Transcripts
1. Introduction: As a former lawyer, turned
full-time creative, I know how hard it
can be to learn drawing foundations on your own. Even though I learned
from books and classes taught by great artists, it wasn't always
obvious how to connect the dots and evolve
into my own style. It took a lot of
practice, study, and experimentation to
get to where I am today. I'm grateful to have
worked with clients like Disney, Adobe, and Samsung. Now I get to create
primarily for my studio, Mimochai, where I make my own illustrated
products, do fun collapse, and host an international
drawing community that helps people overcome
their creative obstacles, and discover creative all being through the
art of drawing. It was this community that actually made me realize I want to teach a class on drawing
foundations in my own way. I remember what it's like
to think maybe it's too late to start drawing or maybe I'll never
get good at this. Or even I got pretty far
without drawing foundations, but now I'm stuck and I don't
know how to keep growing. I know drawing
foundations can be really dry and boring to learn. It can feel uninspiring, especially for those
of us who want to draw in a modern
illustration style, renting a realistic
ball and a shadow might not be that
interesting to us. Most beginning artists I
encounter want one thing, to draw beautifully
in their own style. I totally get it, I
was the same way. I mean, we get interested
in drawing because we see other artists' works
that we admire and we want to jump
straight to that. Unfortunately, that's usually putting the cart
before the horse. What I've realized over and
over again on my own journey is that while you can skip
over the drawing foundations, eventually you'll
find that you're limited in how much
you can really evolve into your own style
and truly express yourself. What are the drawing
foundations? At a basic level, these foundational
techniques are what drawings and paintings
are built on. Think of them like tools in your artist's toolkit or ingredients in your
artist pantry. I group them into
observation, line, shape, value, composition,
form, color, and light. Learning these skills are important both for
observing art, so you can break down your
favorite artist's work and understand the
choices they made, and for making your own art, so you can be intentional
about how you use each as you develop
your own unique style. What I found missing in this drawing journey when I
was learning from books and classes was the how and the why to the whats when it came to bridging how to draw with how I want to draw
in my own style. The problem for me
was that most of what I was learning
from was focused on just a few of the tools
and didn't really explain how it all comes together in
a really stylized drawing. The focus was almost entirely on realistic drawing
studies and ends there, or on the opposite side, an artist's tutorial
might teach me drawing in their specific style, but not explain all of the underlying
considerations that would help me apply it
to my own style. There's a big difference between knowing what the
skills and steps are versus how they
came together and why the artists made
the choices they did. I decided to create a drawing foundations class
using my own approach because I really wish
that I had something like this when I first
learned how to draw. A classic gives a clear overview of not just what the
drawing foundations are, but how to connect these dots to help me draw how I want to draw. I comb through all
of the hours I spent learning drawing
foundations and used an 80/20 approach
to put together a comprehensive yet
digestible class that covers the parts that made
the biggest difference for my own growth
and improvement. I use one main class project
as an anchor for all of the sections and
included lots of additional exercises to
reinforce each step. I explain how to see like an artist through
line and shape, value and form, color and light, portraits, and depth
and composition. Most importantly, I
explain how all of these tools and skills
connect and come together. This class is of course not a replacement for
years of art school. Instead, this is going to give you a really strong
foundation and starting point to learn all of the skills and have
a path forward. I like to think of
it as providing a map or guide for your
own drawing journey. That sounds like what
you've been looking for, let's get started.
2. Getting Started: Artist Toolkit: Over the years, I've experimented a lot and
streamlined my go-to tools in drawing process into an efficient flow that
works well for me. I also developed a
few perspectives that have helped me a lot on
my creative journey. We often deal with challenges
like inner critic and fear. Here's an overview of what's
in my artist's toolkit. I've broken it out
into three parts. Although I started almost exclusively as a
digital painter, I felt something was
missing and started to experiment with
traditional tools. Now, I love using both traditional
and digital mediums as each has strengths
and benefits. The tactile feeling of
traditional mediums just feels so great and
good for the spirit, while the flexibility of digital mediums are so
efficient and powerful. I also find that learning one
helps me improve the other. I've condensed my go-to
drawing tools into a simple set that can fit
into this little case. I have some graphite pencils, charcoals, brush
pens and ink pens. I share how to use these
in my daily pages class, which I'll link to in
the description below. Right now, I actually do most of my drawing with Prismacolor
colored pencils. I color with these as
well and also like Holbein's acrylic gouache
or golden acrylic paint. Of course, I love digital painting with
Procreate on the iPad. Each of these tools
has its pros and cons. Pencils are a great
and easy way to start. They don't require much clean up and are easy to carry around. The professional ones blend beautifully and I also
like the texture a lot. On the downside, they
can tire the hand easily and you can't
really lighten colors. If you go too dark, there's no turning back. Acrylic gouache paint has a lovely matte finish that looks like my digital paintings. Painting just feels like a joy once you
know how to do it. The paint itself is very
opaque and can also layer easily and make corrections
or paint over entirely. On the downside, they
require more prep and cleanup and are not
easy to carry around. Digital painting is like having hundreds of
tools and paints with you in a super thin pad
with no cleanup necessary. The undo button,
time up seizures and myriad of effects and
adjustments are all awesome. On the downside, you
often have to create your own textures
more as an illusion rather than how it is with traditional mediums where it's a natural organic occurrence. In terms of tactile experience, it just feels a little
less satisfying to me than traditional mediums
on paper or Canvas. I've compiled a list
of all the tools I like to use on a
shared notion page. It's nice because I can
keep this updated as I'm always experimenting
with new tools and evolving my practice. Can find a link to it in the
video description below. Remember that you can always just start with the
tools you have. Don't let waiting
for the perfect tool prevent you from
getting started. A pencil and paper is just fine. Even the best tools did not
make up for lack of skills, so let's talk about the
technical skills in our toolkit. At a basic level, these are initial techniques on with drawings and paintings
are built on. Observation, the
ability to see like an artist accurately and
without preconceived notions. Line, the ability to
draw with artful lines that reflect what is observed
or imagined accurately. Shape, the ability to construct drawings with building
blocks and familiar shapes. Value, the ability to see and group lights and darks with
intention and clarity. Form, the ability to
communicate the form of an object using values
including texture and mass. Color, the ability to see, understand and use color for both accuracy and expression. Light, the ability to render light and harness
illusions in color. Composition, the ability to lead the eye and frame an
image to your intention, including the use of
depth and perspective. Learning these skills
are important both for observing art so
you can break down your favorite artists work
and understand the choices they made and for making art, so you can be intentional
about how you use each as you develop
your own unique style. For example, in my illustration, you can observe that I use
mostly shapes and no linework. Use a planner perspective, have relatively flat color, but bring in a 2-3 value system to communicate form and use a high major and minor key to invoke a bright and
energetic atmosphere. Practicing and
studying these skills is really important to improving our fundamental
skills and our own style. To find a healthy
balance as a creative, I've found that it's
really important to have the right mental tools
more than anything else. The main reason I
find people stop being creative or
never get started at all is because of their own inner critic and
unhealthy expectations. Many of us can relate to
having impostor syndrome, self-doubt or just plain fear; fear of failure, fear of looking stupid or fear of
the blank page. Even great artists
suffer from these. For beginners, I'll
also add that there's a strong immediate
gratification syndrome that can cause a lot of grief. By being aware of
these hurdles from the outset and learn
how to manage them, we can learn to overcome
them and keep going. I find it really important
to bring a sense of mindfulness into one's
artist's toolkit. Mindfulness is
defined as the kind non-judgmental awareness
of what is happening in and around you in
the present moment. When I talk about
mindful drawing, I mean bringing that kind, non-judgmental attitude towards
yourself and your work. Observe with curiosity
and open awareness. It's natural and helpful to
see room for improvement. But don't let your
self-critical voice become so loud and so unreasonable that it prevents
you from creating. When this harsh voices
do inevitably come up, you can just notice them with care and gently let them pass. I think that these
mental perspectives are just as important as any other tool or skill
in my artistic toolkit, if not the most important. I personally have found
mindfulness to be an incredible tool for creatives and the
process of art-making. And I really believe
that mindfulness and creativity go hand in hand. I hope you'll give
these tools a try as you build out your
own artistic toolkit. It's all in exploration.
3. Lines & Shapes 1: Learning to See: Let's get started with
our first few tools. This section is all
about lines and shapes. But actually the first
tool that we need to talk about is observation. Learning to draw is really
about learning how to see. As you gradually change
your artist's eye, you'll start to
notice details that you've never seen before even in things that you see every day that you think you
know very well. You're also going to
start to see new colors, understand what value is, and how light affects
everything that we see and experience. Gradually, as you start to understand what
you're seeing, you're going to then be
able to pair it with your art skills
and other tools to start to express your personal unique experience of this world, and that's what's
really exciting. I wanted to start with that
because I know that some of these drills can start to
feel very dry or very boring, and although I've tried to
make them as fun as possible, it's also just so helpful to understand why you're
learning these things. So you can keep in
mind that as you're doing all of these
technical exercises, you're honing this superpower
basically of being able to see the world in this new
and much more vivid way, then each step is going to
be so much more enjoyable. So with that said, let's get
started with our exercises. Before we dive into the
drills and the exercises, I want to explain how
this all comes together in the drawing that
we're going to be creating for our class project. When you look at
this illustration, what do you think about
drawing first if I were to ask you to recreate
this drawing? Usually for beginners,
they're going to be thinking about starting with a detail that they
see or starting with something that isn't
necessarily a shape. For artists who
have been trained to look at
observational drawing, they will start to break
this down into shapes. So I want you to take a moment
right now before moving on to just initially identify
any shapes that you see. Let me show you how I
would break this down. So really obvious,
shapes are of course, this circle right here. Then let's say there's this
whole wall right here, and there's an oval right here. There is this cylinder
shape back here. Then there is oval
shape of her head. There's also a triangle
shape with her hair. There's another
triangle shape here that might be a
little less obvious. Then truncated
triangle shape here, and of course all these
little items are also small rectangles and
small cylinders. There is a cylinder back
here in the face behind. Each of these flowers, you could say is one big circle, or comprised of a few
smaller ellipses. Then there's, of course, this arched doorway in the back, which is a semicircle. Her arms can be broken down into these trapezoid
shapes or triangles. Then same thing on
her other hand. I'm just going to imagine it
going all the way through. Which is another
important aspect of observational drawing
as you are initially starting to compose
or understand the construction of how a
drawing is put together. Her whole body has
this trapezoid shape. Then the book is this sort
of rectangle in perspective. The pencil is a little cylinder. You can even fill anything out the cylinders or the
legs of the telescope, and even her little features, you could see this
is a triangle. This is another leaf
shape, leaf shape. Then of course, all these
little leaf shapes here. It's a shape that I use a lot. So I almost count the leaf
shape as part of the circle, square, triangle
rectangle grouping. So that is one way to break this illustration
down into shapes. Then you can also start to
think about big picture, what are the overall
shape patterns that you're seeing in an image? For example, in
this image there's this overall triangle
composition here. Then the arched
doorway does create this larger shape and frame
behind our character. Then I'm also looking at
the overall gesture of how things are placed and seeing how they're
framing our character. Then over here we simplify this into a circle and a rectangle. Those are the major shapes that I'm looking at in
this illustration.
4. Lines & Shapes 2: Exercise : Now that we know what
we're looking for, we can go back and start to work on some warm-up drills on just regular
pencil and paper. Our first exercise is going to just be drawing straight lines. A dotted paper is nice for providing some
guidelines for that. But honestly, blank paper works just as well
in my opinion. The point of this drill is just to get your
hand used to drawing straight lines because
it's something that's just so useful
throughout drawing. Again, you'll be able
to bring in some of that movement with your
elbow and shoulder and get a feel for that
so that you can try to recreate the naturalness of some of those
drawings when you're drawing really tight
with the risks, which is how you have to draw with a lot
of digital tools. With that said, let's just
start with some lines. With these I'm pivoting
from my elbow, and it definitely feels
different than if I just try to draw from my wrist, which right now I'm trying
to do and it feels tight. What's more important than being perfectly straight lines, is that they feel
natural and they give me that freedom
of movement, and it prevents the really
tight scratching type of drawing that beginners
tend to work with. After you draw lots
of straight lines, and I recommend doing
pages and pages of these. I know it might sound boring, but you can do them
when you're talking on the phone or you're watching TV, or when you're just waiting
around for somebody, so that carrying a sketchbook
is really helpful for that. After straight lines
is also really great to practice curved lines. Again, some people practice
these to make them as perfect and evenly
spaced as possible. I personally find the 80/20 rule means that I want to just get a natural feel and be able to create the overall
shape that I want, but it doesn't
need to be exactly perfect like to the die. Now let's move on to shapes. After lines, next best thing
to practice are circles and ellipses because
they make up so much of our drawings. Many people are very impressed
when someone can just draw a free hand,
a perfect circle, and that just comes from muscle memory and doing
it over and over again. What's nice about
the dotted paper is that if you want to, you can practice
training your arm or your iron hand coordination to fit it within a
particular measurement. You can feel the
difference between these tight little circles
with your wrist and then a bigger one with
your elbow and shoulder. Then another great exercise is draw ellipses which
are just ovals. Maybe do them in different
directions, different sizes. That's how simple
your circle and ellipse exercise
warm-ups can be. Again, same thing
with the lines and I recommend doing pages
and pages of these just so your arm gets
that muscle memory of how it draws smooth lines
and smooth circles. Now, I'm personally going to
move back to the iPad and Procreate because
that way I can screen record and to clear demos
of what I'm drawing. But you are totally
welcome to continue using traditional
mediums to follow along. We have our circle, square, triangle, and rectangle. Of course a rectangle is just a squished, elongated square. But those that need to turn
into the sphere, the cube, the cone, and the cylinder, which is why we include
the rectangle at the end. For a sphere, we start
with the circle, and then you can create these lines that
suggests the sphere. Then again, another curve
over the face of the circle. If you want, you can continue that all the way around so you can get a sense of the
back of the sphere. You can start to see
how that already comes together to suggest
some of that form. With the box, again, you start with the square, and then you extend
it and can just create these parallel
lines coming out sideways. Draw the back of the box, close it off at the
bottom and then closing it off in the back. Then you can create
the dotted lines, these two form a square in the back to create the
bottom face of our cube. With a cone, you want to create the first
two legs of the triangle, and then create an ellipse at the bottom instead
of a straight line. You can also draw a dotted
line through the middle, ending in the middle of the bottom of the
circle of the cone, to suggest the interior
volume of that cone. Now with the cylinder, it's a similar because
if you want to imagine two circles on the top and
the bottom of the cylinder, and then a rectangle
shape if you're looking straight on to the cylinder. Like the cone, you're
going to start with the two straight sides, but then you're going to
draw curved bottom and a curved top to
suggests that ellipse. Again, you can draw a
line through the middle, ending in the middle
of the bottom to suggest that volume inside. I suggest you practice drawing those just like the lines
and the ellipses over and over again so that you can
start to get familiar with stretching them or showing
them at different angles. I actually bought
these wooden toys that are technically for kids, but they are great models for doing some
studies of your own. What's great about that is that you can just
look at them from different angles and draw
them facing forward. Would look like if you
were looking at them from below or from above, coming towards you or
going away from you. They have basically every
shape that you need. I think that these are
really great because you can create some still
lives of your own. Use them with lighting exercises that we'll talk about later. To get the whole set was not too expensive and you can
use them forever. The next thing that I
want to talk about is how you can do some quick warm-up
exercises in a fun way. I know drawing circles and lines and the shapes aren't necessarily the most
exciting thing in the world, and so I came up with
this exercise that will hopefully be a way
for you to just quickly draw something
if you have, say, 5-15 minutes in the morning, it's a great way
to be both mindful and getting your drawing exercise and practice
these shapes. The idea with this exercise
is that you are creating your own flower arrangements
using basic building shapes. I began with this
ellipse at the bottom, and another ellipse to create this shadow shape
beneath it or a plate, and then the opening hole. Then I drew in my curve lines. A very simple way
to approach this is just to draw two at an angle and then criss-cross one or
two more going the other way and drawing some branches
coming out of those lines. Then just following those
lines and creating a bunch of different flowers just
through simple circles. Then adding in leaves
in-between those circles. I've obviously
variated the shapes, the sizes, and then I added bigger and smaller
leaves in-between. We're going to
stop here for now. But of course you can continue
this with color and with rendering and practicing shading when we talk about that later. It's really nice
because you can be in the flow and just express your current emotions or your current mental state
through these different shapes. You can, of course, bring
in triangles and bring in boxes and add tea
cups in the front, create a daily
arrangement and maybe using color or the way
that you use value, which we'll talk about later. You can indicate
your current mood or just your favorite colors, whatever it is that you like. Very simple way to not
need to think about anything other than
getting in those warm-ups. Like I mentioned earlier, drawing straight lines is
really important to practice, I know that it can
get a little dry. This sketch is a great example
of something where you can start with just some
lines in the background, and I'll show you a
little bit of how that would look so that you can create some
interesting backgrounds and textures for your sketches.
