@@plusonepercent9119 it's neutral because he's creating balance. If there were an equal amount of good hacks to bad hacks he wouldn't make more. If there were too many bad hacks he'd make some good ones. Therefore. Chaotic neutral.
AAAAAAHHHHH!!!! PAAAAAIIIINNNN!!!!!! I broke my hand yesterday because of the hate comments I get all the time. I was so angry that I punched a hole in my computer. Please don't hate me, dear stu
IKR, I am listening to this as I work & I am trying not to crack up laughing in the office. I am working, but I have glanced over at it here n there, especially when we have our loving #jazzaexpressive moments. lol
We made "stained glass" in school years ago and it was just colored pencil on paper with baby oil rubbed over the top. Smoothed everything out and the sun shines straight through lol
woah I remember when in a lab experiment (we were learning chemistry stuff) we put oil on paper and let it dry. It was interesting when it became and stayed see through, but I hadnt realized how that can be used in art! that "stained glass" is so cool, I'll try stained glass sometime!
I also made my own stylus But i got tired of it after an hour of use, gave up and gone back to my fingers Plus it seems like my screen was a little bit scratched
hate to tell you this jazza, but this video gave me a free stylus, helped me complete a portrait for my art project (i was struggling with the hair) and gifted me with the tracing paper i couldn't go out to buy because of quarantine. thanks!
The watercolor hack wasn't adding honey to dry watercolor it was adding honey to make watercolors (and gouache btw) better and keep it from being bad and cracked when they do dry.
2:30 A quick explanation: a phone touchscreen works by small electric charges coming from your hand, it conducts to the screen and starts responding, the foil's purpose is to conduct the electric charges to the damp cotton, which is conductive due to the water on it, and when the electric charges travel to the screen it starts responding! there's a lot I didn't mention, so I encourage you yogo and learn about it!
5:08 This actually is not dumb. It's the traditional way of making tracing paper. You use an oil and then rub the paper with a flour or bran to get rid of excess oil. Let it dry and you have a tracing paper old masters style.
I’ve been so incredibly busy being a first time parent, that I’ve hardly had any time to watch yt videos, but coming back I always love watching yours and getting the feeling of comfort from them. If that even makes any sense! Basically, your videos are comforting to me when the rest of my life is utter chaos. So thank you ❤️
The part i enjoyed most about this video is Jazza's increasing frustration at not being able to find a bad art hack and listening to his brain unravel.
The reason the stylus hack works is because the aluminum foil is transmitting the electrical current from your body down to the wet Q-tip. So that's what makes the stylus work. And why it won't work without it. If the Q-tip was dry wouldn't work either.
Touch screen actually rely on capacitance, not the transmission of external electrical current. Your finger acts as a capacitor which changes the internal capacitance and results in a measurable difference in voltage at a given electrode.
That oil thing makes sense, oil makes paper bags and stuff translucent. It's actually a way to demonstrate lipids, they use it in elementary schools and middle schools all the time.
@@sklsdjf Indeed! I used to do it a lot when I was a kid, for geography classes. Not that my family was poor or anything, but I usually only remembered that I was going to need it at the last minute, so I would do it myself... They work fine, however, depending on the type of oil you use, it stinks after dry LOL
And high schools, during our digestive unit in bio we used a whole buncha chemicals and heat for protiens and sugars but tested for lipids with regular paper towel
There is nothing funnier than Jazza, a known sculptor, using a screwdriver instead of a ball tool, a tool, yes, used as a dotting tool on nails but also a sculpting tool.
In regards to the tracing paper. I was cleaning up and found that my 2 part epoxy had leaked onto the documents I had it on. Well, those documents became tracing paper, which was really interesting and double interesting as the text on them was not ruined
do they dry properly? I did experiments with my students having them create paint with things people might have had in the stone age.... and the kids who used honey as a binding agent just brought in a sticky mess, even weeks later!
@@wakemeupwhenpeoplearesaneagain Apparently White Nights also use honey as a binder in their paints and I can say that no, they don't fully dry. I had mine for years and they still are a little bit sticky if I touch them. (I did however heard from people that it also depends on where you live and how you store them)
@@akitalockwood oh i totally didnt know that white nights use honey!! I'm in the UK so the weather varies week by week, but the only problem I've ever had is that sometimes the paint in the pans itself arent fully solid and if you press on them with your finger they leave your fingerprint on them, but I don't think I've ever had problems with the paints themselves not drying once placed down.
The reason it only works with foil is because of how screens work, they sense an electric difference and your fingies are conductive while the plastic pen isn't. That's why you wrap the foil so it makes it conductive.
