Create Powerful paintings from your Art Studies

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
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Комментарии • 24

  • @aerozg
    @aerozg 2 месяца назад +1

    What really helped my environment art get better was practicing a LOT of landscape photography and learning how to use masks for local adjustments in Lightroom and Photoshop - this was the key. Local ajdustments on parts of the image is just like painting with a brush. You work on specific parts only but making sure it looks realistic and in harmony with the rest of the image.
    But you don't just snap a photo with your smartphone. You plan everything ahead. Wait for the proper lighting, usually early in the morning or at the end of the day, blue hour, golden hour etc. when the Sun is low on the horizon and the natural light and shadows are soft. Then you learn to find a nice composition, dial in the camera settings, learn how to use exposure bracketing, focus stacking for the foreground, mid ground and the background of the scene. And then you move the files into the software and basically create a composite of everything. This is the way i think about environments now and it helps a ton. I recommend everybody to try it.

  • @brandi598
    @brandi598 2 года назад +13

    I love watching your videos while working they always put me into such a productive headspace :)!

  • @aleksandraukasiak7576
    @aleksandraukasiak7576 Год назад +4

    This one was really helpful and gave me something to practice, like a solid idea which is great. Thank you! And I would definitely love to see follow up vid about different ways how to progress from lineart, please!

  • @tatianakonovalova6086
    @tatianakonovalova6086 2 года назад +3

    My fav RUclips art channel🙌

  • @Shiznaft1
    @Shiznaft1 2 года назад +3

    Wonderful lesson and very useful.

  • @henklibaci2919
    @henklibaci2919 2 года назад +5

    NEW VIDEO!!!!!!!!

  • @carlosfrostygreen6855
    @carlosfrostygreen6855 Год назад

    Looks like a billboard to me

  • @gunayorbay
    @gunayorbay Год назад

    this was very useful at the stage I am.

  • @shinu_da2286
    @shinu_da2286 2 года назад

    Rip bush, you will be remembered

  • @SuperFlashing
    @SuperFlashing Год назад

    Thanks for this video!

  • @arandompotat0
    @arandompotat0 2 года назад +2

    Hi Tyler. Great video.
    You said around minute 19 that there's not much to gain from speed paintings. How different are speed paintings to color comps tough? Is the difference the level of detail expected from each one?

    • @TylerEdlin84
      @TylerEdlin84  2 года назад +5

      Students see pros doing speed paints and try to emulate that. Pros can skip many steps at a time and produce solid work students likely cannot. Creating a color comp that takes 20mins so not the same as creating a full painting in under an hour

  • @IbrahimKhan-dd2ey
    @IbrahimKhan-dd2ey 2 года назад +5

    How do you find good references? Usually I get stuck in that phase.

    • @TylerEdlin84
      @TylerEdlin84  2 года назад +2

      Usually Pinterest, google, and Instagram

    • @An.Unsought.Thought
      @An.Unsought.Thought 2 года назад +9

      Try separating reference into 3 categories on a page/reference board. Macro, Micro and Theme/Mood. Macro being the subject matter. Perhaps its architecture, or a cart. It can be the main object and side objects or two separate objects that you intend to combine to create a new object. Micro reference would be mostly about the patterns and textures. Think of the modules on a space ship or ornate carvings that you may put into armor or architecture. The theme or mood can be colors, lighting, weather, that sort of thing.
      I find by compartmentalizing these things it allows me to quickely look for reference on google or pinterest that will keep me focused.

    • @An.Unsought.Thought
      @An.Unsought.Thought 2 года назад +2

      Oh to clarify, thats if you want to get reference for your own art pieces. If you mean what Tyler is doing in this video, any photo should work.

  • @ico9966
    @ico9966 2 года назад +2

    One question that keeps bugging me. After finishing the picture (like the one Tyler finished) can you post or sell the picture as your own even after using the reference? ( Keeping in mind IF the reference is not yours ) because you interpreted it in your own way.

    • @TylerEdlin84
      @TylerEdlin84  2 года назад +3

      I genuinely don’t think there would be legal repercussions in selling the work especially if you make it your own. Finding someone that actually wants to buy a work like this is the hard part.

    • @ico9966
      @ico9966 2 года назад +1

      @@TylerEdlin84 Thank you for replying Tyler, your answer made me feel better toward making my own art and using references! Ya it is hard to sell such arts but a challenge i can accept :D. Cheers!

  • @angydovnar5069
    @angydovnar5069 9 месяцев назад

    Thanks a lot for this video, it's super useful. But I don't understand at which stage is it better to start doing this exercise? I am a beginner and my painting really sucks.

    • @TylerEdlin84
      @TylerEdlin84  9 месяцев назад

      You want to do stuff like this after you can copy a basic picture

  • @abdullamohamed7077
    @abdullamohamed7077 2 года назад

    AYO LETS GOOOO

  • @abhavaijnath8401
    @abhavaijnath8401 Год назад

    What brush texture did u use for the wood?

  • @nickdouglas373
    @nickdouglas373 2 года назад

    p͎r͎o͎m͎o͎s͎m͎