5. Lines & Shapes 3: Observational Drawing Techniques: So that was an
example of drawing something from the imagination
or not any reference, but an important
place for beginners to start learning how to draw is through observational practice, and so that's what a lot of this class is going
to be focused on. I'm going to be using this
photo that I've taken of some little billy
balls and a vase. What's great about
this is it's built up from really simple shapes, but is also something
that's nice to look at and nice to draw. I'll be able to show you every single step of
observational drawing through this very simple photograph or seemingly simple
photograph so that you can then apply it to
observational drawings. Before we get into the more
technically accurate methods of observational drawing, I want to talk first
about gesture drawing, which I think is really
fundamental and important. Gesture drawings are
really quick sketches that you use loose line
work that we were just practicing and the goal is to capture the gesture and
movement of your object. You can think of it as its
essence or even its spirit. Oftentimes, your role as
an artist is to bring out that gesture unless
your intention is to have a very rigid
or structural design. Either way, starting to train gesture as a natural instinct in your workflow will help bring more soul and energy
into your final work. Our gesture drawing
is most commonly taught in the context
of figure drawing, everything has a gesture. A curtain has a gesture
in the way it folds, a rock has a gesture in the direction it
sits and it's angle. I want to show you that
even this simple still life has a gesture. Look at how the balls are like little heads being tilted
in different directions. Of course, the stems have this natural gesture
that you can exaggerate. This vase and how it curves
has a gesture as well. So here's how a quick gesture
sketch might look for me. I might do this very lightly
before I begin my block-in, or just have as a warm
up on a separate layer. I want to keep this in mind and check back in
when I'm done with my drawing to see if I've lost some gesture that
I can bring back. I want to note that
gesture isn't just in the individual
objects of a drawing. Remember I pointed
out earlier that the whole composition of our main illustration
has a gesture to it. A whole landscape
can have a gesture. But starting with noticing it in individual objects will
help hone your ability to see it in the big picture and your ability to bring it out
of your future compositions. Now that we have
an understanding of a basic gesture drawing, let's talk about more technically
accurate methods of observational drawing. We're going to be
talking through eight different approaches
to observational drawing. We're going to be talking
about the block-in, then identifying the
shapes, landmarks, angles, proportions, negative
space, shadow shapes, and then checking your study
with a grid or a flip. Now, all of those
terms might sound very mysterious or unfamiliar
to you right now, but by the end of this sequence, you are going to understand
all of them and be able to use them in your
observational sketch studies. A block-in means to first
identify the overall frame of the object that
you're drawing and creating the space
that it lives within. I'm looking at basically
this overall shape. At the beginning, drawing side-by-side with a
drawing reference photo, or another illustration is
a great way to practice your ability to measure
with your eyes. It's a very similar
direct comparison versus having it on the screen
somewhere or a different size, and this is also
sometimes referred to as site size measurement. As I'm drawing, I'm constantly
looking back and forth between my sketch
and the photograph. Since this is even simpler, I can even start to put
in these lines that I'm seeing and maybe even
this back table, so that can create the frame. I would add the frame
to your drawing because the frame does help with a
lot of the measurements. The next step is identifying the shapes that are
within your reference. This one is very
straightforward, but I think it's important
to start with something simple and obvious because there are also going to be details
that you might not have noticed in this thing
that seems very obvious. Of course, these little
billy bob flowers have this circle shape. These are lines, but also, you can think of them as
very slender cylinders, and then there is, of course, this shape right here, which is the opening
of the vase, this overall pebble shape. Maybe I even put in
that shadow line there so that I can
start to imagine it. Those are the things
I'm looking at it, and then maybe this
shadow down here as well. It's technically an
opening on this surface. Then you can
technically say there's a rectangle shape back here. One thing that I want to really emphasize is that you
want to start light. So start with a very
light pencil sketch, especially with the block-in. If you're using charcoal, for example, or graphite pencil, you want to start with the
lightest possible touch, and then you build in
darker and darker. If you start with a really
heavy and dark block-in, those aren't going
to be your final lines and they're going to stand out or be harder to cover up
later into your drawings. So always start
light and then move into darker and darker. Now, the next thing I want
to talk about are landmarks. Landmarks or any point that
you want to focus on on a object that you're looking at or something in real life. So for me the landmarks are this touching point right here, where these intersect
on this vase, and maybe even the relation of where this ball ends
and this vase starts. With this vase, of course, it's not important
that it's super accurate on how big
the vase opening is, for example, but it's great to start
to train your eye to see those things because
there are going to be things where it
is really important, such as, somebody's face. Then from here,
landmarks, angles, proportions, and negative space all work in harmony together. Let me talk through
each of those. With angles, I'm talking
about things like that, seeing how these
angles come together, even how this stem is bending
and then coming back. How this vase goes up a
little before coming down. How this angle right
hear touches the table. Basically, angles are clues, and they help guide how
you're going to draw, and a great way to
check for errors. So for example, earlier when I was
looking at the landmark, I was noticing this landmark or this angle that
was a little off, and that helps me
correct this stem,. There's also this
angle right here. Now it's already
looking a lot better. Then I'm looking at the slope of this and how
this angle looks, how it connects to the table. There's angles all
over the place, especially at tangents, or
where objects meet each other. In addition to angles, you'll look at negative space. When we look at an object, we tend to just look
at the physical thing that we're familiar with, but it's creating
a lot of shapes within the reference image or in real life that are just
as helpful to our drawing. So negative space are just
spaces like this that are created by the space
in-between objects. And even these things
would count as negative space in this
shape right here. There's technically
this negative space created over here, at the end just to see a detail that might
have been missed earlier, a really good example of that. And then another thing we
can check are proportions. For extremely accurate
measuring of drawings, a lot of artists will
use their pencil, for example, held out like this, or using their fingers, and that's a very common way to check how big something is. So say this is one villi
ball and I'm like, okay, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. So there's about
five little balls of difference between
where the flower is and where the base starts, and so my drawing should
have that as well. So I can count in or eyeball 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. That looks pretty accurate. I'm looking at this circle
compared to this circle, and actually I'm just
noticing it looks more narrow on this photo than
I have in this drawing, so I'm going to bring
that up a little bit. And lastly, one thing you can
look at are shadow shapes. So a lot of people
don't really pay attention in the beginning
to light and shadow, but those are another
great place to look for clues on how to
construct your drawing. It will become even more important when we
start to talk about value in the next section,
but even right now, you just have to place in those shadow shapes
and it will actually help create that sense of
volume in a lot of cases. So here I'm seeing this shadow shape at the
bottom of the villi ball, and I can technically
get super detailed with the little pieces
inside the flower, But for now I'm not going to. There's obviously this one, and then there's this
big one over here. I am going to place that one, and there is this shadow up here and then there's of
course this one at the bottom. The last thing that you
can do is to just flip your drawing or add a grid
onto both so you can check it. I can use this as a way to check my work and I can see
that it's not perfect. I can start to see where
I have miscalculated how far to the
side the vase goes and how much the
relation between the balls and the rest of the
image are correct or not. And they can also flip
this image just to check that it looks overall
right and not distorted. And those become even
more handy when you're drawing things such
as human faces. You can always learn from that. In this case, it doesn't
really matter that the face is a little bit longer than the one in the reference photo, but if I was trying
to be super accurate, this is something that
I would go back and fix and be mindful of
because those are the little things that
if you want to create a really accurate
observational drawing are going to be
really important. Instead of tracing
which you can, I would recommend
just keeping it on the side and
correcting from there. This way you can
really train your eye. One way I should have checked is by looking at
this relationship. Here is obviously a lot smaller, and so that tells
me that this guy is sticking out a
little bit too far. Another way to check is
to check this angle. A pencil is a great way to
actually measure the angle, and then bring it
down to your paper to make sure that it matches. I'm going like
this, edge to edge. I'm just moving over here. This new line is looking
a lot more accurate. And then same thing
on this side, looking at this shape right
here in relation to this, so this one's obviously
a little bit wider, this one's a little bit shorter but not that much shorter, so I'm going to want
to extend this a little bit more so that it looks a little bit more
proportional to my reference. This is my sketch study and you want to clean
it up for line work, you just create another layer, or use tracing paper
or a light box to create clean line work
on top of your sketch. And that's a great
way to practice having the ability to
clean up light work, to get those really straight
lines in one and done. I'll do a little quick
practice here and you can follow along or skip
onto the next section. I actually want to
film the block in, again using the
grid overlay effect so that people can see
what that would be like. When you're just starting
out, it's helpful to use a grid as an option
to help you train your eye of looking at landmarks and where things intersect and just how to do some
careful measuring. I personally don't
like to use this after some practice with it because
it can become a crutch. You're not paying as
much attention to your natural awareness of your
ability to use your eyes, to just gauge it on
your own without guidelines because there are no guidelines out there
in the real-world. This can be a good way to
start to train your eye, but eventually I would use it to check your work instead
of always relying on having it to create a
perfectly accurate drawing. This somehow has created
the frame to match exactly. This is the mid
point of the Canvas, I have them exactly
taking up half the space so that I know that my proportions will
be exactly the same. Again, I wouldn't
necessarily be drawing with such thick lines or dark
lines as my block in, but I want to make sure
that it's legible for you. When I'm doing it on my own, I really love using a light peach color and much
lighter hand so that it's just a very sketchy
underlying drawing for my subsequent color on top. The grid lines might
be a little bit hard to see and I just
want to show you, you turn them on by turning
on drawing guide on Canvas, and you can edit the
drawing guide for many things like how
thick the lines are, how big, so make
them much bigger. I'm doing it with
about five boxes across because to me that feels like the right amount
of enough information, but not super tiny. Then you can change the opacity
and of course, the color. So I like to have
them pretty light, but that is how you
would change it. Here I'm just going to
show you that putting it over how accurate
this method can be, and that's actually how
a lot of large murals, life paintings are done
using this grid method. Let's compare this
final line drawing with the gesture
drawing we did earlier. I'm noticing that I could angle the heads of the flowers
a little bit more to make it look even more like they're
leading into each other and exaggerate some of these curves to bring
more life into them. It's nice to start with quick gesture marks
because it can easily get lost when you get into the
detailed measuring work of an observational drawing.
6. Lines & Shapes 4: Class Project Part I: l provide lots of
reference photos and recommendations that I can continue to practice
these observational studies. For now, let's start working
on our class project to use that same training to observe an illustration and do the
block and the landmarks, the angles, and all of that to our structural base
drawing sketch. I'm looking to do
my block in first. For my block in, I'm looking at the overall
shape around the outside. Then at the same time, I'm going to start looking at the overall shapes
and landmarks. Like I said, even though
I showed you each of the methods of measuring
as separate items, there, as you might
have noticed, something that starts to
all integrate together. When you're looking
at negative space, you're also noticing angles. When you're taking proportions, you're also seeing your
landmarks, so on and so forth. Here for the block in,
I'm already starting to look at relationships of how far that line is from
the edge of the borders. Some of these angles here
between the telescope and the flowers and
the telescope and this back doorway, archway. Same thing with this
vase at the bottom, seeing how far that is from
the bottom of my frame, and then coming back up. Noticing that this
book is a little higher than the
bottom of this vase. Same thing with the
bottom of this globe, a little higher than this vase. Then this flow is getting
to this edge right here. Then coming a little bit over this book areas
and it's going to start to place a
little bit of that. Then I need that
point to start to sense where these flowers
start to come up. There's this flower
right here that's not quite touching the door and has a little less space than the globe does from
the edge of the dry. I'm looking at that. Then I'm going back to this and noticing this angle right
here and the distance. This initial line
that I put in is actually a little bit
too close to the edge. That's why it is like a puzzle. If you keep checking all
of your measurements, can't go wrong because
you'll catch yourself. I want to stop here as my block in and I can start to do
a little bit of the girl. Her head starts a little
bit below the telescope. Her hair is a little bit away from this flower
here, like this. I'm starting to check
angles at the same time, just looking at this
angle of the telescope. Then her hair comes over here and I'm starting
to look at this shape, this negative space shape that is being created. Same
thing right here. There's this little
negative space shape. Even though I haven't technically gone to the
negative space check side, I'm at least naturally
noticing and observing those things
for my block in. I'm going to deal with all those little tiny
negative spaces later. I just need to know where her general position
is and I want to elbow and hands
right now. Let's see. I'm going to place them here, noticing her arm in the book. Then her hand comes out a
little bit past the globe. Next, I'm starting to notice the shapes that make
up this drawing. I'm going to start to
place some of those. Place this sphere over here. Here it's a rectangular shape. For this part, I'm drawing through a lot because I want to make sure that my
illustration lines up. Drawing this shape in
here, little opening. Same thing with the pencil
holder on this side. I can continue to keep just checking that my lines match up. Then drawing in this ruler, you can get very detailed. Here you can check the
angle and then notice the negative space and
angle that is created between the pencil and ruler. This telescope has
this cylindrical part here for the lens. It goes in a little
bit and then goes down to about here
past her shoulder. See, I'm looking at
this distance between the two legs as well
as the angle here. That leg actually needs
to be past this pencil. This pencil is more over here. Then there's this leg. Then I can see that
this leg on the back is starting from basically
the edge of this doorway. That's another reference
point, landmark. I can look at this
negative space right here and place the leg of that. I can see that the
leg comes into the vase right around there
and has this little angle. Looking good. This leg, you can't see
it but it ends right around this side of
the pencil case. Then I'm just going to
finish off this part since I'm here with this leaf, which almost touches
her hair here. That's a good reference point. Then putting in this flower. With a flower, there's a few ways I can
go about doing it. I can look very exactly
with where the line is. I can put it in the
overall shape first. You're constantly
measuring and checking, come together like a
puzzle piece and you just naturally catch
your mistakes. It's natural to have a lot of those mistakes in
the beginning and as this part of the process
and the practice. Just be proud of
yourself actually when you do catch
those mistakes. Or just general inaccuracies so that you can go
ahead and correct them and just train
your eye to see more and more clearly
and accurately. Again, I'm just constantly
looking back and forth. This one I can see this edge is right here in
relation to the doorway. There is a little leaf
coming out right here. Then this leaf is
within the doorway. There's this tiny
little green corner of the vase poking out. The leaves on this side or
like this in relation to, I'm looking at where does
this sit to this flower? Where does this sit to this vase into this flower
and then to each other? What angle is it that? Definitely, I'll
be double-checking these flowers later
because there's a lot of measurements that
can go with her body. This flower too. I can see because the top of her head is going to
be right around here, then this is actually only a little bit
higher than this one, which is all the
way down here and definitely lower than
the top of her head. I need to bring that way down. Now let's get to the girl. What are some good
measuring points? This hair coming out to here. Her hair forming
this negative space here is what I'm
looking at right now. Then there's this nice
negative space there. I can bring in the
hair like that. Again, trying to not think of this as hair. What
is that shape? That looks like a fish, actually, a little black fish. Then this one right here
looks like the curtain. Then her face. I'm just going to call that
face so that we can reference the same thing as
this angle like this. Then her hand comes
out like this. Then there's actually this tiny little negative space between her thumb and her back fingers. Now I'm looking at her
chin comes up a little bit above her hair, like that. Let me see if I drew
this line in correctly. Then you can see this shape
that is being created from her cone to her neck. Drawing in her jacket now. I can see the arm is about that far away from her telescope. Her jacket goes up here. Then it has this
negative space here. We put in this shadow shape. With landmarks and angles, a lot of times I'm also
looking forward to seeing the line all the way through
and that's really helpful. You wouldn't necessarily
think to associate the opening of her
jacket with the pencil, but you'll see that that is actually a really
helpful reference point. That's going to help me place
my pencil later on too. I'm starting to get into
the fine details now, so I'm looking at this
negative space here. Actually, I use negative
space as a what, as a measuring tool. I'm starting to see that all of these items are actually
sitting a little too tall, which is an easy fix. But if we didn't notice that, that could become a
big problem later on. This globe is actually too big. It's throwing a
lot of things off. The top of the flower in there. That means this goes
a little bit more in. That's part was
throwing a lot of these flower measurements
off earlier. These are actually
perfect examples of things to look out
for, so I'm glad. Now that's looking much better. I have the little
cutout right here. I've seen this as a cutout. It's the space between
her arm and her body. Then see this connection between the head of the pencil on
the top of her underarm, so drawing that in. That's going to help me
place my hand drawing hand. Looking at this little
shape that's being created. We're not going to get into the details of the
fingers right now. We will do that later for sure. But for now, I'm just looking
at the overall shape, which is like a little
box, like a rock. It's really starting
to come together. I just have a few more details. The left in her face. This are super tricky, but so fun to draw. I'm going to just put it into the basic lines so that I can give myself
a measuring tool. Then from there, you
put it in her eyes. That is starting to
look really close. Remember, you can check
by flipping this image. That looks pretty good. Let's see the overlay.
Pretty close. I can see that the globe
still need some work, but a lot of the
elements are right. The telescope up here needs
a little bit more work. If I were to take the
time to double-check, I should have remembered
that I should have set a little bit further above
her head than it is here. But overall, this is a great example of how
you can use all of the tools that I showed
you for measuring and looking to create
observational sketches
7. Lines & Shapes 5: Summary & Further Practice: We learned a lot
in this section. Let's go over a quick summary
of key points we covered. Learning to draw is
about learning to see. Letting go of
preconceived notions allows us to see
what's really there. Drawings are built out
of lines and shapes, so we need to practice
drawing these well and practice seeing them
in everything we observe. Besides the shape and
structure of an object, it's important to
see it's gesture. Everything has a gesture, everything has a spirit. Last week we went over the eight observational drawing techniques that you can use to hone your hand-eye
coordination and improve the accuracy
of your drawings. So to continue your practice, just keep at it. Do draws in the pages
of lines and shapes. Do them again. Try other images when it comes
to observational drawings. I recommend practicing
a drawing flow using the gesture drawing and then the eight observational
drawing techniques. You can use my curated
drawing references that I've provided or find your
own or draw from life. These are really easy ways to fill up your
sketch book pages, builds your muscle memory, and help practice
mindfulness while creating. For deeper studies
on these topics, see my recommendations
in the class resources. When you're feeling ready, let's move on to the next section.
8. Value & Form 1: Intro to Value: Welcome to Part 2 of my
drawing foundations class. In the first part we
covered lines and shapes, and saw how they are
the building blocks of all of our drawings. In most art training, the giant process is broken
down into three stages. There's line, shape, and form. You can think of
it as going from one-dimensional line work, to two-dimensional
flattened shapes, and finally to
three-dimensional forms. In this section we'll be
moving from lines and shapes, and onto value and form. We need to start with value because that's what's
going to lead to an understanding of how to
give a 2D shape it's form. What is value? Value is how light or dark a color object is on a
scale from white to black. For every color, there is a corresponding value
on a gray scale. With white being at one
end of the spectrum, and black being on the
other end of the spectrum, and all of the shades
of gray in-between. If you're trying to photograph or painting
into gray scale, you're seeing all of its values. Value is also called tone. In digital painting tools such as Procreate and Photoshop, you'll see the value scale
on the color selector. That's a simple way to
understand that value is a measure of how much white or black is in a particular color. When studying value, we're
looking at both the color of objects such as a white
ball and a black table, as well as the
lights and shadows, such as the many shades
of white to black that is cast onto the white
ball by a light source. Value refers to
lights and darks, both the terms of the amount of white
and black in a color, as well as lights and shadows. Here's a standard value scale. The grading at the top shows the full spectrum of
hundreds of shades of gray. Below it is a nine value scale. This can be broken down
into labels of shadows, mid-tones, and highlights. Notice that throughout
this section, we're not going to be
dealing with any color, just working in black and white. In fact, most
formal art training starts with charcoal
and pencil studies, and it stays in
gray scale drawing long before getting
into any color at all. This is because color can be distracting from
understanding value. Color mixes in hue
and saturation, and so it can be hard
for a beginner to see the underlying value of color. By focusing on value first and really getting
an understanding of it on its own will have a much deeper understanding
of color later on, and be able to use
value to lead the eye. It's a critical
tool for designing skillful illustrations
and artwork, and for seeing your
reference photos or real life
examples accurately. Now let's do some value
exercises together so that you can get a real understanding
of how this all works.
