! Fixative is amazing and absolutely should be used for really important assignments (say, finals) but me and my classmates rarely ever used it. Those first couple foundation years aren't really about making masterpieces, they're just about cranking out as many pieces as possible in one semester. Aka, nothing we made was precious. To protect our homework and past assignments, the professors told us to sandwich a sheet of newsprint between the art and just call it a day. If we had actually taken the time to spray down every single in-class assignment plus homework, we'd waste a hell of a lot of time and money (and brain cells considering how toxic that stuff is) on stuff that really didn't deserve it.
      And not to mention, there's always the fear that you're professor will ask you to change something after you've already sprayed it down. Back during finals week at UCONN, my prof asked us to create three HUGE charcoal drawings. I had finished one of them, and was so cocky about it being perfect that I sprayed it down long before our final critique. All of us had our final and in-progress work lying around in one of the classrooms, and at one point our professor snuck in there to see how we were doing--and was NOT pleased. He sent us all a /SCORCHING/ email calling us out for making sub par work and basically said to hardcore rework what we were doing. He didn't mention anyone by name, but I had a strong feeling that one of the pieces he referred to was mine, so I desperately tried to erase it off, to no avail. I had to start the entire piece over using the back of the paper. (Don't pity me though, the redone piece I made ended up being one of the best finals in the class) All this to say, in college at least, you never know when something might need to be changed later. Better to wait until the semester is over before spraying away.
      TL;DR Absolutely buy yourself a can of fixative, especially if you're creating something really precious, but if you're just in your foundation years of college, you won't use it much. Just protect it was another sheet of paper and you're good to go.

  • @LorraineTapper
    @LorraineTapper 5 месяцев назад

    I think your drawing is really good even though you don't like it.

  • @gillinacook1477
    @gillinacook1477 4 года назад

    Is Charcoal archival and lightfast?

    • @WendyDaCanuck
      @WendyDaCanuck 4 года назад +1

      Gillina Cook you need a spray fixative to seal the drawing. Be sure to stand back two feet when you spray it so it doesn’t blow too much of the charcoal off. As long as you stand back when you spray it and it wasn’t drawn with just vine charcoal it shouldn’t be a problem though.

  • @ladyinblack3398
    @ladyinblack3398 Год назад

    Hiw come you hardly maje Videos anymore?
    Would be nice to see more videos like this.

  • @barbvongunten6214
    @barbvongunten6214 Год назад

    Not fond of music choice, but good info on use of charcoal.

  • @indranilnag877
    @indranilnag877 3 года назад

    Why don't you have more videos on charcoal? 🥲

  • @snehasarkar6914
    @snehasarkar6914 3 года назад

    not sure if i heard it ryt, but did she say that she studied art in yukon? i really wanna know!

    • @snehasarkar6914
      @snehasarkar6914 3 года назад

      Tbh , this video was damn helpful, of course she reminds of one of my teachers but other than that she really really explains things and they make life much easier.

    • @dawnh3495
      @dawnh3495 3 года назад

      She was referring to UConn University of Connecticut.

    • @snehasarkar6914
      @snehasarkar6914 3 года назад

      @@dawnh3495 thank you so much

  • @cynthiamarston2208
    @cynthiamarston2208 3 года назад

    Agree white charcoal

  • @carolpenn1155
    @carolpenn1155 4 месяца назад

    Just started in charcoal. This is super useful so thank you but yes agree with some comments..the music is very annoying. You are too good…you don’t need it!