9. Value & Form 2: Value Study Exercises: The first thing I want to do to start our
demo drawing exercises is to actually take a look
at our main illustration and explain how value is the
next step of our analysis. Here is our final
finished piece and then I just go into adjustments,
hue saturation. I just bring
saturation all the way down and that gives me the
values that I want to see. What I'm looking at here is, is this image legible? Is my eye drawn to
where I want it to be. Here, the first thing I see
is obviously the character. We look at her first
because she has the highest contrast between
her face and her hair. We also have this
highest contrast as an object overall compared
to the rest of the items. Then I've added
these darker values, one to distinguish the shapes between these different
objects and then two, it just starts to
gradually bring your eye around
the illustration. As for the objects on the side, I've chosen this middle value to still make sure that the
objects are distinguished so you can see that the
flowers don't disappear into the telescope or
the pencil case, but of course, I
could have created a lot stronger contrast as well. Here I want to
show you a version where I made the
flowers a little bit darker and while that technically is a little
bit more legible, it actually goes against
what I want to do, which is to keep the focus on the character because
it starts to get a little bit to
competing in terms of what our eye wants to
be drawn to first. I like that actually, there's a lower contrast amongst these items
and then the higher contrast this with a
few smaller things that lead your eye around. That is what I'm thinking
about when I check value and I'll talk more about
that later in the section. For now, hopefully we
understand how value plays into our illustration
and artwork design. So we can get into some of the drills to get
familiar with values, how we control it with our tools and then build up from there. I've set up this paper with these boxes already to save us some time but if you'd like, you can go ahead and make
some squares for yourself, just five squares
and then I'm going to demo three different
types of tools. You don't have to do all
three but if you're unsure which one you feel most intuitive with or which one
you want to use the most, it could be a great
way to just test out different things while
also learning about value. Let's start with charcoal. Charcoal is one of those
traditional mediums and amazing for
learning about value because it produces a true black versus the gray that a
graphite pencil can do. I feel like this is a really
good place to start and just understand and
have a very simple, very affordable tool to help you understand the
range of values. Let's start with actually
the darkest dark. I'm just going to
make this as black as possible and pressing down as hard as I can to create
a very dark square here. I want to point out here that in a two value study you're just
looking at black and white. So literally could just be this. I'm using the white
of the paper as the first value and then this
which is the darkest dark. If you're just using two, you
don't press down so hard. The black will already
provide such a contrast, but those would be
a two value study. For a three value system, you just want to create
something that's 50% between the two of these. One way you can do that is
of course just sketching back in here and it's
just a matter of practice and feeling
the weight of your hand and how the charcoal
or whatever tool you're using responds to you to
know how heavy or hard to push and how to achieve
that middle value. With things like graphite,
pencil, and charcoal, you can always erase
and lift some of the color you put down if it's
getting a little too dark. This is a shamoy and it's also called a shammy,
and Artist shammy. And with this shammy, you can actually draw with it as well if you're using
your finger and it's actually really helpful for big studies and so
just using this, I'm going to actually
start to put in my second value here. That looks pretty good. I'm just actually
going to lift some of this charcoal that I have spilling over on this one
to create my fourth value. The fourth value, of
course wants to be 50% between the third
and fifth value. I really like
charcoal because it almost feels like
being a kid again, it's getting to finger paint and then when you do
charcoal studies, you're just amazed
by actually by how good it looks
when you're doing value studies without
having to be super exact and that looks
pretty even to me. Let's move on to the pen. You might not be working with something like a
charcoal that can create different
levels depending on how hard you're pressing. So instead, what
you can do is use hatching or line work to
convey the different values. Let me start again
with the fifth value. Filled all the way in is
going to be my fifth value. Now again, I'm going to leave
this first one blank as my first value and
then I'm going to create something in
the middle between these, so I'm just going
to use [inaudible] mark for this example. Right now I'm not trying to
make the line super perfect, but just to give you the idea, it's better with pen to start
lighter and then move into a darker hatch should I feel that I need to create
that difference. I'm going to move into
the fourth one now. I'm just basically going to double this amount of patchwork. Then let's come over
to the second value, and actually what I
think my work is just keeping the line weight very thin and spread
out. [NOISE] It was actually nice about doing the charcoal version first
it's a good way to compare and eyeball if your other versions are feeling generally
the same as those. With all this hatching, it still looks
significantly lighter than this totally dark ones. I'm going to go with these as
my five values with a pen. Now finally, I want to
show you a colored pencils and what's nice with colored pencils is that
with [inaudible] color, which is my favorite
brand of colored pencils, you can basically get them pre-made for you and
they have one gray, cool gray, and French
gray and you can just pick your five values and
do studies with that. Of course, you can just use
the black color, for example, and do lighter and
lighter strokes like how I demonstrated
with the charcoal. But I just wanted to show
you what it could look like if you just use
these pencils that are ready to go and that's actually how I enjoyed
using colored pencils, usually with color, but
the same idea of having a dark value and a mid
value and a light value. I'm going to start with
this black one here. I'm not going to do a
standard graphite pencil or mechanical pencil because it's a really similar idea
to the charcoal. You just won't get
as dark of a black as a charcoal can do
but it's the same idea, just starting with the
absolute darkest mark you can make as your
fist value and then keep splitting it
into the midway for your third
value and then your second value and
your fourth value. What I really like about
colored pencils is that you can get this
pretty dark black and it doesn't smear and these particular more
waxy colored pencils, the artists grade ones, blend really well together. It brings in a lot of the best of pencils and paints in a way, and charcoal, so a
happy medium for me. I am going to do with
the middle value next, just to continue
with our pattern. This is the 50% warm gray. These pencils are broken down. There's a 10%, 20%, 30%, 40, 50, and then it
goes to 70 and 90. Let me go into the 20 next. This is the 20% warm gray. I choose warm gray because I like the tone more than cool but again,
each one has its place. There's no reason
why you can only use warm gray for
these exercises. You can use cool gray
or French gray as well. If you're trying to convey
different temperatures, you might mix the two together. This is the five value studies. Go ahead and take some time to finish yours out if you need a little bit more time
and then we'll move on to the next exercise. We're going to continue with this reference photo that I've provided because it'll help you understand by reinforcing
something you're familiar with and seeing how each step layers on
top of each other. Let's start by creating a little value system for ourselves using
these digital tools and I am going to just quickly swatch out the
five value system. That is my darkest dark. Let's go here. My fourth value. I'm just moving it
up the scale here. Then the white of our
background can be our lightest light or
what we can try to do is to use a tonal color. That's around my two and then bring in the
white so we can really see any highlights
that we want to add. I actually prefer to
work like that for value studies and
you're welcome to do the same using
toned paper or just in the background of your tablet, if you're following
along digitally. So at this point, I am going to take a moment
to really look at this image and start to plan ahead of what are the different
values that we see. Some obvious things are
the shadow area and the opening of the
vase are very dark, so those would be
our fifth value. Then my brightest brights are going to be definitely
edge of this flower. The yellow looks very light to me and then coming
down the stem, there's some darkness there. When you're doing value studies, a big part of the task is
to group values together. Of course, again, like
we mentioned before, the photograph has
hundreds of values in it. To make it really
clear, value studies need to make some decisions sometimes where things are
often in the gray area, and then need to
decide one way or another which value is the closest that you
want to put in there? Let's just get into it. We
can always adjust as we go along and create a new layer
to start my value study. I'm going to start
with my middle value. I recommend when doing
values that you're starting with the middle
value and then going into your darkest dark
and then putting in the range of the mid tones and then ending with
the highlights. The beauty of working
digitally is of course, you can undo and
create new layers, but as much as you can, I recommend following
the limitations of the traditional
methods so that you can train your hand to really make good decisions
instead of relying on the undo or delete button. I'm also seeing this
shadow shape right here. That's really important to
do any table from the wall. I'm going to just put a
little bit of that there. With value studies, you're
not really trying to be super accurate
unless you want to. But the purpose is not
necessarily to be super accurate, is just to convey the overall forms and
shapes that you're seeing. Here, the optic basically
blends into its shadows, so we treat them
all as one shape. Again, I'm squinting because the billy ball itself is
quite a complex thing. If you look at all the details, but if I squint and just look at the shadows
that I'm seeing, I can definitely
see the sphere that encompasses or makes
up the billy balls. I'm just going to put
in the show shape. Here's a good area where
I'm making a judgment call. I can see that this stem
is on the darker side, but it definitely pops against the back of the billy ball. I'm going to say that
the stem is lighter there and back here for
now I'm using the four. It might need to add
a little bit of a five just to make
that even more clear. You can bring that
four and starting a little bit below so that
I still get that part of the stem to show
that it's going into the ball in the
front of our view. Now I am going to start
working on the top of this base because that to
me is not looking like that. I think this three is going
to be the highlight for sure. Maybe just like little
specs that are coming in to indicate that there's
a light bouncing off there. I'm noticing that it's coming down here and that's really nice to indicate the
shape of the vase. I'm just doing a lighter
strokes to start to get into that transition. Can definitely see that
there is a lighter part on the outside of this vase where the light
is reflecting in. We'll learn more
about that in a bit. Having that knowledge
will help you catch it in your
observation as well. I'm going to add a little bit
of the fourth value here, just to make that
even more clear. That's looking pretty good. Maybe I can add a little bit of the wood green in this
vase fine detail. But I want to try it so
that you guys can see how much of a difference, just subtle value shifts in
communicating our forms and our volumes because
our little things that most people are
not going to notice the first time they look
at an image like this. But once you start to draw it, I appreciate that a lot more. Then I'm going to go back in here because I'm
feeling like the top of this billy ball
deserves more contrast. I'm going to cover
up my base block in lines that we created
earlier and look at this. I'm going to just add a few pieces of my
third value on top. You can just see how that
starts to look like, the texture of the billy ball. Of course I can get into
even more detail on that, but I want to save that
for later in this section. Notice the more I
put them together, the lighter the area isn't,
it may keep those spread out. The fourth value you
can still dominate. Bringing in a little touch
of the black certain areas. Let's just add a little
bit of highlight. It's mostly around the edge of this billy ball
that I'm seeing it. Then maybe we can
add a little bit to the vase to just to make it pop. You can just see how powerful the white highlight is
because of the contrast. Having this highlight
here really clarifies that this billy ball is
in front of the left one. What I like about this is I
can think about in the form, which I want this flower to pop. That is my five value
study of a billy balls. Take some time to
create your own. Then let's meet with a slightly more advanced
exercise with the same concept. Now that we've done basic value study exercise
with billy balls, which we're familiar with, I want to show you a more complicated
image and demonstrate how the same concepts
apply no matter how complicated the image
might appear at first. This is a great
example to start with. You can use drawing guides if you'd like to the whole
block and exercise. I want to go a
little more quickly through this one and just show you how fast value
thumbnails can actually be. Here's the horizon line. Here is this shape
ends down here. Then I'm looking at
shadow shapes now. Here's this one, there's
big one right here. That's my basic blocking. Bringing in that
same five values that I was using earlier, Sum, bring the background down a little bit so that you
can see the white more. Again, I'm going to
start with my middle value and I'm going to put in my big shapes. I'm going to squint
and I'm going to see where my darkest darks are, where I think the third
value is the truck or the van and then the sky and parts of the road are
definitely the lightest lights, I'm seeing, then everything
else is in-between. Let me just start to place in some of these big shapes
and go from there. Remember that values
are relative. Although it might seem like it's a little bit too
much in contrast, is because we
haven't put the rest of our values in right now. I am going to put in
the fourth value in next and work into the darkest dark for
this particular image. When I'm looking at
this I'm really feeling the flow of the overall image. I really love this sweep. As I'm staring at the values, I'm definitely considering
what I've seen in the photo, but I'm also starting to
think about how to exaggerate maybe some of these shapes to emphasize that
flow even more. Maybe I'll bring
this one up a bit. That's where a lot of design
considerations can come in, which you don't have to worry
about in the beginning, but I want to show you
that it would be part of this step as you start to get more comfortable with observing, in identifying different values. Everything has a gesture, even these shadow shapes. That's a really nice thing to learn when you're
developing your design. It really did helps
to define the edge. Then I'm just going
to keep putting in some of these shapes back here. This is a really nice gesture
of the hill coming down. So far you can see
that I've only been working with two values, three plus the background. It pretty much looks very
much like the image. I could stop here is
actually a good value study. I'm just going to now go in with a few more details to show you the difference between a
threeish value to a five value. Let me go in with my
second value now. Like I said, the more
values that you have, the more realistic it will look. You can start to see the forms being pulled out as I add
in this second value. I'm not trying to
match the image exactly for these rough
studies but I am starting to, again go back to thinking about the overall feeling that
I want to give through different gestures and
how I put in the values which was I want to
emphasize and which ones maybe I want to
play down a little bit. This area is actually one
bigger shape when I squint. Let me try to put that in.
I think that looks better. That has this flow with
this back shape like that. Let's start putting in
my darkest darks and like the hazy feeling
of this image. I'll only really bring it in, in a very few select areas. Draw the eye to the car a bit. See how just that
little bit of black really helps make this become even more clear and pops
and we add some white, it'll be even more so. You can see how really
choosing where to place my values to emphasize or not
emphasize certain things. That's just starts to become an artistic choice that
you can practice by doing. We need different value studies, ideally the same image. Hopefully you can see now how these five value
studies can be applied to very simple
drawings and then worked up to even very
complicated drawings. They're a beautiful way
to study photos that you enjoy and you start to practice learning to
see lights and darks
10. Value & Form 3: Intro to Form: Now that we have an
understanding of value, let's go back to
what we were talking about at the beginning
of this section, which is how value
relates to form. Remember the three stages
of our drawing process going from lines to
shape and then form. We have our lines
and shapes in place. How do we then render it
to communicate its form? Its mass, or its depth,
or its textures. It all comes down to
skillfully placed values. Let's start by talking
about value in the 2D versus 3D world. In a 2D world, value helps communicate in
images big shapes. It can also be used to
create a value pattern, which helps us use
the distribution of lights and shadows
to guide the eye. In a 3D world, value is what
communicates the form, texture, and volume of an object by using
lights and shadows. The more values are, the more realistic it will look. Let's talk about rendering form. Remember this
shapes that we drew together in Part
one of the section. Let's talk about
how we can shade those so we can
make them look 3D. It's helpful to learn about the classical order of
light for this purpose. Understanding this across all of the basic 3D shapes will help you render
many other things. This is the classical
order of light, but you really only need
to know three major areas, the light side, the form shadow, and then the cast shadow. But knowing these additional
terms will help you understand and talk about
the full range of light. Doing highly rendered value
studies might seem tedious, especially if you want to
draw in a modern flat style. But doing at least a few will
help you understand how to adjust your style to be more
flat or more realistic. Studying a range of value and maybe doing a scale like
this so you can see where along this spectrum of flat to realistic that you personally like can
be really helpful. Finally, an important aspect of communicating form
to learn about is texture and stretching. To communicate that
something is fuzzy, bumpy, what in, or whatever else is actually
a matter of value variation. Try practicing creating a sheet of different
textures and hatches so that you can
experiment with what you would want to
use in your work. Some basics to start with
are stippling, scribbling, grass hatching, crosshatching,
and contour hatching
11. Value & Form 4: Form Rendering Exercises: Let's do a few exercises
together now on form so we can start to get a hang of
how to render 3D shapes. Now let's render a sphere
so we can really focus on understanding how much of a render we enjoy and
also how to achieve it. I'm going to start by drawing in the core shadow line and then putting in
the darkest dark. I won't go all the way here, but just having it so
that I can start to see the form of my sphere
already. I'm using charcoal. We're quickly demo
the shading because I can blend it easily
with my chamois. I'm just following the shape
of the bowl right now. [NOISE] I'm also going to think about the
highlight being right here. I'm going to give myself
some charcoal to work with. I'm going to put up all
the way around here. Now I am going to
take my chamois. I'm going to start to blend
in this core shadow area. It's okay if it's not
a super sharp edge. It's perfect because
obviously the more I'm blending the more I'm
losing the charcoal piece, so I'm just going to carry
it all the way up and over. You can get very
detailed and technical, especially in like
atelier training, render like a perfect sphere and create very gentle marks. But for our training purposes, I think that this is a great
starting point and you can dive into more
detail if you'd like. This is already
looking pretty good. I'm just going to
start to darken certain areas to bring
the form out even more. With the charcoal
I'm not working in just straightforward
five values, I'm trying to bring in all of the different tones available. The shifts in value really
communicate the shape, the light, strong that light is. Shadows also have
their sharp edges and blurry edges depending on
how strong light source is, where it's positioned above it. That's why studying
from real life is really helpful
because you'll start to get a sense of how that
behaves in real life. You want to sharpen your
edges with charcoal. Your eraser is
absolutely a tool. With your eraser you can
pretty much draw with, especially when it
comes to charcoal. Let me just show you
really quickly how adding a little bit
of white would look. Like I said, the white also
blends just like the dark. Now that we have some
experience rendering a sphere, let's move back to our Billy Ball reference image so that we can practice
adding texture. With this study, we're going
to focus on adding texture. Studying texture is a great way to observe many
different things. One exercise you can
do is just create a whole sheets of
different textures. Studying natural things, just
plants and wood and rocks, but also studying maybe some
synthetic things such as how to render stainless steel
or how to render plastic. I'm going to start with
actually a dark color. I'm just putting in
my shapes and I'm not trying to be super
accurate here. Your darkest value or maybe your second darkest
value is a nice way to approach rendering these
types of detailed textures, for anything like leaves
and foliage because bringing it out is
more intuitive. Actually it's how the object is structured
if you think about it. Like the darkest dark is within the Billy Ball and then the lightest lights are the
pieces that are coming out. This is the sphere if
you think about it. There's this sphere or
ellipse comes out like that. The core shadow is around here. Then the light area is
this whole area up here. There's light coming in from above and then reflect
off the floor from below. But this would be
our shadow area. That's how to think about this sphere as a general matter. It's something to really keep in mind throughout the whole
process because it's easy to lose yourself in
the little details and then not pay attention to the overall shadow
structure and how the value plays out on this object
that you're observing. Especially because
it's in color, it's easy to get distracted with all the little details and then eventually
you almost forget to keep checking your values. Even though when you
first started this class, you probably looked at this
Billy Ball and was like, that's a yellow Billy Ball, yellow flower, one color. You can see there's an
infinite number of colors, an infinite number of values that you will now learn
to group together into your limited value
palate and to see how few you need to really
communicate to that texture. You'll see that
the darkest parts definitely get thicker, so that's something you want
to keep in mind so maybe extend these parts
out a little bit more and then keep these
parts pretty clean and tight. Then if you think each
of these are cone, and so I'm also seeing them this is where the light
is hitting them at the top. Even your little main shapes
can then be broken down further into tinnier shapes. White. I'm going to keep it just focus to
this area and maybe the edge a little bit. I think with fairness
you want to be really selective in where you
want to draw the eye. Even if you technically see the same highlight elsewhere, the highlight is just
really powerful. Now you know how to
render these textures. I would just keep
practicing if this is something that you want to
incorporate into your style. You can draw a bird,
you can draw leaves, you can draw flowers, of course. If you can really
get this down with just gray scale is going to help so much more when
you get into color
12. Value & Form 5: Value for Artists & Class Project Part II: Now that we have a basic
understanding of value, let's dive a little
bit deeper and talk about how it helps
us as artists. Value helps in many ways. But to me, the most important
ways that helps is one, allowing us to see
the essence of an image behind all the details. [inaudible] has
helped by squinting. Two, setting up a strong base
structure for our drawing. Remembering how we work from
big picture to details. Three, helps us pick
the right colors which we'll talk about in more detail in the next section. And finally, it helps us manage our color and
light relationships. An easy way to check
the legibility of your drawing is to
check its values, which it can do by turning
it into grayscale. If it's still legible
without color, that's a strong value setup. When I'm working with
my own artwork and coming up with something
original and different, I tend to start with
color first and then I check it with
values afterwards. I can adjust the
colors as needed, and this is just for me, a more natural way for me
to think about my process. For you, I recommend starting with these foundational
belly studies, getting understanding
of it first, and then trying it both ways, and just see which is
the most helpful for you in terms of getting
the best final results. I also want to talk
about describing value in terms of major
and minor keys. I learnt this
concept from teacher built Perkins at New
Masters Academy, and I find it really helpful to think
about value this way. Major key refers to
the proportions of whites to darks within
the entire image. High major key means the image
has mostly light values, while low major key means the image has
mostly dark values. Minor key, on the other hand, refers to the range of contrast between the
values themselves. A high minor key means
there's a lot of contrast, while low minor key means
there's not much contrast. You can see how the
different pairings of the keys creates these
different moods, which makes sense because
these combinations have a lot to do with
lighting and atmosphere. How bright or hazy a
setting is or isn't. Another aspect to
keep in mind as you're doing value
studies are Value thumbs, is that a valley
can appear light or dark depending on what
values is surrounded by. The same shade of
gray can appear totally different depending
on its surroundings. You can try this for yourself
by recreating this image. Training your eyes to
be able to proceed is visual illusions
is really helpful. Now it's your turn. You're going to take
everything we learned in this section about value and form and bring it into
our main class project. We started this section
with a discussion of how value follows
the lines and shapes exercise and now it's your
turn to do a value study of the illustration and you
can check it by simply turning the provided
illustration to grayscale. Also just provide that as an
image so you can compare. For this one, I'm
not going to do an example alive just so we can keep this class at a
more manageable length, and this is something that
you can just practice on your own and compare it with
the provided images. The same concepts that I've been demonstrating to you with the billy balls and landscape studies are the
same in this situation. The few additional
exercises that you can incorporate include after you finish putting in
the values that you see, you can play with adjusting
them so that you can create different moods based on the major and minor keys
that you learned about. Then from there, consider
potentially rendering some of the objects based on the
3D shapes that they take. For example, we can
render the globe a little bit more and see if you like that as you
more realistic style. I know that was a lot, but I hope it was
helpful and interesting. Let's go over a summary of what we learned together
in this section. In this section, we learned, value is the study
of lights and darks. Understanding values helps
us design art that is clear and easy to
read or if it's not, that's intentional on our part. Planning the value is
a critical tool in creating a mood and
directing the viewer's eye. A painting can still work
if the colors are wrong, but the values are right. It's generally not
true vice versa. When studying the
values in an image, what do we to see more
clearly is to squint. Squinting is a legit
tool that's taught in art schools and
professional art books. When giving a value studies, the fewer values, the better. A black and white photo has the full spectrum of
hundreds of values. You really only need 3-5
to do and effective study. It's all about grouping
related values together which
squinting helps with. Before you start drawing, really study the values
and find a pattern you want to intentionally
depict to focus the eye. Finally, the most important
thing is just to keep practicing through lots of value studies from photographs, real life, and other
artwork and it will naturally start to hone your
sense of light and dark. When you feel ready, let's
meet in the next section, we'll finally talk about color and light.
I'll see you there.
13. Color & Light 1: Seeing Color: We've finally reached
color and light, which I know is many
people's favorite part. In this section,
we're going to be talking about basic
color theory, color relationships, how
to pick a color palette, and seeing how it
all comes together by doing guided studies. Grab your tools and let's start exploring the world of color. Color is one of the first
things we learn about as kids. We learn about the colors of
the rainbow are blue ocean, are green trees, but understanding color as
artists is much more complex. For some, picking colors and working with color is intuitive, while for others, the whole
process is very challenging. Either way, don't worry. Understanding basic
color theory can help you regardless of
which camp you are, and it will bring a whole new appreciation
to how you see the world. Color is beautiful and
complicated and you can spend your whole life learning about the science and the
art behind color. Again, here I'm approaching
it with my 80/20 principle. I will provide resources for
you if you would like to dive deeper into any
of these topics. As for what tools will use, you can follow along
this class with digital or traditional tools. But I do want to note that
I've personally find learning color theory is best with
traditional mediums. This is because with
traditional tools, you're really forced to think
about how colors are made and really feel what it means
to mix colors together. Digital tools, on
the other hand, are really great
for experimenting with color palettes because you can use all those great
adjustments to your advantage. That's why I'll be
using a combination of both traditional and digital
tools in this section. What should we tackle first? Most schools would start with basic color theory when
talking about color. But I personally
found it helpful to start with studying color and understanding some
nuances to get my feet wet before diving into
the technicalities. This way, I was understanding
why I was learning color theory so that I could see color better in practice. Instead of the color wheel, let's start with nature. Here's a picture of
some beautiful leaves. At first we see objects
just as an obvious color. As a kid, we think about a
red apple, a yellow lemon, and even as adults,
we still think of the world generally
in these terms. But as you really study objects, especially for
artistic purposes, you start to see all these beautiful subtleties
in everything. Here in this photo
you might say, there's a green, yellow, red, red orange, orange and darker green leaf,
which is all true. But take a closer
look and see how many colors each
leaf actually has. Feel free to take a
pause here if you'd like some time to study it
on your own first. Let's talk through some of
the colors that I'm seeing. Starting with this
green leaf at the top, I can see many shades of
green, yellow green, yellow, brown, dark green, and shades of gray and maybe even some hints of
blue in the shadow areas. In this yellow leaf, I'm seeing some browns, some dark browns, hints of some purples, red violet and hints
of green as well. In this red leaf has really
beautiful deep wine color, and in the shadows you can
see it almost gets to black. There's definitely
some pops of yellow, some magenta, red, and
maybe even hints of green. In this red orange leaf, similarly, there's a lot of
yellow around the edges, some reds, and then some browns and some black spots that
are covering the leaf. Moving over to this
dark green leaf, I'm seeing definitely some
browns and yellows, some reds. In this yellow leaf over here, there is predominantly
yellows and yellow oranges, but also a lot of browns. I can even see some hints
of green at the tip, and it would bring in some
reds in some of the detailing. What were some of the
colors that you picked? Were they even more that
you saw that I didn't? This is a great way to start to exercise your eye and
start to think about what colors you would
be using in order to create this type of image. We'll get into more
of that later. But first I want to show you this quote by Winston Churchill. "Gradually the veil over my
eyes was lifted and I could stare at an object and see
what my instructors saw, an ephemeral mingling of color." A great way to hone
our ability to see true colors is by doing
still life paintings. But doing observational
color studies is important even if you don't want to
paint super realistically. Developing an
understanding of how real life works is square one. From there, you can
interpret and stylize. Without it, your drawings
and paintings will be built on weak foundations.
14. Color & Light 2: Plant Study: So let's bring these
concepts together by doing a color study
of this photograph. It's a great reference
for our class because it's a step
up in terms of complexity from our
billy balls and also moves us towards our initial
benchmark drawing photo. It has these great lines, shapes, values, and colors. We can bring all of what
we've been learning together. First I want to talk about our different coloring mediums and the pros and cons of each. I want to spend a
little bit of time just talking through the three
materials that I tend to use the most and the benefits and drawbacks of each one. Starting with colored pencil, because I think it's just
the easiest to access and most familiar
because we've all used colored pencils as kids. I love these colored pencils for just having something
quick and easy on the go. It leads to a lot of
happy accidents and just feels great to have
pencil put to paper. It gives me these
great textures and I love how a lot of the
pages turned out. This is when I started to use colored pencils a lot more
in my sketchbook pages. They just have this really
nice quality to them. They're able to blend really well and I'm able
to experiment and then carry these pages into my digital practice and create prints or
anything else with them. The downside is that it's
hard to go back sometimes. There's a certain point
and color pencils, if you go too dark or
too deep into one hue, you can't really fix it. Sometimes having those
limitations is a good thing. But to address that, we can then bring
in our next friend. This is done with gouache, it's actually acrylic gouache. It's both acrylic and gouache, which I like more than
just plain gouache. These are really
great for having this extremely matte finish. It's almost like a digital painting and that's
why I like it, because it really can emulate my digital style very
well or vice versa. But it's still also has
these limitations that helps me work out
problems traditionally. And I was able to go
back over it with these dark colors
and highlights. I can't pull this off
with just colored pencil. That's what I really
like about gouache. Gouache, on the other hand, does not give me that pencil texture that
I really love from colored pencils and
of course it's not as easy to carry around
and use anywhere. I tend to like to do
that more at home and then colored
pencils outside. Then lastly, we have digital. Digital is amazing
for being able to experiment with these
different colors. Also be able to bring in my traditional keep those
textures and then create new colors or textures and experimentations
on top of that. You have big layers, of course, and you can clean things
up very nicely and so keep it looking very traditional or make it really abstract. Digital has so
much potential and power to it and I really think
it's such an amazing tool. I still use digital
most of the time. Bringing these two together
has been really helpful to my own practice and I really think that there
are pros and cons of each. I was at the
downside of digital, is that it just feels different. It doesn't feel like
you're in the flow as much as when you're working
with paper and pencil. Sometimes the fact
that there are hardly any limitations makes it really complicated in terms of picking the right
color palette or coming up with the
right textures. All the textures
that come really naturally and beautifully with paper and pencil and
paint have to be created manually in digital. Those are the pros and cons of the three materials that
I like to use the most. I encourage you to
experiment with all sorts of things and just see what
feels best for you. Now, I'm going to start the
demo from the beginning. This gives me a chance to bring together everything we've
been learning so far, starting with the blocking and doing an observational drawing. I'm starting with my
peach colored pencil because it's great for lightly laying and guidelines for my coloring and painting. If I need to make adjustments, I just draw over it so
that trains myself not to erase and also notice where
I didn't observe accurately. As I'm laying this in, I'm going over the observational
drawing techniques that we learned earlier. I'm really paying attention to the gesture of the
overall branch, the overall triangle shape of this object and then the
individual leaf shapes, landmarks of how the leaves
are overlapping each other and where they line up
with the leaves around it, directly the below
or to the side. I'm also noticing the angles of the edges and how
they meet the branch, the overall proportion
of how big and small the leaves are to each
other and the branches, and of course the negative
space between the leaves. Once we have our observational
drawing line work put in, next I'm going to
show you a bit of my colored pencil
coloring process and bring in some of our
learnings about value. At first, we might look at
this photo and just think, a green plant, you might
think of it as one color. But now you'll
notice that there's so many different colors
that make up this study. In this stage, I'm
paying attention to the values and starting to
notice the color shifts. I'm starting with a
medium green coloring in at about 50% of
my hand weight. But I'm also going
to need to add dark green, dark brown, and even indigo and
black colors to get those shadow shapes
and value changes. The value shifts are how
we can see the form of the leaf where it gets folded
and where it casts shadows. I also need to add in yellow
and blue-green hues to shift the temperature as a light reflects on the different
angles of the leaves. I can really see here how
the different warm greens versus a cool greens look very different once I
take a closer look. You can experiment here with seeing what other
colors you notice. Colored pencil is
intuitive and familiar. But you'll also notice that once I put down a darker color, I'm not going to be
able to lighten it again with colored pencil alone. There's definitely
pros and cons, which hopefully is obvious
through this demo. That brings us to gouache. First I'm just
laying out some of the basic paints that I know
I'm going to need to use. If you don't have any of these particular
hues, don't worry. As long as you have
the basic colors, you'll be able to mix a
close approximation of them. For example, with blue-green, you don't necessarily
need to have that color. You can mix blue
and green together. I'm using the Princeton
velvet touch brush line, which is really great for
acrylic and acrylic wash. I'm just coloring directly
over my colored pencil study, starting with this
yellow green color because it's the biggest
color shape that I can see. I'm just placing
that wherever I feel like I notice that color
in my photo reference. I'm looking at the
photo reference a lot going back and forth. This is just my
first bottom layer. I don't have to be super exact. Trying to place it in as many
places as I can notice it. Colored pencils and gouache actually work really
beautifully together. Gouache can cover up
layers completely. You cover up any mistakes and colored pencils
or just adjust things that you want
to change that you can't do through
colored pencil alone. You can be selective
about having the parts with that
lovely pencil texture showing through while leaving other parts with the flat
matte of the gouache. Now, I don't normally cover up my colored pencil studies
with gouache like this but this demo will
help demonstrate the same exercise
with this new medium. Now I'm mixing color
green by bringing in the blue into my green color, adding a little bit of
white to lighten that up. Another tip is that
you can mix colors with these little
palette knives. What's nice about
this is soon as you mix with your brush, your brush gets really
fat with lots of paint and it's hard to really scrape it out and get a nice delicate touch
with the paint again. And so these palette knives, one can be really
great at mixing paints because it has
this broad surface, and two keeps your paint brushes for painting instead
of color mixing. I'm going to start to put
this color down wherever I see that cooler green hue. With gouache, there
is a little bit of time where you can blend the colors together but
it does dry quickly, so a lot of times
it ends up feeling a little bit more like
separate colors which can be a challenge if you're trying to get a very blended look or a great benefit if you like that really clean
and more digital look. Now that you've
started to notice the lights and shadows of objects from our
value and form class, you can think about
the main colors you see and how they are shifting from lighter
values to darker values. Keep an eye out for that
suddenly changing color. Even without knowing
any color theory or the science of
light and shadow, you can simply observe what
you literally see before you. As much as you can try to isolate a color
you're observing. So many times we think a color is different
because of what it's surrounded by such
as a gray that looks really green because it's surrounded by
really potent reds. And swatching out some of the colors at the top
here so that you can see the difference and the
shifting temperatures of each hue that I'm using and creating this little
palette up here. It's also nice about
trying little swatches, either directly on
your study or it can have a little scratch
paper next to you, is that you can preview a color before putting it
down onto your study. So when you're mixing, I really recommend
mixing in small amounts first to see this getting
to the right temperature. I'm just putting
in my dark color in where I see my shadow shapes. Something so organic like a
leaf is a little trickier because there's not like
that really hard edge, clear shadow shape
that you can often get with man-made objects, but I think this is
a great exercise. Just start to really see how these little changes can really make such a
huge difference, and it's going to be a little
bit delicate about how you put down different
colors and how you can go back and color on top of them to create the
effect that you want. So knowing we're starting to see three different values
at this point, overall, we have this really
dark shadow color, the lighter yellow-green color, and this middle
cool green color. Just with three values, like we've talked about
in our value form class, can I create so much
definition and form? Of course, it's flat,
but it really makes a huge difference going
from one value to three. So now I'm just
going to mix in some of my highlight colors. Can already see just
what a huge difference that added value creates. Now, because gouache is really
opaque and dries quickly, I can add back in lighter
colors and highlights or fix colors that didn't
turn out the way I imagined. This is really helpful and feels a bit like digital
painting actually. I love how opaque and vibrant
the paint it turns out. Now I'm adding in some yellow, creating this warmer highlight. So adding in this yellow to this mane yellow-green
that I had earlier, it's interesting to see
the slight shift that it creates making it a little
bit more warm in the center. Now just adding even more
warm and brighter highlight. I'm starting to notice
that the contrast between the cool and warm parts of these leaves are going to feel a little bit too different, so I know I'm going to
need to harmonize that a little bit more
moving forward. This is really amazing to
observe how these shifts and color temperature and
value really start to bring out how this
form is angled, where the light source is and making this whole painting
look more dimensional. That's also where you
can really start to get the sense that color is so relative and it depends on the colors
that it's next to. This green that
looks really cool. Next to this warm
green can look a lot warmer if it's next to
say a blue or a purple. And even though these two greens you probably thought were
really similar when you started to mix them
can feel so different if those were the
only two things you're trying to compare. Now I've created this slightly less saturated shadow color and I'm placing it
anywhere I see some of that shift and the shadow
shapes of the photo reference. Even within these really
dark parts of an object, there are shifts that might be hard to notice at first but do make this big difference in terms of how the
form is rendered. You'll notice that doing the
colored pencil study plus a gouache study also helped
reinforce observing color. For me, I catch things
the second time around that I didn't
notice the first time. And because I've already blocked in the drawing with pencil, I can focus entirely on studying value and color it with
my gouache painting. I'm really getting
into the details, defining the branch
more and putting in some of those little
kinks in the leaves, trying to really
pay attention to how the different leaves
are angled to the branch, making sure that I'm
showing the right overlaps, right tilting towards and away. All right so that's
looking pretty good. I decided to add
some clean up around the whole image is putting in this really light green shade, covering up all of
my pencil marks, but that's not necessary. I actually think it
looks cool with some of the pencil marks
showing up underneath. This is also helping
me really clarify my negative spaces and
crisping up the edge. So now I'm using this filbert greener three-eighth inch brush, which is really cool. It has basically
this thinned out brush head and it creates
these little hatch marks. So I'm just going in with
my highlight colors. Now that you've seen
a full demo with both colored pencil
and gouache paint, encourage you to try this for yourself if you haven't already. See how you like using each and maybe see how you
like using them together. Keep in mind that it
takes practice to start to get into the flow
with these materials. My colored pencils
set on my desk for years before I found out
how I like to use them, and my first few attempts
with gouache look so flat and lifeless and sad that
I put them aside for a while before picking
them back up again. For both gouache and
colored pencils, I found that the key was
understanding values, layering, and color mixing
to get the most out of them. That's why we went over
valued form first, and now we're going to move on to discussing color theory. When you're ready, let's
meet in the next class.
15. Color & Light 3: Understanding Color: Now that we've gotten a taste of seeing the subtleties and color, let's talk about
basic color theory. As we dive into color theory, I want us to keep in mind
that at the end of the day, we're really talking
about nature. Color is a part of our
natural experience. It's in everything around us and everything
that we perceive. So even though these topics
have been broken down into these diagrams and these
charts and these theories, keep in mind the big
picture context, which is that we're
talking about nature and our ability to better
see the world around us. Let's start with this
basic color wheel that you're probably
all familiar with. It captures the colors we see in the visible light
spectrum made most clear to us when
we see a rainbow. We have the primary
colors of red, yellow, and blue, then the
secondary colors of orange, green, and purple, and finally the tertiary
colors in-between produced by mixing the primary and secondary colors together. Some of you probably
already know that the colors opposite of each other on the color wheel are
considered complementary, such as red and green, blue and orange,
yellow and purple. By being on the opposite
ends of the circle, they cause each other to
pop when placed next to each other, making
them complimentary. Also note that when
we mix them together, we produce a neutral color. I think that's a really
beautiful aspect of both art and life. We understand that in theory, but to get that into
our unexperienced, let's actually make a
color wheel together. Now let's talk about
these colored pencils and how are we going to do the color wheel
exercise with them. I've selected the
12 hues that are in our color wheel as
close as I can with what the color pencils offer. Let's actually start
by just penciling really quick little
circles for us to do. We have 12 hues in our wheel. What you can do is
just start with north, south, east, west. They don't have to
be perfect, but this will be for you
to fill in later on. The hues create two
equally spaced circles between each one to get your 12. What we're going to
do is we're going to put one of these hues
into each one of these and then we're going to pick
a lighter hue and then a darker hue to place
inside and around it. Then we'll start to see how the color palette
is reflected in our palette and then
also be able to mix them together on the
side of the page. Let's get started with our red. Just go in and fill
in your circle. You can always make
them bigger or smaller after
closest move along. Next I'm having the red orange, which is pale vermilion 921. Then next up having orange 918. That goes here. The reason why I'm not starting
with red, yellow, blue, and then mixing it into a secondary green,
orange, purple, and then the tertiary
colors is because with these colored
pencils they aren't going to mix
perfectly like that. This exercises now
that we understand the basic color theory of
how the color wheel works, now let's see it in practice
with their actual materials. Then yellow-orange, which
is the sunburst yellow 917. Now we move on to yellow. I've picked this canary
yellow, which is 916. Then this yellow green, which is our chartreuse 989. Then our true green, which is going to be a little more blue than you're
going to expect, at least that I'd expected. You see that they're
on the opposite side from its complimentary
color red. Then blue-green which is just
going to be aquamarine 905. Then here we have true blue 903. If you want, you can put
the little numbers next to each circle if you want to remind yourself
which ones they are. Then we have cobalt
blue hue 133. Now I have violet 932. Then finally we have red violet, which I've picked
up as mulberry 995. The next exercise is to pick the light version and the
dark version of each hue. If you were to get a
scratch paper and just add white and black to these, you're going to get
something like this. That's not exactly the
colors that we want to have. Some of them work
in the darker ones. But especially up here,
this is just not like the dark oranges that we're going to want to use
our illustrations. A good exercise is then to just go through your
pack and pick the closest that you see to be the dark and light
version of each one. Even if you don't have exact
same hues that I'm using, just use the closest
ones and this is part of the experiment so that you
can see what colors you have. For red, I've picked
blush pink for my lighter color and then crimson red for my darker color. I'm just going to put
a smaller circle here. Then with the crimson red, I'll put this darker
circle outside here. Let's make it a
little bit bigger. It doesn't really matter. You find you pick one
that you're like, actually that doesn't really
turn out the way I expected. You can always mix in a
closer adjacent color like something
deeper or something lighter to try to get
closer to what you want. But this is a good way to
get to know your palate. For red orange, I've picked
salmon pink as my red one, 1001 and poppy red as
my darker hue, so 922. Continuing in my little circle
and doing my big circle. You can really just
start to compare and see how much
more orange it is. Whereas on its own you might
just think it's pure red. Next for orange I've picked this cadmium orange hue 118 and then this Spanish orange
103 for my lighter one. Again, feel free to take your
time, enjoy this process. You're learning about all of your tools and how to use color, but at the same time creating something that's very beautiful. Then I will use Spanish orange as my
darker yellow orange. For this lighter one, going to try this
jasmine color 1012. Next up to the light yellow, I've picked deco
yellow, which is 1011. Then for the darker
one, I picked goldenrod, which is 1034. I'm going to put it in
this deco yellow 1011. Then the goldenrod,
that's darker color. That's a little too
dark for my preference. What I'm going to do is actually bring in the yellow-orange, I mean the sunburst
yellow because actually I do feel like that's a darker
color version of that. That's yellow ocher
942 is finally getting closer to what I would imagine a
darker yellow to be. Now moving on to chartreuse. I've picked up this
yellow chartreuse. It's number 1004. You can start to see that chartreuse and
the yellow chartreuse sometimes when you want
to lighten something, you don't necessarily
need to add white. You might need to add its
adjacent brighter color. Then for the darker
color I've picked up the spring green 913. It's not going to
be a perfect match. I'm going to go in a
little lighter and then see if I can
adjust it from there. It's a little more green than
I feel like it should be. Let me actually bring in
the chartreuse itself. That looks a lot more like
a darker version of that. You see mixing just
the darker or the adjacent hue into it will be
better than adding a black. For light green I've picked
this, light green 920. Then for dark green, I've
picked grass green 909. Now let's move on
to this blue-green. I've picked the light aqua. Then for the darker version, I've picked this
cobalt turquoise 105. Then we get into the blue. I'm going to do the sky blue. Actually, for the dark
blue I'm going to use this blue denim 1101. Then I could do
want to try adding a little bit of blue
into the sky blue light. Maybe a little bit
into here too. Whenever you're adding
your original hue into whatever color you're trying to mix it into is that of course it starts to
harmonize it more. That's looking nicer already. Then let's move on
to this blue violet. I have picked blue lake
color, like a periwinkle. Then for our dark
version of that, ultramarine. It looks nice. Getting into our violet. I've chosen the lavender
as our light violet 934. I'm adding imperial violet
1007 as my darker color. Then for the red violet, picked out this pink rose 1018. Then for the dark
red violet I've picked out this
Dahlia purple 1009. That was hopefully relaxing. It's like doing a mandala. Here you have your nice
little color wheel. If you'd like, you can
go in and clean it up a bit or I move on to
the next section. For this next section
on this side, we're going to talk
about blending with these neutral grays
and blacks and browns. You can pick any hue, but just pick one out
of these main ones. I'm going to be
using grass green because it's a color that I use a lot and would be
really helpful for me to see how they interact
with all these colors. I would recommend picking
whichever hue that you like. It's best to start with one
that has room to be blended. Maybe not something that's
super dark like this. If you're going to
pick one of these, I would pick one at
the middle colors. I'm going to start
with grass green, but you are, of course, welcome to start with
whatever you like. What I'm going to do
is I'm going to draw eight rows of five circles and they're all going to
start with this green hue. Then I have collected
here a group of four of each of the neutrals
that I want to mix with. Starting with these browns, I have beige, light amber, dark amber and black. Then I have basically the 30%, 50%, 70%, and 90% of
each of the grays. If you have all of these hues, go ahead and collect them. If not, you can just
watch the demonstration and see how they interact
with each other. Then actually you
can use that and decide which ones you like the most and maybe just get those specific colors,
if not all of them. Let me just start with
the five circles. All of our circle and line
practices will come in handy. There's going to be
eight rows of each, and you can add a label
here on the side leader, which is why it's a little
bit leaning that way. Let's start by actually just filling all of these
in with your green. I wouldn't go as hard as that, but maybe like about
50-60% filled in, so it gives us some
room to blend. Feel free to put
on some music or an audio-book and fill
out your circles. When you're ready let's
move on to blending. The goal is to basically have
a light to dark version. We want to see how
we can achieve the different colors
that we actually want. With this top one, we're actually going to
start with green. Then I want to see
how it works with putting in an adjacent
warmer colors. I will put in yellow, then an adjacent
cooler color, blue. Then what it looks like to put in actually
complimentary colors, so neutralizes it but how. After that we're going
to put in our ambers. I'm going to put in our
just u for amber and blacks and beiges and then
we'll do our three grays. We're going to do French gray, warm gray and cool gray. Starting with green is going to be similar to this exercise. This is why colored pencils
do have a limitation, obviously with like paint or on digital if you mixed
more and more white, you could get very light color. But with colored pencils, there's a limit to how
much you can go back. What I like to do
is to start with a medium weight hand and
then blend in as needed. Next, I'm putting
in a light green. It's noticing how
those two interact. This one is going to
be my true green. Then I'm going to keep
mixing in a dark green. First I'm going to just
do maybe like half, maybe about 50, 50. Then for this one over here, I'm going to go very
hard so they can get as much as the dark
green as possible. Those are my top five for now, mixing in just different
versions of green. Next one, I am
going to try yellow so I can actually try
these different yellow, yellow oranges and see
how they affect my color. I'm going to start
with this cream color. It's one of my
lightest yellows, 914. Then let's see if I can
try this deco yellow. That was the one-zero, one-one. Let's put in yellow, yellow. That's going to be our
canary yellow here. You can see how
that really starts to bring it more into
this yellow green color. And then let's try yellow ocher. Again, you can add
the little numbers at the bottom if you
would like to keep track. Let's try Spanish orange next, and then lastly, I'm
going to try goldenrod, it's a pretty dark
yellow, orange. We just start to
see the difference between these darker greens and what kind of effects
we're trying to achieve. Now let's move on to the blue. This is going to cool
down our greens. So I'm going to start
with this sky blue. It definitely gives a
little mint here feel. This is blue slate, 1024. Then I'm going to do true blue. Let's start to see how
different those two are. Then let's try this
darker denim blue. Definitely looking like
a pretty cool blue-green now and then let's
try ultramarine, just kind of get that range of blue and seeing how
they all affect. Ultramarine obviously is a lot darker than these yellow color, so it's able to bring it closer to its color than
the yellows are. You can start to learn
how much you can push a colored pencil to its lighter hue
versus a darker hue. I added in the red, I started with the
pink and then moved into poppy red and
then true red, crimson red, and Tuscan red. You can see how much that
muddied it up right away and turned it into this really
deep Ox blood color. And then I moved
into the umbers, so I did beige, light umber, dark
umber and black, and then the three
different grays. These are 30%,
50%, 70%, and 90%. You can just see it. They're very subtle shifts, but definitely like one is a warmer gray and one
is a cooler gray, and then French gray kind of has this other different tint to it. What's good about this is when
I want to do a study I can refer to this of how I get
to the shadows that I want. It can really depend on whether you want to do
something a little bit more realistic or something that's
a little bit more stylized. I'll pipe work more
in this realm, but it's good to know how
to bring in the blacks and the grays should I want to get colors closer to this range. This is straightforward enough, but this only covers
the most basic hues. What do I mean by hue? Every color has three properties that we can measure it by; hue, value, and saturation. Hue is probably what most
people think of as color. In the color wheel
we just looked at, the names we gave
each color is more accurately thought of
as the name of its hue. Now, recall how we learned that each color has a
corresponding value. Remember that there's
that full spectrum with hundreds of values. What about all of those
corresponding values to any one particular hue? That's where we start to see lighter and darker
versions of each hue. You add black and
white our values to lighten or darken a hue. So by adding white
to lighten a hue, it's called a tint. By adding black to darken
a hue is called a shade. Finally, we can consider our
third property, saturation. Think about how any given
hue you be more intense or more muted or pastel,
so that's saturation. We're talking about
the brilliance or intensity of a color. So 100% saturation will be a pure hue or adding any value, whether it's white or black, will desaturate that color. Now that we know about
hue, saturation, and value, let's look at a
more thorough color wheel. I like using the color
disk in Procreate, which is the digital
app that I draw with because hue is
on the outer ring and then the
saturation and value controls for each of the
hues is on the inner ring. Compare this to a more
traditional gradient at color wheel where
you might think all the colors are present, but actually value is measured on a separate scale
in these cases. The Procreate disk is
very intuitive to me. You can also compare this to the classic color selector
and digital painting tools, which has the three
control sliders for hue, saturation, and value. This might be a
better way for you to start to understand
the levels of hue, saturation, value in each
color that you pick. So we've talked about basic hue, saturation, and value, but one aspect of color
that is really important, that isn't included in that
traditional conversation is color temperature. Color temperature isn't an exact measure like
it is with hue, saturation, value, but you
can definitely feel it. So even to an untrained eye, you can feel when something
feels warm or feels cool. Looking at these two famous
haystack paintings by Monet, which would you say feels cool
and which one feels warm? This probably seems
pretty obvious to you, but really think
about why and how an artist needs to
convey these feelings. At a high level we think
of the reds, yellows, and oranges as warm colors, and then the blues, purples, and greens as the cool colors. But think about how within each of these hues
there are also cool and warm versions
of each of those. This is where it gets
really interesting. Think about how you can
have a really warm green, those tend to be a
little bit more yellow, and then a really cool green, which tends to be a little
bit more blue-green, and then see how
many uses a blend of pinks and blues for
this haystack painting. If you look at this one, does this is feel cool or warm? On the one hand it
looks like wintry, but there's also pink in it. So traditionally, you would say it should be a warm color, but overall, it
feels pretty cool. Being able to mix these different hues together
with different values, different temperatures,
can help you achieve the right atmosphere that you're trying to go for. Note that temperature
is found even within whites,
grays, and blacks. The same idea applies about
making them warmer or cooler. So by adding a little bit
of yellows and oranges, you get this warmer whites, and if you add more
blues and purples, you get these cooler whites. The same is true for
grays and blacks. Now that we're color masters, let's talk about
color and light. Scientifically speaking,
color is the part of the spectrum of a ray
of light that does not get absorbed by the object. We're seeing the part
that is being reflected. Understanding this helps
us process what we're seeing when we're doing
a photo or lifestyle. When you start to understand why a color is most
clear where a light hits an object and darker and less
saturated in the shadow, or why things get lighter and more muted in
color when it's farther away or covered by atmosphere is because less light is
getting to our perception. This knowledge will
also help us create believable color
without reference. Now that we've covered the
basics of color theory, let's bring all of that together
in our next color study.
16. Color & Light 4: Color Theory Exercise: Now we're going
to do an exercise together that I call
the color garden. By creating these florals, we'll be learning about mixing different color temperatures
and how to vary our hue, saturation, and value. Here are the materials
that I'm going to be using for this
color garden study. I have my Holbein Acrylic
Gouache here in red, orange, deep yellow, green, light blue, ultramarine
deep, violet, titanium white, burnt
sienna, and primary black. Next, I have this small
Masterson stay wet palette, which is really
great for keeping your paints wet for a longer especially
something like gouache, which tends to dry
really quickly. As for brushes, I'm using these Princeton Velvetouch
mixed-media brushes, which I really like. I have a filbert in Size 8, an angular shader, and a 3/8 inch and then this
little tight spot liner, but any small thin liner in
about a Size 0 would be good. We're going to be doing this exercise where we experiment with
different temperatures of green for the leaves
and the stems and then experiment with a different hues of the color wheel in
the flowers above. We can begin with our basic green color and then I put in the deep yellow on one side and the ultramarine on the other so this is going to give me my warm green tones and on the other side
my cool green tones. I'm also going to have
a bit of white to work with if I want to lighten
any of the colors. Let's just go in
and start to mix that warm green color
that's going to be our first leaf and stem. There's no exact
measurement of how much yellow and how
much green to use. It's really actually your
preference to see what kind of warm yellow-green
you want to have. I've had quite a
bit of yellow with my green to have this really
nice warm yellow and green. I'm actually going to start with my peach-colored pencils. I just put in a line at the bottom so that I can
make sure everything is nicely spaced out and I'm
just putting in ROYGBIV, so R-O-Y-G-B-I-V to keep track of which hue I'm
going to put on which stem, so red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet. Now I'm just going to start
putting in the leaves and stems so this might take a
little bit of getting used to, but it really is quite natural, just with the flow of the brush so I'm using the
angle tutor here. We can achieve a very similar
effect with the filbert. Starting with the edge tapered, then pushing down to create
the thicker part of the leaf. Then for the longer stems, just not pushing
down as much to get the fatter parts
but still getting a little bit of that variation of line
thickness and weight. I like to overlap the stems and the leaves a little bit
to create a natural look. You can stagger the leaves so some are higher
and some are lower. There's really no
wrong way to do this. It's supposed to be
something that's enjoyable, relaxing is just
beautiful to start to see the leaves and the
stems come together. You don't necessarily
have to have a plan of exactly how it's
going to look but something that just feels organic and you
can start to just fill in some of the empty
spaces with additional leaves, a little branching
off of the stems and just making sure
they have enough to place all your
different hues on top. If you want, you can start
on a scratch piece of paper first just so you
can get the feel of tapering that angle going
over a few just to get the right shape but it's something that should
really feel natural. If you notice any
spots that you feel like a little blank or you
want to thicken up a bit, you can just add a little
bit more paint to it. As I'm going down the line, I'm just lowering the
amount of yellow. In the middle, I'm
getting pretty much just the pure green hue
and then from there, I'm going to be mixing
in more of the blues. So far I haven't done
any straight lines so in some way it's, a little less challenging by creating a more natural look. It's already starting to
look and feel like there's this warm sunlight on the
stems and leaves on the left. I'm getting into this
cooler shaded area of our forest or our garden
over here on the right. What I like about
this exercise is that puts it in this
real-life contexts. Green is a great way to observe
nature and it looks like something that has
the light and shadows affecting it just
by experimenting, exploring color
temperature within green. We don't need to
[inaudible] too with this. We can always go back and add some more color after we put in our flowers
so at this point, let's move on to adding
our colored flowers. I'm going to start with
this pure red color. Now I'm using the filbert brush, and I really like this
brush for creating these nice little petal shapes. Again, just using
the natural curve of the brush pressing down and then lifting up to create
the petal shape. As I'm thinking
about the flowers, I'm just varying the
thickness of certain petals, adding in a thinner
pedal on the side to convey the edge of the petal. What I'm doing here is starting with just the pure hue out of the paint tube so
this is a red flower. Then I'm adding in white to
see how that affects it. It gives me this nice
rosy pink color. Then I want to see what
happens if I add in its complimentary color and also what happens
when I add in black. What's just the
difference of darkening that red through these
two different hues? This is giving me ox blood
color practically and then this is really dark and the last almost
all of the red hue. That might be a
color I want to use, say if I have a really
dark shaded area of a red object or red flower, and I'm just going
to experiment with placing that a little bit on my flowers to see and contrast and whether that
works as a shadow color. Now let's move on to orange. Again, I'm just putting
in the pure hue out of the paint tube to see how that looks and I'm thinking of
poppies at this point, so I'm just doing these
really nice little petals with a thicker one in the middle and then
I'm going to mix it with my red to
get my red oranges. I'm mixing in some white getting this nice light orange color. It could be a great peach, apricot, then trying some black. That gives me this brown color that touches the
table, actually. I tried complimentary color just getting that really
dark muddy color. Now let's move on to
our yellows so again, we're going to bring in
our yellow hues and then mix it in with orange to
get our yellow-orange. First I'm just mixing together this yellow orange
is really more dominated by the
orange right now. Mixing in some black, mixing in some
complimentary colors to see how it
darkens this color. Now let's try the pure yellow just straight out of the tube. My paper's still
has a little bit of color that didn't
get washed off, so it's looking a little
muddy, but also nice. Those are some of the
happy accidents that can happen when you're
painting something that you didn't intend for it to be that way but actually creates a nice effect
like this one. It looks like it
has a bit of nice shading and value to it now. That's how a lightened yellow
with some white looks. Now mixing in some
complimentary colors. Now let's start moving
towards yellow-green. Again, I'm going to try
some different shapes here, but still keeping it all within the same idea because I
started with a deep yellow, it's going to give me
this darker yellow-green. I can also add in some white
to lighten it up and then from there we can move
into our green green. For this one, I'm going
to make it a little fern. Now we can move onto
our blue-greens. I'm starting with this
light blue that I have. This is out of the tube it
has this really rich sky blue creating the
lily iris shapes. Now I want to see
and go backwards a little bit of what
that blue mixed with green will look
like because it's really beautiful
blue-green color. I love that teal color. Now we're going to go
into our deeper blues as we move into your
indigo and violets. I'm going to put out some
of my ultramarine deep. This is really nice,
rich, medium blue. Now I'm just doing the
ultramarine again, gouache is pretty forgiving
so it turns out to be a shape that you don't love
you You always add a little bit more
or paint around it. Now we're finally at our final hue so I've brought
in the violet and I'm going to be mixing it in first with the ultramarine and adding some white in it because with violet, more so than any other color, I find it needs a little bit of white to bring out more of its color because you'll see
how the pure paint looks. This is the violet
straight out of the tube compared
to a violet that's been mixed with blue and some red and some
white on top of it. Let's just really see how
much it desaturates it. Let's try to bring in some
of that saturation back. Now I'm just going
to mix a red violet, See how it looks so we
can close out our loop. Now I'm just experimenting with adding some
pinks at the end. I've gone in and added
some white to my red, but also added a little bit more purple to see how that affects things because
the first time I did it, I did only with red and white. You can see here the difference between the pink all
the way on the far left and that rosy deeper
pink that I did at first. Now I can just do
some final cleanup, you want to fill
in any blanks with maybe your favorite colors or experiment with a little bit more but now you have
an idea of how to do this color garden exercise
and you can do it anytime. It's a really relaxing exercise. You're just experimenting
and playing with color. You don't even have to use
all of them maybe you want to do one that is just
focusing on say, reds and oranges and
yellows or all of the cool tones and
experimenting within there. You can mix them up
and not have them in the specific order
and just start to experiment with
relationships. There's so many potentials, but at the end of the day, just wanting it to be
something that's relaxing, enjoyable to do while
learning about color theory.
17. Color & Light 5: Using Color: Doing all these
observational color studies is a great way to
hone your ability to see color and understand how to render it according
to real life. But of course they're going to be times where you're
going to want to come up with your
own color palette. Maybe you're doing an
original imaginative painting or you're doing a study, but you want to abstract the colors into your own
interpretation of it. Either way, how do you
pick a good color palette? Here are some tips on
how to approach that. To start, I recommend
keeping it simple. Focus on a complimentary
color families and keep your values clear. You can do a lot even with
just a three color palette. When I say complimentary, I'm referring to what we
were talking about earlier. There are actually many other traditional relationships
in color theory. Let's talk about each
one of those here. There's a monochromatic
relationship, so having one hue with
different shades and tints within that hue,
there's complimentary, so the hues that are opposite each other on the color
wheel such as red and green, which we've talked
about earlier, then there's split
complimentary, so one hue plus the
two others that are equally spaced apart from
its opposite complement. There's also double
complementary, so similar to the split complimentary but with
two on each side. Then there's analogous,
which is a grouping of adjacent hues together such
as red, orange, and yellow. Finally, there's
triadic relationships. Three hues that are equidistant from each other on
the color wheel. As for me, I actually
very rarely think about my color palettes and these traditional color
relationship terms. I tend to find color very intuitive when it comes to
picking color palettes, not necessarily rendering color. That when I'm thinking
about palettes, I'm really more thinking about the emotion and the moods of
what I'm trying to convey. I very rarely use
primary colors and very basic relationships of say like blue, yellow, and red, but try to find more
nuanced versions of each hue and match them accordingly to a
general complements such as warm, cool
relationships. When I'm talking about the
emotion and mood of colors, there actually really
is a whole study of emotion and
psychology of colors. While it's subjective and
often dependent on culture, but still there are a
lot of patterns that emerge in these studies of
how people perceive color. But think about how within
each of these hues, depending on which
version it is, it can indicate something
very different. Even though green tends
to indicate nature, it can also be used to
convey feelings of envy, or maybe money, or maybe even
something icky and gross, so something quite
different than nature. What I recommend
is just to study these general color
psychology concepts and then observe your own
gut reaction to colors, and use that to guide
how you select colors depending on what it is you
want your image to convey. With all of this
knowledge in mind, the next step is
just to experiment. A lot of happy accidents happen while using
traditional mediums, especially paints and
digital tools are a great way to experiment
with color palettes. For example, you can
flatten your image and just use the hue and
saturation adjustments to experiment with how
it might look like in totally different shades and also just go out and explore. There really is this
inspiration everywhere. Nature is a great
place to start, but I find a lot of color palette inspiration
in things like fashion and in man-made
objects and architecture. Literally everywhere
has inspiration, even covers of magazines
and book design, I mean, I could just name
pretty much everything, food, interior design. There's so many ways to get
inspired with color palettes. If you'd like to start
with an existing palette, some resources that you
can use are, of course, Pinterest, there's also Adobe Color and
procreates color picker. Procreate has this cool
option where you can upload a photograph or
image with colors you like, and it will generate a
color palette for you. As for me, I very
rarely start with a set color palette
from an outside source. Usually when I'm
creating a drawing, I have a general
color palette in mind because I have
a mood in mind. That's what I lead with. Usually there's a
dominant color, whether it's a darker
one or a lighter one, and then I complement it
with a warm or cool color. I use a lot of navies
and peaches are darker greens and lighter
oranges and corals and peaches. I personally really like those color
combinations right now. That said, let yourself evolve when it comes
to color palettes. I used to work so much in this really blue and
purple fantasy world. Recently I've been
liking to work in more of these
warm, natural colors, but I'm sure I'm going to
evolve beyond that as well. It's all about experimenting and playing and just really feeling into what it is you want to communicate through
your artistic voice. I'm going to show you
some quick demos of how I come up with
color palettes. I tend to personally have a color that I
like to start with. Let's use this peachy orange. Then I usually like to have a few different
shades of that color. Let's say a darker color. Then I compliment that
with a cool color, usually a blue or a green. This is a color that I'm
enjoying a lot lately. Then from there, we usually have a color that is like a dark version of
that, so almost black. Then oftentimes, I will have a highlight color that I
feel like just adds a punch. Lately I've been living
a really bright yellow, have that as the accent color. Even with this one, you can adjust it to see whether there's another accent
color that you like. Maybe a little warmer, maybe a little bit more bold. Try little brighter. I have this feeling right now. But keeping them on
different layers, you can use the adjustments
to play around with that. Then you can also
group them together, flatten it, and then keep these same value and
saturation relationship. Then try different hues and see if there's anything in there that peaks your interests. Or desaturate it and see like, oh do I wants me that's a
little bit more muted or something that's
super bold and puppy. Then also I want some little bit more blown out, something a little darker. I will see you in general,
if you're gonna go lighter, then you can also adjust the
hue and saturation to match. Usually it's not going to work to just only change
the brightness. Another cool thing
is that you can import a new palette
from a photo. Say you take this photo of flowers that
you think are very beautiful and then it will create a color palette
from that image. Then it's created this
color palette for me. You can see it's not perfect. So it's maybe a good
starting point. But what I would
say is like, okay, why don't you start
to pick up the colors that you really love. But remember that a photo
has tons of little pixels. Depending on where you
place your eye dropper, even though it seems
like all the same color, you're getting many
different colors. Sometimes what I'll do
is I'll pick the color, but then I'll adjust
it based on what I perceive the color to be. This might be technically
the right color, but it's not giving me the color that I feel
like I'm seeing. I'll just go in and
adjust it a bit. This is how I feel like it looks same thing
with this yellow. Yellow might be
technically correct, but it looks a little bit dull. I'm just going to bring that up. Now that looks a lot closer
to what I have in mind. Then you can keep
going like that. It's picking this color. That looks pretty nice. Picking out this color and see, you thought this
was a white flower, but this color inside is
this mint practically. Let's see what this color is. This is like a gray, and I'm sure this looks
like a yellow flower, but actually has this really, really dark red, a
little too dark for me. I like that color. Just going around and pulling out what it is that you
like about this photo. What's interesting is we
just look at this palette. I don't know that I'd
be like, oh, that's such a beautiful palette, but looking at them
altogether in this photo, I can really see how
you can make it work. Having these to compliment
each other in your process is a great way to figure out the colors and color palettes
that you enjoy as well. Take some time and just type to collect color palettes
that you like. You can look at actual color
palette, say on Pinterest, or finding them online, collect artists
work that you like or the color pallet
speaks to you. You can also look at magazine clippings or find
inspiration in photographs that you have on your
phone to start to build up your library of which
combinations of colors you like. Maybe it's an exercise you'd never really thought
about before, but you just have a
photo you know you like, you haven't thought
about looking at it on why those
colors work together. This is a great time
to start to do that, and it can be a
lifelong practice. But for now, just start
to get your feet wet. I'm thinking about the color
palettes that you like. Then when you're
ready, let's meet. In the next section, we'll bring all of this
together in our class project
18. Color & Light 6: Class Project Part III: Now let's work together
on our class project. I'm going to first do a demo of coloring in the image
exactly as it's shown. That exercise is
going to help us think about the color palette. Why the complimentary
colors work together? How we did some
adjustments to create some different variations
and some interests, and the choices that
I made along the way. For this one, you're welcome
to try to mix the colors by eyeballing them
first and then checking with the color picker. For the sake of time, I'm going to be using
the color picker directly so we can
focus on discussion of color selection and
technique of digital painting. In general, I'm thinking
about putting on the big layers of color, so large shapes, and then working into
detailing at the end. At this point, I'm not trying
to make perfect edges but I will go in afterwards to
clean up all of the edges. For this section, I
recommend keeping your colors on separate
layers so that in the next section you'll
be able to adjust each layer and experiment with different color
palettes easily. Now this bright orange
color for the flowers is worth talking about because you'll remember in
the value section, I talked about how
I purposely chose this more middle value
that was close to the other colors so
it wouldn't be as distracting from
our main character. We didn't think
about the values. You would just think,
well, this orange is extremely distracting. Maybe you would not
have guessed that the values of the
different colors were actually so close together. I also could have
considered different shades or tense of the orange
In the flowers. That's definitely an option. I could have considered
rendering them more. But this is starting to become
more stylistic choice of having these really
flat graphic flowers, keeping them all one color, and just having them be this nice frame around her
instead of drawing a lot of attention to them by adding more detail and more
value shifts within them. Already you can start
to see the contrast between this cool
green that I've used compared to
these warm yellows and peaches around her. Even though technically in
color theory we learned that red and green are
the complimentary colors. I find that using the adjacent
colors can be really nice. Here I am mixing warms
and cools together, but instead of red and
green or orange and blue I'm using a
shaded blue green, and then bringing in some deep yellows and
a bit of red orange. I didn't just start out with
this palette right away. I knew I wanted it to be green and have some warm
colors around it. But within those
hues and the range, I would do some adjustments
of maybe making it a little bit more blue
or a little darker, making the orange a little
bit more saturated until I just got that relationship
that I'm looking for. We have our basic
color layers in place and I'm just going in and put in the detailing
of her face, which can be really challenging. In the portrait section, we'll talk more about the human typical
phase proportions. But even without knowing the
typical face proportions, you can just observe and use the same observational
drawing techniques that we learned earlier of how
does everything align? Where is her mouth
in relationships say to the bottom of her shirt, where the v intersects, or where is it aligned
next to her fingers, or the flower next to her face? Then from there
where eye is placed, how much space is
between those eyes? How much space is between
her eyes and her lips? All of those measurements
that we learned in the first-class apply just
as much to human face. That's actually how people
came up with the measurements and the proportions just by observing and noticing patterns. Here are a couple of
tips on finessing your coloring and
your color palettes. What I find really brings a
piece together and harmonizes a palette is when you mix
them together in subtle ways. This is based on
real life science of reflected color and light, and also just something
I've personally found through experimentation. For example, I added this
orange highlight to her hair, is some orange being created in her skin interface that's echoing the orange in the
colors of the flowers. These are all things
that people might not notice in your illustration, but they can definitely feel it even if they
can't explain it. Another tip is to remember
the color is relative. Peak can look more red, get surrounded by green, more pale if it's
surrounded by reds. There's this great book
on this topic called the Interaction of Color
by Joseph Albers. I'm sure you've
seen those images where a color looks
totally different depending on what is next to and you swear they are
different colors, but when you place them
next to each other, they're truly the same. It's interesting is flat of
an illustration as this is. There really is still a lot of consideration of the
highlights and the shadows to bring a little bit of that form in that really
makes a difference between a super flat
drawing and something that has this little almost, barely noticeable but really important sense of
form and deaths. We can clean up all of our
details of this image. It's looking good. We learned a lot about observing color choices
and when you look at other artist's work now
you can really think about the different palettes
that they're using, and why they work together, and start to observe
how they are doing their coloring
techniques as well. You'll also notice that this illustration is
likely set in the daytime, or in a well-lit area. One experiment that you
can do is to bring in those major and minor
keys that we talked about earlier and also all of the different moods we talked about with
different colors. Combine those and think
about how you can create different atmospheres
within this image. For example, if I wanted
her to feel more like she was working in the
twilight evening hours. She is working and there is
this really magical feeling. Then I might experiment with
lots more blues and purples. Just think about different
variations along those lines, coming up with different
color palettes, just playing around. A great way to do this if
you're working digitally, is just to save out each layer and then adjust the
color from there. I hope that that was super
interesting and fun to experiment with and you learned a lot about color
through the exercise. When you're feeling ready, let's meet in the
final summary section.
19. Color & Light 7: Summary: We learned so much
together in this class. And now you have a really
great starting point of understanding this
really important aspect of drawing foundations. I encourage you to
continue to explore and experiment and see how you
like to work with color. For now, here's a summary of everything that we
learned together. We started off by talking
about seeing color. Seeing color like
an artist reveals all these nuanced
interminglings of color. Color is composed of hue,
saturation, and value. Temperature is another
important aspect of color. As a general matter, we can think of it as when
you're moving more towards the reds on a color
wheel, it becomes warmer, if you're moving
more towards blue, it becomes more cool, regardless of which hue
you're talking about. Color is reflected light, and without light, there is no color. This helps us understand why we are seeing
all of the shifts that we do when you're looking at different objects
in the light. Studying color helps us notice these subtle
shifts in hue and value as well as reflected
light and illusions of color. Finally, when picking
color palettes, start by keeping it simple, harmonious, and
mood appropriate. There are lots of
emotions and psychology associated with colors
that one can study. When you're ready, let's
move on to the next part. We're going to be
talking about portraits
20. Portraits 1: Head & Face Basics: Welcome to our portraits class. Drawing portraits is something
that's really personal and most people want to
find their own style for. In this section, I'm going
to be introducing you to the basic understanding
that I found to be the most important to approaching
how to draw portraits, and also the things that I'm
thinking about these days as I do drawing portrait
studies myself. Drawing the human
face and figure encompasses everything that
we've been learning so far. Observational drawing
skills, how to communicate form through value, and really starting to see and understand how to apply color. In this section, we're also
going to be introducing a basic understanding of anatomy and the standard
human measurements so that we can complement our observational
drawing skills with an understanding of the
construction underneath. This is also going
to help us learn to draw from the imagination. Drawing portraits is a great way to hone all of your
drawing skills. It's also something that
most people enjoy because it's so immediate to
our human experience. Having that understanding
is that you'll learn in this class will take
you to the next step to be able to better
draw what you see so that this process can
be even more enjoyable. I'm going to cover
basic face proportions, upper body landmarks, and
basic construction of hands. I'll also give you resources
if you want to take a deeper dive into any of these. We're going to start
with our heads and our faces because
that tends to be the most interesting
for people to learn first and also is one of
the most challenging. When people first
start to draw faces, they really focus
on drawing an eye, and they draw this
really big face, usually on a tiny head. But really starting to
think about our head in terms of those shapes that
we've been learning about, the sphere, the cylinder, the columns is going
to really help us think about our
heads as a 3D form, and also better see
the proportions and how things shift as
we tilt our heads. Thinking of all of
these in terms of these shapes is really
going to help because oftentimes when people just
draw a circle to represent the face is going to be a little harder to communicate
what you really want. Starting with that basic circle and then some sort of V or triangle shape jaw shape
that's attached to that is going to help as
a foundational spot. We're then going to take
that head measure and then measure in our
individual features. So let's talk about constructing the head and the face
at a very basic level. I'm sure you've seen
these mannequins before, and they are handy for drawing the different proportions
of the human face. But I want to talk
a little bit about what I personally
found really helpful when studying anatomy and how I think about
drawing the face. One thing that I find really
important is just thinking about shapes in space. So you can think of the head
as a sphere, basically, and there's this shield
that is our jaw and our front of the mouth and of course these are
not quite proportional, but you can think of it
as this shield covering this sphere or egg-shaped
part of your skull, and then you can think of
our neck as this cylinder, so this shield and this sphere sitting
on top of a cylinder. In terms of actual construction, I'm sure you've seen
many different ways of constructing the head. I think of it more or less
as an oval shape that's made out of this upper circle
with the jaw line built-in. Thinner jaws tend to
depict feminine features while wider jaws tend to depict
more masculine features. But it's really a matter
of starting to observe different people and seeing
how you like to draw jaws. But you can think of
it as coming out of the temples and then meeting either in
a pointed shape at the bottom or a
wider set shape, a little more rounded. You can play with all these
different shapes for the jaw. Now, I'm just going
to start to fill in these shapes with some color now that you've seen the
basic construction lines. So I have my head shape. And the neck comes out
from underneath the skull, but it's important to make
sure it's not too thin. For females, it tends to come in a little bit in-between
the chin and the outer part of the jaw and
for men it's a little bit closer to the
outsets of the jaw. Then in terms of how to start to place the facial features, the head measurement
is the most common way to measure the
figure proportions. So this is one head measure and
within this head measure, there's several
important landmarks just so you can start to
have a starting point. So we have this halfway
point for your eyes, and then that's just the halfway point
between the very tip of your crown of your head all the way
down to your chin, and then the halfway mark
in-between your eyes and your chin is going to be
the bottom of your nose. So I put that as a quarter. We can also think as just
another half of the half, and then in-between the
nose and the chin and other half or an eighth is going through the
bottom of your mouth. Another helpful measure is to keep in mind that the
ears tend to fall in-between the bottom of the
nose to the top of the eyes. Then to place a
few more features, we start to look
at the hairline. So think about the top of the face is at the
top of the head, and then break that into thirds. So the top third is going to be about where your brow is, and the bottom third is going to be where the bottom
of your nose is, and it perfectly aligns with that quarter mark that we made for the bottom of the nose. So it's a nice way
to double-check around where the bottom
of your nose tends to be. So those are the
horizontal measures, but there are also some good vertical standard
measurements that are helpful to play some of these features from a
vertical point of view. So the eyes tend to be spaced about another
eye width apart. So I'm just drawing in
an eye width measure. The edges of the nose
tend to fall right around where the corners
of the eyes are. Some people are a
little bit more narrow, some people are a
little bit more wide, and then the edge of the mouth
tends to fall in-between the corner of your eyes and then the inside
edge of your pupil. So a little bit further
out from your nose. I find all of these
measurements to be really helpful
to keep in mind. So just to review, we have the eye width that we're facing out the face
measurements into. The nose bridge at the
very top of the nose tends to fall in-between
the eye and the brow. The middle point
is a safe place, but sometimes I find that some bridges are right
in-between the eyes. The nose width, again, is about the size or
the width of an eye, and the mouth width is
just a little bit longer. So that again, is
something that you can play with because
different people have different sized mouths. But I find a comfortable measured tends to be
like right in-between the inside corner and the
inside part of the pupil. So those are your
basic measurements when you're looking
straight on at a face. Now let's talk about this
exact same measurements from a profile view. From a profile, again, it's helpful to start
with the circle. I tend to find that
actually our skulls are a little more egg-shaped
like an oval shapes. So if you want, you can
add a little bit of a bump outside of the circle, but the circle is
a great place to start and then you have the jaw, which connects right in front
of the bottom of the ear. And of course our
faces are not so flat. So this is just
measuring straight line that's going down your face, not considering your
nose and your mouth, but we can place in those
shapes sticking out. So again, we see the
halfway mark with the eyes, the ears in-between the eyes
and the bottom of the nose, which is halfway
between the eyes and the bottom of the chin, and then the bottom of the mouth in-between the corner
mark and the chin. So again, I'm just
going to color in those shapes so that we
can start to visualize it in terms of our oval sitting on top of our
cylinder of the neck. And then here I
started to just place some very basic
shapes to indicate where all the
features go and this is already really helpful map. So I have this bar basically for my eyebrows and then these little oval
shapes for my eyes. A triangular shape for
the nose coming out, and then a heart
shape for the lips. And it's just important to study people from real
life or from photographs. You'll start to see how there's
that rhythm of the face. So that's the head in profile. Now let's talk quickly
about the head at a tilt. So again, we want to think
about our forms in space, and that's why it was
so helpful for us to think about the
sphere and the cone and the cube all in space in
our first class together. So it's also really helpful
to draw all of those in perspective because then you can start to really
think about, okay, if my face was here on this sphere and I
tilt that sphere, how is that going
to affect all of those different
features that I've placed onto the sphere. So of course they
get distorted at the right perspective angle and so you just want to start to visualize if that sphere is turning in space
and looking down, then you're going
to want to tilt all of those features along with it. So here I've placed
in my crosshairs again for my basic eyeline
and center of the head, just so I can start to
visualize that tilt, and then let's put in those same measurements
on top of the tilt. So here are our top of
the head to the chin. So again, think about where that top of the head
is on a sphere. It's not at the edge of
the circle we've drawn, it's going to be in the middle, and then the chin is
still at the bottom, but now it's at an angle. So when we start to place
in our eye measure, our nose measure and
our mouth measure, those need to be a little
bit more skewed on the vertical axis so
that it's starting to go more down as
the head is tilting. So obviously we just drew
it as it looks straight on, then it won't look like
the head is looking down. So here I've placed
in these features again based on this measurement. So the eyes are
along this curve, we're looking down and
then we have the nose, which if you think about
it as a cone that's pointing downwards
or this pyramid, it's covering actually where the bottom of the nose
is sitting on the face, the tip of your nose is
going to be covering that. So the bottom of your nose
is actually going to be a little bit
underneath where you might see the tip of your nose. And similarly for the mouth, the chin is going to look
smaller because now it's tilting away and
down from your view. So all of this is to just really emphasize that we
want to think about our face as this form that's
in space and that it's tilting down or up depending on which direction your
character is looking. [inaudible] or to place in
some of the features without the measurements and
I'm really thinking about how it's sitting
on top of a shape. I've put in this
hairline and it's really wrapping around
the sphere of the head. When I start to
think about hair, I'm still thinking again
about wrapping a form. So even though my
style is very flat, you can still convey how things wrap around formed just
like a simple curve, like how her hair
is going around her ears and this is the
back part of her hair, and you can see it in our
class demonstration image too, because the way that her
hair curves on her forehead really indicates how it's
wrapping around her form. Then you can play with
different hairstyles and try adding layer
in the front and you can start to see how this
affects the feeling of depth. Here I had just
this lighter value brown where it's showing
that it's in front of her face and I'm
covering her ears and you can just experiment with different hairstyles from here. On a profile view,
it's similar idea, having this hair piece in
the back that's in shadow, so it's a little bit darker, and then the piece in the
front where now I've put it over her ear that's a
little bit lighter, so we can start to
feel that depth again from the side view. With hair, you really
want to think of it as this piece of cloth
almost our shape that's wrapping around the
form of the sphere of the head and not like drawing little
strands of actual hair. Another helpful
piece of anatomy to know is that a lot of
times we tend to draw the neck as either like
these swooped curves or just like a straight up and down cylinder when it's a
combination of both. So the way our anatomy is, is we have our neck is
more like a cylinder, and then we have these
trapezius muscles that are coming out in this triangle shape from to form the beginnings of
our neck shoulders. Here I'm just doing
a really quick demo of what the basic
skeletal structure looks like for the head, we have our skull, which is really more of an
egg shape like I mentioned, we have our jaw bone that connects right underneath
the ear canal, which is in the
middle of it all, and then finally
the spinal cord, which connects in through the skull at its
base in the back. So this is very simple
knowledge can start to help you visualize the under
workings of a head. And what's beneficial about
that is more when you want to construct your own
pose in your own head, you just understand why
certain things are at a angle or how to see
things in perspective. If you're studying
purely from, say, a real life study
or a photograph, it's not as critical
that you know the underlying
skeletal structure. But it's still helpful to have that knowledge because
it'll actually fill in some of those visual gaps and illusions that we've been
talking about this whole time. So that is the head and the
face at a very basic level, looking at it straight on and in profile at different angles. So I recommend taking some time to practice out some of
these measures yourself. Maybe create your own charts and then we can move on
to the upper body.
21. Portraits 2: Upper Body & Hands Basics: Now let's talk about
the basic proportions of the upper body. Of course, we have the full
figure and that can be broken out into our
typical head measurements. A very high level, I just want to show you
what that looks like. The average person
tends to fall in 7-8 head measures and of course, we have these
mannequins that can show you these
proportions as well. For this particular class, I want to focus on
portraits and just focusing on the upper body. We're looking at the first
three head measures, starting from the crown
down to the chin, into the chest and waist. Using the head as a measure is a very common way to
do human proportions. There are other
ways to do as well, but I find the head
to be one of the most useful and the one that
I think about the most. Let's take a closer
look at the upper body. I've configured her
pose to somewhat mirror our hero illustration so you can see a one for one example. Another helpful measure is that the waist is right around where
your elbow is and even if you want to take a
moment to squeeze in your elbows and see where
it falls along your body, you'll see that
those two landmarks are another nice
helpful measure. Now, when we start
to think about the shapes of our torsos. For females, we
tend to think about them maybe as an oval or a slightly more narrow rectangle and then for men we tend
to have wider shoulders. I'm going to stick here with the female figure and
we tend to measure the shoulder width at about one-and-a-half head length wide. I don't always do this at a very specific like I actually
measure out one-and-a-half, but just making sure I keep
that overall silhouette of how the angle from the head goes out down to its shoulders. Just keep in mind that
above the shoulders, we can think of the
shoulder joints as these two oval shapes. We have our neck and then the trapezius muscles coming out almost like a coat hanger. It's not a straight up
and down 90 degree angle from our neck over
to our shoulders. From our shoulders it's
helpful to think of our torso and this
trapezoid shape. Then the head is a
good measure for a few more important
body parts here. Our upper arm and our
lower arm tends to be about one head length long and then from behind our wrist to the tip
of our hands tends to be another head length long. You can actually check
all these measurements on yourself as well. It's helpful to think of all these basic landmarks
of the upper body in terms of these joint ovals
that are connected by cylinders and wedges
and trapezoids. Those are the basics
of her upper body. But let's take a closer
look at the hands. Here I've created a
really simple template to start to think
about the hands. Again, we're using the head as a measure and what's
really helpful in terms of proportions is that we can think of our hand being about
the height of our face. Not the top of the
head to the chin, but our hairline to the chin. Again, of course everyone has different sized hands and
this is the starting point, it's a great way to have a measuring tool to get them to look at least
generally correct. Now let's think
about the back and the front of our hands. Here I've used three different
values so that we can see each major part
clearly and I've laid it out with a back
view showing where the knuckles are and showing a little bit
of the fingertips. There's that swoop from our
index finger to our thumbs. Then on the fingers themselves, you can also break that
down into two measures. About half of your middle finger and then you can notice that
your pinky starts close to the middle of your middle
finger so that's a good way to keep track of what the natural arch
tends to look like. Another thing that I find important to keep
in mind is that our knuckles are further down in our palm than a
lot of times people think. Some people tend to draw their knuckles at the
very edge of the palm, but it's a little deeper if
you look at your hand itself. Then on the other side, there's this oval-shaped
or I think of almost like an egg shape muscle that we
have in front of the palm. We have our three
major sections. We have the fingers, the palm, and then the thumb area. We can also break this
down into two measures. One is the length
of the fingers, since we're about the
length of your palm, so that's one and two. In terms of the
shapes of our hands, you can really think
about the palm as this bendable
rectangular wedge shape. When you look at it
from the profile, you can really think of those like platform
doorstop shape. Then this very
bendy thumb shape, like this egg that can wrap in the front or
go out to the side and then this muscle going down the thumb can be a really
good landmark to put in. Starting to break her hands
down into shapes is really helpful if we start to
think about it in space. Just like I was talking
about with the head and the sphere and
cylinder and the jaw, our hand can also be broken down into these
constructive shapes. I have basically that
wedge shape I was talking about for
the palm and we have one piece for the thumb
at our thumb knuckle, and then the three sections of the individual fingers so two joints that bend into three. Just keeping this
in mind is going to help you think about the
hand a lot more clearly. Well, if I wanted to turn
my hand to the side, what would that look
like and start to visualize how those
shapes start to overlap, how that wedge shape
can start to bend, and how we do a little bit
of overlap of the fingers. Then with a fist and think of it almost
like a rock at first. You have these sides of your fist that are
a lot like a rock. But then also thinking about in terms of the shapes
we discussed, so you have this wedge shape and then your three cylinders from your fingers
dig into that and then your fist
wraps around that. I've mirrored the pencil
holding fist that I have in our illustration and
just starting to break that down into
how that looks like. If we looked through
the fingers and we see the edge of the
wedge of the palm, we would see the thumb
egg shape in the back, and then we see the tops of our fingers and then
having them curve in. Lastly, I just want
to quickly talk about clothing on the body. When you're drying clothes,
you want to think about wrapping the form of the body. That's really critical,
even if you're drawing in a really flat
style like mine. When you have clothing like if you're going around the neck, so it's very similar to what I was talking about
with the hair. You want to think
of it as this shape that's wrapping the
sphere of the head. You want to think
about clothing as really wrapping the 3D shape, even if you're only
conveying a very flat look. If you think about, for
example, the sleeve here, how it wraps around the lower arm and really
conveys that form. Same thing with the
elbow on the other side. These very subtle differences compared to just drawing a
very straight line are really important to start to move your drawing skills from
something that is based in reality and then stylized
versus something that doesn't have that root understanding
of basic anatomy. Then in terms of conveying some fore into
very simple values can make a huge difference. Even here I have
only two values, but there's a highlight and
a shadow and that helps bring a little bit more
realism into the illustration. If you would like, I
recommend that you take some time right now
to create your own map of the basic landmarks and measurements of
the upper body and combine it with the
head ones that we did earlier and then
when you're ready, let's move on into the
next section where I'll demonstrate how I like
to do a portrait study.
22. Portraits 3: Portrait Study Demo: I've actually found
this reference photo on Unsplash that is really close to the pose that I created for our class project
illustration. I think this is a good example to demonstrate to
you how I like to do photo studies for
portraits in figure drawing, and what I'm thinking
about as I'm doing them, and how I tend to stylize them. Let's get into it. I have
the grid on here just to go back to our first
class and demo what it's like to be able
to draw with a grid. I've just split
this photo right in half and have my photo reference on the side and drawing
right next to it so that I can do a direct
measure one-to-one. That's going to be
helpful to just start to place the general landmarks. Again, we're doing our block in, our observational
drawing techniques just was trying to
bring in some of that constructive drawing
that we've been talking about with our shapes
and our forms. I'm going to start with
just the oval shape for her face and coming
down into her chin. Then starting to block
in her hair shape. You can go in and
start to just put it a very basic cross for
her face to start to place her eyeline and
the center of her face and how her head is
tilting in space. I'm also thinking about the
shape of her head in space. You can think about the sphere and her jaw resting inside of a box and how that box is floating in space
and taking up space. You can see that she's tilting over to our
right, her left, and then her face is not
quite straight on the camera, but a little bit
off to the side. Next, she has her hand
resting on her face, so I'm just going
to start putting just that very basic rectangular wedge block shape
that I was talking about earlier and also that cylinder that attaches as her upper arm. What's helpful about this
approach compared to just looking purely at observational landmarks
and all the angles that we talked about earlier, is that for some people,
it's still really hard to see what's really there because we just have such
a bias towards what we want to see and what we
think should be there. That's why sometimes
when people try to draw a hand in perspective, it's so hard because
they just really want to draw what they think the hand should look like and
not what is actually there. When you start to think about it as shapes and forms and space, and really break that down into the different perspectives, it can really help us start to really see more accurately. They really go hand in hand and help each other,
these two approaches. Here I'm looking at both
the landmarks and where her fingers and her hands
are in relation to the grid, but also drawing in the
shapes so that I can really think about how
this is being constructed. I have the wet
shape of her hand, little cylinders
for her fingers, the cylinders for her upper arm, a little bit of her clothing
put in just as landmarks. Now I'm going to look at the cylinder shape of her neck and start
to place that in. I'm looking at the lines and where they land for
her clothing now, putting in that shoulder, trying to keep gesture
in mind as well. At the very beginning, you
want to think about like, what is the pose here and what about it is
something that you like and how you can continue to
keep that sense of gesture in your study then of course for her other arm, another
cylindrical shape. Then going back into the
details of her clothing a bit. Really these types
of photos are great to study folds of fabric, how much and how little you want to include
what you convey what's there without getting
into the tiny details unless you prefer really
highly rendered look. Then just filling in the other
side of her jacket here. That we actually already
had the basic blocking of our portrait here, I'm going to just put
in a little bit value to show her hair shape. Then I'm just going in
and trying to be more careful about the ins
and outs of her face. Like I mentioned in the face measurements
and landmark section, your face has this wave that goes in and out from your forehead into
your eye sockets, over your nose and
your cheekbones, and back down over your
lips and your chin. These subtle variations really makes such a huge difference in conveying a person's
facial structures. Here ever always do
is in my drawing, so if I do you think
is really helpful, especially for a
beginner to start to place in the
measurements that we've been learning and
talking about and thinking about how they sit on this plane of our
portrait studies face. I've put it in the half
mark for her eyeline. I'm measuring the thirds
from her face so I know her brow and her general
nose and mouth placement. I'm just going to block in
these really simple shapes to see where her eyes and
her nose and her mouth go. The face has so
many details on it, but the exact same observational drawing skills apply here. Right now I can see
that the inner edge of her pupil lines up with
the inside part of her mouth and a top of her lapel and her
wrist of her left arm. It looks like the
right side to us. Then how far away
from the palm that is and how far away that is from the other side of her face. This is a constant
going back and forth of noting your
different landmarks, noting your proportions, and how everything sits in
relation to each other. I'm starting to put in a
little bit of detail on her features just to
start to give some of that form of her
nose coming out, continuing can think of that
kind of pyramid cone shape. We have the plane
at the top that's a little bit more
in light and the two sides that are in shadow. With lips, you can get really
into the structure of it. But for our purposes, I like to keep it more or
less about two values, maybe three with the middle
of darker part of the mouth. But just starting
with a heart shape, like wide heart shape is a good starting place of
putting in the mouth. I really like her strong brows, so I'm going to keep that in. Then for eyes, I personally
like to do a simplified eye, I don't personally prefer a
really realistic portrait. When I do portrait studies, this is the level of detail
of eyes that I like to do. When I do portrait studies, they're usually a little bit more complicated than the way that I end up drawing
characters in my own work. I like the more
simplified look because I tend to draw on these
really simple graphic shapes, and if I have this
highly rendered person, it just doesn't
quite feel right. But by doing these studies, I really find that knowing where I want to add
and subtract detail is really helpful for being able
to get my style to match where I want it to
be and not just be constrained by what I
can and can't draw. I would say at this stage for me the most important
elements to get in are the hair shape because I really convey the shape of
the head and often place a strong contrast with the
jaws and the forehead. Then of course the
facial features, but really important
is that shadow underneath the head
and onto the neck. I find that really defines and clarifies where the form sit
in relation to each other. At this point, we're still purely in the line, shape, and volume section of what we've been
learning in class so far. This is why I think
learning value and form is so important because it's really just this invisible
underlying foundation of good drawings that is really hard to see these go
straight into color. Even though I know it's
not as interesting, it really is so important. Here I'm just focusing on
how the shadows and all of the form changes
that wrap around her body and then indicate
her clothing folds. It's really helpful to
communicate what's going on. Again, it's a really good moment to check in on your gesture. A lot of times when I'm doing these studies and
doing the block in, I find that it's starting
to get a little bit stiff. Just adding a few arrows will
help me keep in mind that I want to maintain what I like about the
gesture of this pose. For now, I am going to start
to bring in some color. I'm going to be working
with five values. What I like about starting with these five values
is that it gives me a starting point to
put in my darkest darks, my have tones and
then my highlights, and we usually ends
up happening is that within each
of these values, I'll then pick another like lighter version
and darker version of that color so that it starts to become
more and more realistic, and I can control how much I want it to be flat versus a
little bit more rendered. I have my base drawing around the four-value color right now, and I'm going to go in
with a third color and just start to put in a
little bit more forms. I'm going to start with
her chin because I find that the shading and the form conveyance
of the outside of the face is really important
even in a flat style. Of course, in our
reference photo, she has a lot of
different light and shadows from her environment, but I'm really
focusing on what is actually communicating
the form of her face. I'm not going to be copying or studying the light in
this particular photo, I'm just looking at how
she might look like with this normal surrounded light. You'll see as you start to put
in the values of the face, it really makes such
a huge difference. The more values
you add, the more realistic is going to look, as we've talked about in
the valley and form class. Just putting in the
second value is already making such a huge
difference in terms of seeing how underneath the
eyebrow space dips in, how the nose starts to come out and goes
back into the face. I am thinking again about
the tilt of her head and how to convey the way that
your face starts to bend, tilt away from your
view just like a sphere going into the
backs of the space, and just being able to
convey that so that the face can remain
flat in color, but still have that
more realistic form. I'm adjusting it a
little bit because it turned out to be a little pink. I made it a little
bit more orange. Then I'm picking
this green color, which one complements
her skin color well, but also is like our
class project drawing, so it's a nice reference. I'm just going in with
one flat tone right now. You can collect both above
or behind your lines. I definitely recommend
keeping it on separate layers so you can
move it around as you like. For this type of study,
it's nice to keep it behind because then I can use
the lines as needed. If I were trying to
finalize this for say, a print then I would
definitely clean it up. I'm just going to put
a little bit of this, looks like a trunk that she's resting on to ground
this portrait a bit. I'll start to go in with
our darker value so that we can define our
form even more. So you can see in the
reference photos have really high contrast between the dark color of her
hair and her skin. So even though we're
not doing a one for one study in terms of exactly
how his portrait looks, we can bring in
some of that here. As you get more comfortable
doing these kind of studies, you can start to experiment on the go as you do these studies. You can, for example, change her hair completely, maybe give her very
different facial features and just keep the pose. But for now I'm trying to
show a middle way of like, I'm not copying the portrait
exactly like a realistic, highly rendered portrait and I'm able to practice my style more, but I'm also still
sticking more or less to the main elements
of the drawing so that we can make sure that
that's the focus of our study. Now I can also go
in and start to detail some of our features. So I'm using both
the dark color, but also bringing
in a lighter value to start to pull out
the whites of her eyes. You really notice
that for most people, the whites of her eyes
are not really white, it's actually just a
little bit lighter than our skin color usually. You can bring in a lot of shadow because of
course your lids are casting these shadows
onto the eyeballs. Rendering out the face can
be really tedious work, but it's also really beautiful. So take your time to
enjoy the practice. It's going to start off
a little bit junky, but you'll be able to get closer and closer
to how you want to draw people the more you practice
as just keep all of these different
techniques and anatomy, construction, shapes, and space that we've been
talking about together. Now I'm just playing out of more pink colors to give
her some cheek color. This is a good example
of where I start to stray from the
photo reference. This is how I like
to draw people. It's something that you can experiment with a
lot of times as a matter of observing other artists that you like
and how they render people. You end up picking and selecting different things
from different artists or just different styles and bringing them together
in your own unique take. Just going to lighten the
lips a little bit here. Here's a good example of a
very subtle shift in the values of this peachy rose color that I've selected and starting to show that
form of the lip. So adding a little shadow to
the bottom of each portion, really thinking
about these little pillow shapes can really help to start to convey
that movement of the lips, even if it's a flat style. I can bring this
third value in to indicate the middle
of the mouth. Then having the
shadow underneath the bottom lip to show
that form as well. Now I'm just going to
start to pull in some of those values that I've been
creating into the arm. Continuing to think about
it as a cylindrical shape. Her fingers of course,
are also tiny cylinders. We can really start to bring in some of those
details, even more. There's very subtle shifts
that you might not notice that first glance like putting in this slightly darker
peach color on her face, on the side of her face
that's further away from us. More cast in shadow. Adding that does make to me, a significant
difference even if it's not noticeable right away. There's a lot of things
I feel in drawing that you might not technically notice and
be able to pull out, but without it, you really
feel it's difference. That's where I really think a lot of drawing
foundations comes in, in terms of being able to advance your drawing
technique from a beginner to a more established and
strong foundations style. Now we're just going
in and putting some finishing touches
using the darkest dark. It's like line work, but really thinking about where to place the line work based on where our shadows are
to convey that form. This was something that took me a long time to figure
out because I knew I liked that style where
the lines aren't just a complete outline around the object
or the character. But I had to really understand drawing
foundations to be able to appreciate or understand how artists knew where to put
the lines to begin with. That's another great example of how you might think that, of course it seems like
a very simple line and it's maybe the
artist just intuitive, but no, it's always based on
the foundational knowledge. In this last step, I really just starting to
think about the gesture again as I start to put
in these highlights, I'm trying to exaggerate
some of the movement. I love the way that the shoulder is popping
up on the right side here and maybe using even the lapel to convey a
little bit of that gesture. It's a highlight, but it's also having some gesture to it. Can put a little bit
more dark green in if I want to render
out the clothing worn, but I also like the super
flat style for the clothing. A few more tips is by
bringing in some of your colors to areas that
you might not expect, such as adding this
green into some of the details and some of
the peach into her hair, that really helps to unify your color palette
in your drawing. Let's put a little
bit of this peach onto her green jacket. Then I'm going to put
a little bit of the green into her face. These very subtle
details, again, just really help
bring everything together even if you
don't notice it, you notice it subconsciously. So I'm going to do some
final cleanup and detailing and that's pretty much done
with my portrait drawing. If you'd like, you
can put in some of the surroundings as well. I just want to quickly show
you with this shale brush, how quick it can be
to create some of these really beautiful
leaf shapes. Of course, you want to add
a little bit more value, but I'm just tapering
it and using the pen pressure to create
these palm leaf shapes. That is our finished
portrait study, a stylized study,
but still really faithful to a lot of
elements of this photograph. You can start to really
see how you can take a photograph and
use it to study all of the concepts
that we've learned from lines and
shapes and value all the way to color and
anatomy and then now we're going to start
to get into composition. But first, let's meet
in our next section, where we're going to talk
a little bit more about how to practice this
in our class project
23. Portraits 4: Class Project Part IV: We're finally at the
class projects part of this section and
we're returning to our hero illustration
that has been anchoring everything that
we've been learning so far. Of course, we've already done the line observational drawing and a color study of a
character and the scene. For this section, we're
really going to focus on one, observing the construction
of how this is created, combining the anatomy and
measurements that we've just learned with our observational
drawing techniques. Then going to
encourage you to come up with your own
version to start to see how you can draw from
imagination and use those standard measurements to create your own characters. As a starting exercise, I encourage you to
place the landmarks on the character's face and
body and compare this with your benchmark drawing
now that you have a foundational understanding of standard measurements
and anatomy. You can start with the
circle shape for our skull and attach to the triangular
shape for our face, place in some of the
measurements we've learned about the halfway
mark for our eyeline. Then the third's for
the facial features from the hairline to the brow
to the nose, to the chin. Then check that
with a quarter and one-eighth marks for the nose and the bottom of our mouth. You can also place in
the cylindrical shape of our necks and then the
shoulder and elbow joints. Of course, the cylindrical
shapes for our arms, both the upper and lower parts. Just having that as a reinforcement and then
I'm just going to go into a quick freehand draw
of how I am thinking about constructing my characters when I'm drawing
them from scratch. Just like how you
learned in the class, I start with the
sphere for the head. Thinking about the
tilt as I place in the triangular
shape for the face, and I sometimes tend to put in body parts that you
can't necessarily see. In this final drawing, you can't see her
ears, but I will place them in just in case. I'll then also put in the hair shape and then start
to block in her upper body. I tend to then put in
some very basic wedge and cylinder shapes
for the hands. Now I don't always do this, but I think it's
a good practice, especially in the beginning
to check your measurements. Here I'm just doing a
measurement of the head. I'm just starting a little
bit lower since her head is being tilted and that looks good in terms
of the placement of where our chest line and
our waistline would be. I also have the basic
face measurements marked off so I can start to put
in some very basic eyes, nose, and mouth shapes. Again, keeping in mind the tilt. Now I'm just putting in a
little bit more details of the eyes, the eyebrows, and then doing my vertical
measurement check to see that my eyes are correctly spaced in
relation to each other, the nose and the
edges of the mouth. What we can do with
portrait studies, is first do a
constructive drawing such as this based on a pose
that you're looking at. Then go in and do some of the detailing with observational
drawing techniques. This is of course,
easier when working with a photograph so
someone's not moving around, but working from a live model or just observing in
real life is also really great practice
because you have to place some of these
measurements really quickly. It's also good challenge
if you're starting a pose and someone
you're observing moves, are you able to fill that
rest of the information in based on the anatomy
that you have learned? Normally next what
I do once I have the upper body in place, I'll start to put in
some of the forms and this wrapping
of the clothing, and so to clarify some of
the shapes in the details. For this exercise, you're
welcome to take it to as finished of a
completion as you'd like, or stop at just the
sketch stage so that you can just practice observing
and constructing. Can do another quick check using the head measurement to check our upper body and our
arms and our lower arms. Another challenge that you
can try in this exercise is to start drawing your own character
based on this pose. Just changing some of the characteristics
such as the hairstyle, or the eyes and the nose
and the mouth shapes, and maybe trying on a slightly different piece
of clothing based on, for example, your favorite
outfit or something that you're pulling
from a reference photo. You might also try challenging
yourself by taking a self portrait reference photo and then drawing
yourself into the scene. Here I've given her
different hairstyle. Now you can see her ears, so placing in the
sketch points is helpful and then changing the
shape of her face slightly, just giving her a
different top and outfit. Similarly, simplifying
the nose and trying one of many different
ways you can draw eyes. If you really want to have fun, you can start to add
different accessories such as glasses or headphones
or jewelry and again, thinking about even these
accessories in terms of shapes and then
having them wrap around the form of her head
and her body are really going to help you
think about how to construct that from imagination. Have fun with this experiment
and when you're ready, let's share the project
and then go over a summary of everything that
we've learned together.
24. Portraits 5: Summary & Further Study: Now that you have a
foundational understanding of drawing portraits, I really encourage
you to continue to draw, practice, observe, and deepen your understanding of anatomy and the basic
measurements as you see fit. First, let's go
over a summary of everything that we learned
together in this section. We learned the
basic measurements of the human head and face starting with a
constructive circle shape connected to a triangular shape, placing the eyes at
about the halfway mark, and then finding the brow line, nose, and mouth at the
thirds of the face. We learned how to
connect that with the cylindrical
shape of our necks, and how to use the head as
a measure to approximate the size of our upper
torsos and place the chest, waist, arms, and hands. We know that the hands requires some special attention and learning to construct
them with the wedge, egg and cylinder shapes will
help us draw better hands. We also learned the basics
of wrapping hair, shapes, and close around the
form of the body, and why thinking
of our figures in 3D shapes is important
even in a flat style. Finally, we learned that we can experiment with our
understanding of values and color to draw people
and portraits in different levels of
realism and stylization. That it's a matter
of practice and continued observation to
find our own people style. For further study, besides Juliette
Aristides books which I have recommended in
previous classes, you can also look at books
specifically about drawing the human figure and anatomy
by Andrew Loomis and Morpho. I also recommend the lessons
on New Masters Academy for more classical
figure studies and Skillshare classes on how to draw cute stylized characters. When you're ready, let's meet in the final section where we're
going to talk about depth, composition, how this
all comes together.
25. Portraits 5: Summary & Further Study: [MUSIC] Now that you have a
foundational understanding of drawing portraits, I really encourage you
to continue to draw, practice, observe, and
deepen your understanding of anatomy and the basic
measurements as you see fit. First, let's go over a
summary of everything that we learned together
in this section. We learned the basic
measurements of the human head and face, starting with a
constructive circle shape connected to a triangular shape, placing the eyes at
about the halfway mark, and then finding the
brow line, nose, and mouth at the
1/3 of the face. We learned how to
connect that with the cylindrical
shape of our necks, and how to use the
head as a measure to approximate the size
of our upper torsos, and place the chest, waist, arms, and hands. We know that the hands
require some some attention, and learning to construct
them with the wedge, egg, and cylinder shapes will help us draw better hands. We also learned the
basics of wrapping hair shapes and clothes
around the form of the body and why thinking
of our figures in 3D shapes is important
even in a flat style. Finally, we learned that
we can experiment with our understanding
of values and color to draw people and portraits in different levels of
realism and stylization, and that it's a matter of
practice and continued observation to find
our own people style. For further study, beside Juliette
Aristides' books which I have recommended in
previous classes, you can also look at books specifically about
drawing the human figure and anatomy by Andrew
Loomis and Morpho. I also recommend the lessons on New Masters Academy for more
classical figure studies, and Skillshare classes on how to draw cute stylized characters. When you're ready, let's meet in the final section where we're
going to talk about depth, composition, and how
these all comes together.
26. Depth & Composition 1: Intro to Perspectives: [MUSIC] Welcome to our depth
and composition class. I'm going to share my approach
to perspective and how I communicate depth,
and then we'll work on creating a
composition together. My personal experience with perspective is that I've never wanted to draw realistic
linear perspective drawing. I spent the time to practice 1, 2, and 3-point
perspective exercises. I used only the bare
minimum in my drawings, such as the book in our
class project illustration. For a long time, I thought learning
the intricacies of mathematical perspective
was the right way to learn how to draw because that's how
it's emphasized in most teachings these days. However, as I came to
understand what style of art I was drawn to, over time, I've come to see a different
perspective on perspective. In this class, I'm going
to provide an overview of different approaches to perspective and
composition techniques. Then I'm going to show you
how I like to put together an illustration like
the class project. To better understand
perspective, I found it helpful to learn
a bit about the history of perspective and how it has
evolved in art and culture. I promise that this is not
a boring history lesson but something that is
really relevant and will help you understand how to study art that you
admire and how to translate it into
your own expression. At a basic level, when we
think of learning perspective, we think of linear perspective. Linear perspective is a
mathematical approach to constructing objects where all parallel lines
disappear into a single or multiple
vanishing points on the horizon line. This is especially useful with man-made objects, such
as buildings and roads. There's one-point, two-point, and three-point perspectives. Linear perspective,
as we know it today, did not always exist in art. In fact, it wasn't established
until the Renaissance by architects Filippo Brunelleschi
and Leon Battista Alberti. This technique arose out of a desire and need to
convincingly convey space and buildings and depict structures from a
viewer's point of view. It was a truly remarkable feat that changed how many artists, especially in the West, depicted scenes in their work. This was especially important
before the time of film and cameras when the need to
convey realism was a priority. Historic paintings
from other cultures, including China, Japan, India, and Egypt, had different artistic priorities than their Western counterparts. In many Eastern
paintings, for example, the goal of art was to
convey the spirit of the subject and the artist's personal experience
of the subject, rather than an observationally
accurate depiction of it. Furthermore, since
many paintings were on long scrolls meant to be experienced as a whole and
by viewing individual parts, a single vanishing point simply would not have
served its purpose. With planar perspective, Eastern art communicates
depth via overlaps, basically laying
the subject matter on three separate planes. First, the foreground plane, then the middle plane, and finally the
background plane. The distance between each
plane was accentuated by the level of detail,
hue, and value; all concepts that we've been learning throughout this course. Buildings and geometric
objects that were suited for linear perspective were instead drawn in parallel perspective, which avoids vanishing points while still achieving a sense of space in relation to
the subjects around it. Large groups of people in many different spaces were thus able to be depicted
with this perspective, which couldn't be achieved
in linear perspective. These paintings communicate
artistically and effectively, even if not technically
realistically. You can see how linear
perspective can be limiting, including sometimes rigid
placement of subjects not being able to
convey space relations outside of the standard
individual human viewpoint. Planar perspective,
on the other hand, also has limitations and that it does not accurately
depict space, especially the view from a person's standpoint inside
a structure or outside of it. So each really serves its own purpose and is
needed at different times. Having an understanding of the different approaches
to perspective will allow you to mix and match to your needs and your
artistic vision. As a beginner, I
recommend that you start to really identify, observe, and study what your
favorite artists are using. Having an understanding of the prospective approach
that they employ, and then practicing
and exploring those on your own will
allow you to come to an understanding of
how you would like to communicate your
expression and views. [MUSIC]
27. Depth & Composition 2: Creating Depth in Planar Perspective: [MUSIC] Most of the modern
illustration that I like uses some form of planar perspective, and that's the illustration style that
I like to draw in as well. They started as just my
personal aesthetic taste that I couldn't
really explain, but after coming to a
better understanding of the history of
planar perspective, I realized that I
really relate to that priority of
expressing the spirit of a subject and my own
personal experience of it over a technically
accurate depiction. I think, for me, it
really boils down to, I like to draw things
in a way that you can take a picture
of in real life. I also like to combine different approaches to
perspective and continue to experiment with ways of
mixing together views that you don't expect to go
well together yet work. For example, in this illustration I made
called The Courtyard, it has a layered
planar perspective, but also includes a
top-down line work on the ground that
depicts tiles. I prefer this over a one-point perspective view of the tiles because, for me, it creates a subtle
feeling of surrealism, which of course is
a complement to the very large giant flowers that is surrounding
our character. I want to emphasize
that a flat style of illustration doesn't mean
that it can't have depth. To create a simple feeling of depth and a flat illustration, I typically think of having the character in the middle or foreground and
placing objects in the foreground while having
a simple background. This can apply in more
intimate settings, such as the vases and the gate in the
courtyard illustration, as well as in larger
landscape settings. Here, in my illustration,
The Reflection, the characters in
the foreground, but there is an added
depth created by adding rocks even
closer to the viewer. The middle plane then becomes the reflection in the mountains, which is also a
major focal point. The background is the
sky and the clouds. It's all very simple
but communicates depth by deploying the three
separate planes. Take a moment here to break down what's in the foreground, middle plane, and background of our class project
illustration. What sense of depth is
created in your view? Where does it feel like you're
standing in relation to the character and how far
away does she feel from you? Think about how this was
achieved by layering depths despite the fact that this is a flat style of illustration. Can you think of ways to make the character look
closer or further away? Now that you're beginning
to understand how depth is achieved in a
flat style, really observe and think about the
choices that were made in order to communicate this in artwork that you admire. [MUSIC]
28. Depth & Composition 3: Intro to Composition Techniques: [MUSIC] Now let's talk a little bit about composition
techniques, because that's a question that a lot of people
have at this point. You have an understanding
of observational drawing, but how do you come up
with your own designs? Let's explore some basic
composition techniques that can help you get started. For me, the most popular
and frequently used rule is the rule of thirds, often used in
photography and film. The rule of thirds
just means that if you place a tic-tac-toe
grid on a frame, the focal points fall around the intersections of the lines, or at the thirds of the images. You'll see many examples using
this technique if you just start to place this type of grid over images that you see. Another common approach
that I use to composition, is simply centering a character and then creating
environment around them. Many teachings will recommend avoiding centering
a composition, but I do it all
the time and so do many illustrators that I admire. It's really about
what you're trying to achieve and I can see why
in certain situations, you won't want to
center a composition. I personally find it
very effective for portraits and character
centered narrative art. Studying the composition
of your favorite photos, movie scenes and
of course artwork, is a great way to start to
hone your eye for composition. Ask yourself when you're
observing something you like, why does that composition
work for you? Even if you don't have a
clear answer right away, as you continue to
observe and reflect, patterns will emerge
and you'll start to understand how you like to incorporate it into
your own work. Remember that your favorite
artwork was a result of many different
thumbnails and concepts before the artists reach
their final design. Exploring and experimenting
is all part of the process. Some other basic tips are, think about leading the eye, use focal points and different
rhythms and patterns in your artwork to
draw the eye and be intentional about where
the viewer looks. Always keep the overall flow and gesture of the
piece in mind. As you really start to
observe artwork that is masterful or just
stuff that you like, you'll notice that
there are a lot of connecting points that might have been unintentional
but work, because these are the lines and patterns and rhythms
in a drawing, that an artist use to
their advantage to communicate and control
where the viewer looks. Another helpful tip is to
think in groups of threes. Three is often considered a
magic number in composition. It's active and
avoids feelings of pairings that come up with twos, or too much symmetry
with groups of four. Anymore than that
and your mind starts to think in groups again. This can also apply
to focal areas or the shape of your flow. Triangles, a three
pointed shape, convey a feeling of
balanced activeness. In our hero drawing, although there are
technically seven flowers, they're grouped into
three clusters. There are also three
golden objects around her forming a triangle. There are also three
green objects, including her jacket
and they're all spaced apart in a
triangular format. Of course, you can see that
the rule doesn't apply to everything
strictly everywhere. For example, I have
pairs of leaves, but you can begin to play with your own patterns with
this starting place and then decide if
you want to break the rule where it
doesn't feel awkward. Other common issues
to be aware of are to avoid awkward tangents, where the edges of different
objects are barely touching, or just overlapping
in an awkward way, usually where you
can't tell where something begins or ends. You also want to avoid
unclear plane hierarchies, such as not being clear
what is in the foreground, what's in the middle ground
and what's in the background. Usually this is just a matter of overlapping your objects
in a clear way and again, making sure you don't have
any awkward tangents. Avoid too perfect symmetry if
that's not your intention. Having a little bit more
of an organic flow to your illustration will help
make it feel more balanced. Finally, make sure your values
support your structure. It's one thing to intend to lead the eye with an interesting
subject or action, but if your values
do not support it, your viewer may become
confused where to look. Values can incorporate color
as well, so for example, you don't want a bystander in the background
to be wearing a very bright red in a
very dark composition. Instead, you want them
to look somewhere else. Think about where the artist
might have intended you to look and then consider whether they were
successful at it. Did you look at different
details as your eyes float around in a natural
and organic way? Are your eyes drawn
to the places where it seems like that
should be the focal point? If so, think about why
that worked and if not, think about what
could have changed. Just starting to notice and observe is already
a big start in starting to hone your
ability to think about strong
compositions. [MUSIC]
29. Depth & Composition 4: Class Project Part V: Now let's return to our
anchoring class project. We started this entire series with observational drawing, but actually the
very first step of your own original drawing is
going to be thumbnailing. It's concepting different ideas, doing really quick sketches, and then refining
those thoughts and ideas with the line, value, color, and portrait skills
that we've learned. That's where this class brings
things into full circle. We're going back
to the beginning, but with a fresh perspective. Together, we're going
to come up with a concept, create
many thumbnails, and then refine our
chosen thumbnail and finish them off
with all of the skills that we've been building
throughout this class. We're going to work
with the prompt of designing a cover for a
drawing foundations class. They incorporate everything
that we've covered in terms of line and shape, value and form, color
and light portraits, and then putting it altogether. This was literally what I
was thinking about as I was designing the hero illustration or class project for this class. So I'm going to walk through a very realistic example of
what that process is like. You can work digitally
or on paper. I personally find that I think best on just scratch notebook, sketch paper, and I
personally like to use this blue Col-Erase
pencil by Prismacolor. You can, of course, do the
same thing on the iPad. The iPad's really great
for being able to easily move things around. But when I just want to
get some quick ideas out, I find a piece of paper is
best. So let's start with that. If you'd like, you
can start off by just creating little boxes. If you have a piece
of paper about the size of mine, I'll do six. If you have larger ones or smaller ones, just
adjust accordingly. When you're working on,
say, a client brief or even coming up with
your own illustration, there's some initial parameters that you're going to
want to know or at least know that you're going to
need to know such as how big is this illustration and
where is it going to be used. You can keep all of these considerations
in mind as you design. First, let's just come
up with different ideas. Obviously, it's a drawing
foundations class. So having someone drawing
seems to make a lot of sense. So let's start with
some ideas around that. This is a very basic
starting point. I have someone drawing
at their desk. As I'm going along, I
need to really start to think about whether it's
checking all the boxes. How can I best express
thinking about line and shape, value and form, color and light? I can start to see
those in my mind because even though this
is a sketch drawing, I can imagine what it
might look like in color. You notice I'm starting
with very simple shapes. Not quite a stick figure, but basically they're
little drawing mannequins, and that's more
than enough to get a sense of the
overall composition. At the thumbnail stage, we're really focusing on
what content we're going to be including at a
very high level and what's the
overall composition. With the second
idea, I have been thinking about maybe
just showing a notebook. Maybe there's no person in it, and it's depicting these flowers and just objects around it. This is top-down view
of a desk more or less, but with some
skewed perspective. Of course, I'm
realizing that now I don't have the portrait
section included, so maybe I can add a
little portrait here. Now it's not a
character drawing, but the drawing is
of a character, but it still gets the
element of having all of the aspects of the
class included covered. Again, I don't
need to detail it, just enough so that you know what is going there. That's a little bit more
of a graphic approach. Let's think of something maybe a little bit more abstract. My idea is here is almost maybe like a stack of books,
and then there's this pencil going through that
has the lines and shapes. Then maybe this part would
have some value and form, and then this part of the
pencil would be colored. This is definitely
not the strongest in terms of showing portraits. Even though this doesn't hit
all of the requirements, it's good to have these
kinds of explorations that are just really
different than what you've been doing so that you
can test the limits and see what makes you feel like is
the strongest contender. I'm going to try just a scene,
an outdoor scene maybe. Maybe this person isn't drawing. It doesn't necessarily
need to be so literal. Let's see. Maybe they're in
a world of drawing somehow. Maybe instead of a tree, I could actually
show you a mountain. That makes more sense. Building a foundation
and working your way up. This help emphasize the drawing
journey aspect as well. Maybe the pond on the floor
looks like a color palette. It's interesting idea, but one, I don't think it
communicates portraits enough, two, I think this might be
a little bit too abstract. Not be clear enough this is a drawing foundations class. I do think the hand is maybe a good example
of something, like the hand holding the leaf. This communicate that
there is this branch here, and maybe the branch is what has the different aspects that
actually can be really cool. You can write little
notes to yourself, too. This has line, shape obviously. This one would be in value
and showing its form. This part would be in color. This would represent
the portrait class because we talked
about hands as well, and then there's the
whole composition. That's an option and that's
a nice way to anchor a whole class in an
illustration and what I was trying to get
with our final design. Let me talk about
our final design. Of course, you can
continue to make as many thumbnails
as you'd like. The more that you come up with, I think the better
your outcome will be because you've
thought through all of your weaker ideas and then come out with
something strong. Usually, by the end,
when you really like, "I just can't think
of another idea," that's when you'll
come up with an idea. You really didn't expect. But that said, I
also sometimes just have an idea and I just
go with that right away, and I don't do a ton of
different thumbnails. So each drawing is
its own experience. Let me go into this concept of someone sitting at
a desk drawing. Let's think what kind
of mood she is in. I've already decided
that's a girl. Is she at a super
exciting environment? Is she calm and relaxed? Is she frustrated? Is it very active
or is it a balance? Like I've mentioned, I want it to feel
peaceful but engaging. So active yet calming. You can play around
with different poses. I thought it would
be nice to show her hand resting on her face, both contemplative and also
just a little more active, and also so we can
see both hands. Then I thought about
what do I want to surround her with. This can be an exploration
in and of itself. But you can say so
much about a character by what you surround them with, what you dress them with, and just every single
aspect of them. I had the idea that this would be like a drawing journey. So I wanted to give
her an explorer vibe. That's why I put in this telescope and then
I added the globe. I'm here working
with the knowledge of what the class
illustration look like, but realistically, I wouldn't necessarily known exactly
where all of these things go. Maybe the globe started over here or maybe the telescope
wasn't this tall. But eventually, I would
move things around until I feel like the
composition felt right. I want things to overlap, so it feels like she is immersed in all of these
things around her. We're looking at her through the objects standing basically
at the front of her desk. I wanted to bring in a sense of nature and maybe
a little bit more surrealism like
imagining you're in a dream or the flow state
when you're drawing. So that's why I had these
flowers surrounding her. I knew I wanted them
to give her a frame. This is where something
like not having it too symmetrical comes into play. Of course, the flowers could be exactly symmetrical
and that's one look. But for me, I like things to feel a little bit
more flowy and organic. So that's why there's this
frame that is not symmetrical, but instead has a
nice flow to it. I was starting to think about different shapes I
wanted to incorporate, so that's how I decided the
rest of the objects here. I had this egg-shaped flattened ellipse
sphere for this face, and then I had a cylinder
for the pencil case and I overlapped those two. The ruler was a rectangle and the pencils were
smaller cylinder still. Over here, I had a
tall cylindrical vase and the globe of course
is an obvious big sphere, and then the telescope
is also a nice cone. Those are all considerations
as I started to think about what I wanted to
place here on her desk. Now to finish this off, I knew I didn't want to create a full scene because then it
would be difficult for me to place it on, say,
a horizontal image or just different aspect ratios. So having it be something
that is more of a spot illustration was going
to be helpful for me. I just finish it off with
this archway in the back. It could be seen as a door, but I thought of it
more like a window. Her desk is positioned where
the back is facing a window. That is my little thumbnail. Let's now move
this into our iPad and go from there. We've talked about our prompt, we've done our
thumbnail sketching, and thinking about the framing and the overall composition. Now let's start to clean
that up a little bit. All I've done is taken a photo of this
literally with my phone, airdropped it to my iPad. Doesn't look like much and I
could obviously recreate it. But there are times
when actually your very rough sketch is going to be a great guide
to your finished piece. I like to just have
it there on a layer. You can always just hide it and just reference it later on. But I'm going to
demonstrate how I would think about cleaning
up some of the line work., how I organize my layers to
really take advantage of the digital tools when it comes to working on composition. Now let's really
start to go back and think about line, shape, structure, leading the eye
and all of those things, but now from a design
point of view. You might be following
along to recreate the class project again
with that new perspective, or you might be working on your own design
based on the prompt. Whichever one it is, let's just go through
each step with the same goals and
focuses in mind together. There's a few ways
to approach this. You can do it all on
one layer and then just select things
and move them around, or try to draw each object on a separate layer and then have that be easier for
you to move around. This might just
become a matter of experimenting what works
best for you and your flow. Around this stage,
I will start to pull up reference images. In this sketch stage, I'm not looking at
any references. I'm just drawing
from imagination what I think things look like. But around here, I'll start to actually look up what a globe looks like and where those
important details are. Trying to think about gestures. One, considering how
her head is tilting and this gesture of her body, this overall triangle shape. Now with the sphere, there could be just
a straight up and down aspect to the sphere. But if I tilt it, it echoes the tilt of her head. With the telescope, that was a little tricky
because I could have it pointing in many different ways. Want to have a rhythm so
this globe is down here. That's why I thought
maybe it'd be good to have a telescope on this side pointing in another direction. But again, tilted. Even things like the legs, how far apart they're spread out are all design decisions and can affect things in a
very subtle way. Having this leg here in front of the book clearly communicates where in relation the
book the telescope sits. If I kept it here, I wouldn't really be sure
where exactly it sits. Is it behind the book, next to the book, further away? Maybe it's a very tiny telescope or a very huge telescope. Having it on a separate layer allows me to play with that. This has a slightly
different oval shape, more of an ellipse, and that's why I want
to paste it here. But this is a good
little object where I could really move it around
all sorts of places. If it goes back here, it
would look like it's behind. At first, I think
I had it more on even plane with the globe. Then realized by moving it
just a little bit down, it just creates
more of this rhythm hopping back and forth. Now with the things
inside the pencil folder, I could have made it
very complicated. Maybe she has a ton
of things in here. But I decided that this
is a more minimal space. I don't want to
distract with a ton of things in this tin because
that's not the point. Just enough to be able to communicate that she has some
drawing tools at her table. You'll see I like to draw all
the way through oftentimes because I'm not sure where
things are going to end up, and you can easily do the final line work
without these later on. But this way, you will really ensure that you have
some accurate lines. A lot of times with beginners, if they don't draw
all the way through, say, this was an elbow, then the shoulder will be here and then they might
forget that it needs to connect, and then the elbow will
be a little bit off. Those are good reasons
to draw all the way through and just do
checks for yourself. Then start to put
in those flowers. Just overall thinking
about the shapes. Here definitely a
group of three. I could have the option
to put two up here and one down here or vice versa. I ended up with having two at the bottom and one
bigger one up here, but let's just leave that
in place for awhile. You can look here, are there any strange
tangents happening? I think this part's feeling
a little confusing. Maybe what I do is
bring this more clearly in front of
the book closer to us. Then maybe arrange the globe and the vase a little bit
more clearly that way. Now the globe is covering
the top of the vase. To make sure that's sticking
out, I'll have this. Then now this little part of the globe is touching
the edge of the vase, which causes this
strange tangent. I can just go into my globe
and tilt it some more. To add a little bit more detail, I added these very
simple leaf shapes. This was just putting whatever I felt like some space
needed to be filled in. You can also keep these on separate layers so that you can move them
around as needed. Again, you can say that this technically breaks
those rules of threes that I
mentioned earlier and I could've included
another one here. There's no right or wrong here. For me, the leaves are
more like compliments. So it almost becomes a pairing
with the flower. There's a grouping of
three here instead and a grouping of three here. When I was thinking
about her clothing, that's part of the design, too. Again, what does it
say about this person? What is she wearing? Is she wearing a
cozy sweater and all snuggled up with a
mug by her side? Or is she wearing something
more professional? Maybe she's getting
ready to work. You can try many
different approaches. But just remember that clothing is part of
the storytelling, is part of the visual design. I ended up giving her
this nice green outfit and it's a little
bit like a blazer. So definitely feeling
very structured. Also it gave me
the opportunity to talk about things like having this V-neck point to or
other focal areas as well. We, of course, are
looking at her, but also subtly
thinking about drawing. In terms of her hairstyle, I kept it very simple and clean. But I was, again, thinking
about the shape language. I thought it'd be
cool to talk about the sphere and then her face, and then this
triangular shape of both her hair and then the
rest of her upper body. I took a reference
photo of myself in a similar pose to make sure that my anatomy
was looking accurate. Put in a little bit
of the details of her face more to think about
the expression that she has. Is she looking? Was her eyes open
and looking at you or looking off in the distance because she's thinking
about something? I decided that she
was going to look calm and contemplative
as she was working on her drawing, and
then have a slight smile. Let's turn off my sketch layer in the back and see how
that's coming along. You see it's going to
be very similar to, of course, the observational
drawing that we did together. But now think about
it in terms of this drawing didn't
exist before. So there was nothing to observe. Now we put together this original drawing
from our imagination and our understanding of various foundational
skills all combined. As you are working on yours, think about all
of these concepts together and you can
even have a list of the tools at your disposal
or the different aspects at every stage of
what to keep in mind. Feel free to continue
to experiment with your composition and
when you're ready, let's move on. After we have our basic
sketch composition in place, you can either clean
up the line work here or do a quick value thumbnail
so that you can make sure that you have a little
map for yourself as you move into selecting a color palette and refining your line work. Keeping everything that
we've learned in mind, including avoiding tangents, making sure that the
separate planes are clear, and drawing the eye to
important focal points, let's start to use our five value system
to start to think about how we might want
to sign and group different values
into our sketch. I'm going to start with my
fourth value on her hair. Just know that I want to create a high-contrast doing
her face and her hair. Then using my lightest
value for her skin, it could also be vice versa. Then working my way
around the illustration. By using these values and all of the concepts
that we've learned, I can make sure that there's
clear differentiation that's supporting my drawing
composition and structure. Even if I've overlapped objects, which is already one clear way to define different planes, I can also use
contrasting values to make that even more clear. I can use stronger values where it's more
closer to the viewer, and then lighter values
in places where I don't necessarily need the
viewer to look right away. I'm also using the contrast of the darker values in the
vases and the leaves so it draws your
attention all around the artwork after first
looking at the character. Then a lighter value
for the background because I want
that to be more in the background and also not necessarily draw attention
to it right away. You'll find as you work through the five values that you may
need to adjust it sometimes. For example on her jacket, I wanted to have two values that clearly showed a difference between the shirt underneath her jacket and the
jacket itself, but not a super huge difference. So I just slightly
lightened the jacket color and slightly darkened
the shirt color for my three and four values. This is a good moment to pause and consider the
difference between a value study and then doing a value thumbnail
for your own work. Here, there's nothing I'm
observing and copying from, but the value studies
help me really learn to appreciate how others use value to make a really strong structure
for their drawings. When it comes time for me to do value thumbnails
for my own pieces, I can really start
to pay attention of how to group values together and also how to have a good balance between all
of my different values. I'm thinking about the
major and minor key that I want it to feel very
bright and lively. So I'm using a high
major key and also pretty high minor key in terms
of the level of contrast. I have my darkest darks. I have some whitest whites. I make sure a lot of the contrast is
here on her face, but also here
around her writing. Then just the overall balance
of having it feel like a bright setting,
but also calming. I've started with the
five basic values, but you saw that I had made some adjustments here and there. I'm probably working almost
more with a nine value or almost 10 value scale because
there are some areas where I want it to just have
a little bit more subtle of a difference. With this, I already
have a roadmap for my color palette when
it comes time to think about how to pick colors, where in the range of value do I want to be
collecting the hues from. Even though I know I
want it to be green, and orange, and peach, what kind of oranges
and what kind of greens am I looking for? Now, I don't want to
repeat too much of what I talked about in the
color class in terms of the emotions I was trying
to convey and what the color psychology
was and how I ended up with my green
and orange palette. In this stage, I'm just
going to talk a little bit more about creating depths and what I was thinking about
in a composition viewpoint. As you learned in the
planner perspective section, there's a few aspects
of color that we can think about
such as making her a little bit
more desaturated and brighter because
she's further away. But for me, because I wanted
to keep the attention on her, so I decided to keep her just as vivid as the
rest of the image. I wouldn't say that the
greens that I used on her or the reds and the
oranges that I used in the details are
really that much more desaturated or further away than the things in
the foreground. We don't really experience
that distance or that shift in values and hues anyway
when things are in such close approximation
to each other. But I did choose a more neutral and toned down background color for the
archway in the back. When I was thinking
about rendering and how much value to put into
the objects around there, I decided to keep
things very simple, more flat, and a little
bit more subdued. If you came up with your own
drawing or recreated this one now with your
own understanding of how everything
comes together, I would love to see
how it all turned out.
30. Depth & Composition 5: Summary: [MUSIC] I hope you've
learned so much in seeing how everything
we've been learning comes together in this
final class project. I can't wait to see
what you've made. First, let's go over
a quick summary of what we learned together in this depth and
composition section. In this section,
we learned about the evolution of different
approaches to perspective, including classical
linear perspective and planar and
parallel perspective, and why they might be used for different purposes
in artistic expressions. We learned how to
create depth in planar or flat perspective by
utilizing the foreground, middle ground, and background, and varying the
details and tones. We learned classic
composition techniques, such as the rule of thirds
and groups of threes, and how to lead the
eye with focal points and different rhythms in lines. You put it all together
by going full circle and learning the first step
of an original drawing, ideating and thumbnailing. For further study,
I encourage you to continue to practice, especially with
little thumbnails and just sketching and coming
up with different ideas and, of course, observing
the artworks, pictures, and movies that you enjoy
to better understand what compositions
feel strong for you. You can also check out books that have composition techniques that are relevant
to your interests. For example, I have these really great
detailed books on Hokusai and Muka's work, which really helps me study their approach to composition. Spend some time exploring
and going through the competition
exercises for yourself and when you're ready, let's meet in the final
part of this class [MUSIC]
31. Final Thoughts & Tips: [MUSIC] Congratulations
on reaching the end of this drawing
foundations course. We've learned so much together and I hope you're proud of
what you've accomplished. We now have a solid
foundation and understanding of how our tools of line,
shape, value, form, color and light
can come together to start strengthening our
observational drawings. From there, we know how we
can use those same tools and add in perspective
and composition and grow into our own
artistic expression. Continue to practice the
exercises from this class and you will improve. For your convenience,
I've compiled the key concepts and exercises into a workbook that you
can refer to any time. If you enjoyed this class and want more support on
your drawing journey, I welcome you to join my drawing studio
for guided prompts, more classes, and
live sessions with me and a friendly, intimate
community in Mimochai Studio. Either way, practicing with
the knowledge of the tools you've learned in this class is going to be way
more effective than just practicing blindly. As you continue to practice, remember to keep your
explorer's mindset and draw what you love. That way, you'll stay motivated to keep going on this journey and see this as a
drawing adventure. I also invite you
to leave a review and a comment for this class, as it's super helpful
for both me as a teacher and for other students
considering taking this class. Thanks so much for joining me. Until next time, take care
and keep creating. [MUSIC]