I love Jazza's work, and it hurts me to know that he is selling ALL his work form the past 10 years. Would buy something if I could afford it, but for now I will just sit by and continue enjoying his videos. Thanks Jazza!
It kinda sucks looking through the jazzy auction, I remember every piece there. It's so weird seeing it all going. Hate that I could never afford a piece. I hope you get all that you need for your new place. I believe in you.
Jazza, I'm starting to quit heroin yet again, and yet again I'm inspired by your enthusiasm in life! Thank you for your energy. There is art to be made, people
I don’t have tiktok but someone needs to make one on how to properly use a pencil not the regular side but sharpen the eraser side until you reach the lead and add a eraser cap to the normal side!
You can pull off the earaser and metal in one fell swoop if you keep at it long enough, its hard to get it back on the other end tho because of how its manufactured. Source i always remove the eraser
Jazza just accidentally learnt the difference between old style resistive touch screens and modern capacitive screens. Keep up the amazing content Jazza 😀👍
No one: Art hacker: I’m going to show you how to fix your old dry water colors Also art hacker: *poors perfectly normal water colors into honey thinking we won’t notice*
I am so confused with the watercolour one, if your watercolour tubes dry, all you need is some water to use it again? Isn't that the whole point of watercolours?
You can rehydrate pretty much any dried water colour by adding water to it but, unless you use extremely high quality water colours, the end result will be quite powdery. Honey gives it back a more plastic and smooth texture, more like it would have been if you'd used it before it dried. The honey gives better blending, a denser colour spread and better ability to fade/wash back the colour once applied. Without the honey the rehydrated paint tends to get caught in the fibres of the paper and causes a stain.
Well, I've only ever used solid watercolours, so I'm confused as to why they are in a tube, and why it would be a problem that it's dry. I have *seen* that kind of liquid watercolours and gouache, but never used it.
@@heatherrowles2580 is this an English-speaking country thing then? I use very cheap watercolour tubes, and that never happens to me, the only watercolours we have that get powdery are the ones for kids (yk, the ones that come with the cheap red brush with them plasticy bristles)
@@Golden_Bubblebee not just english speaking countries. There are plenty of cheap tube watercolors that are mostly filler. These stretch out the pigments but make the watercolors dry chalky and powdery. May I ask what country you are from? I'd like to live there because good watercolors where I live (Malaysia) are soooo expensive T.T
Sitting here now wondering what I can make as a bad art hack and if it’s worth finally uploading something to my TikTok account just cause this was funny
Honey is legit an ingredient for watercolours, especially for artisan and homemade watercolours. So that art hack is literally just telling you to put an ingredient that most likely evaporated out of the paint back into it. If anything, it would probably genuinely improve lesser quality watercolours.
The touch screen works by sending weak electricity trough your fingers when toucht. Non conductive materials do not work. Foil is conductive, that is why it works.
Haaha! Jazza trying to string a sentence together on the bad hack video is EXACTLY how I speak when I try to make a photography tutorial. I'm not the only one! Thank god! Words are hard.
The one about embossing the paper is really good. I did a fluffy white dog on commission one time, and it would've been such a pain without that little trick.
Nobody tell him that touchscreens sense electricity from your fingers and that’s why the foil works! 😂😂 fr, I love ya Jazz’s, I love how joyful you are and you’re just a joy to watch
The only time I've seen that oil and paper thing is that episode of the Simpsons where Homer is trying to gain weight so he rubs the food against some paper to see if it's oily enough and bad enough for him 😂😂😂 Simpsons life lessons
So, the stylus works with electrical current of the human body, the tip is rubber in normal styluses and the body is metal so that the electrical current for the body travels into the stylus. The aluminum conducts electrical current from the body to the wet cotton buds as water conducts electricity well. So that's how a makeshift stylus works
Thanks for sharing the makeshift stylus! I've been needing a stylus to draw on my phone, but I know that touchscreens require the little bit of conducted electricity from your finger to complete the circuit... and that just so happens to let phone brands ransom you for a little stylus. >:c Joking, there's no conspiracy here--I know the touchscreen circuit concept happened long before the phone stylus around the beginning of its invention XD--but I am legitimately stubborn and won't pay a damn dollar for a pen when I've already got a not-so-portable screen-less drawing tablet. Gimme dat pocket digital art, pls.
I was taught in colored pencil drawing that when your pencil is too short you take an unsharpened pencil of the same color and super glue it to the end so you have a (very long at first) never ending pencil.
the stylus works with a foil because the static energy passes through your fingers, into the foil, and then to the cotton with water. That's how it works :p
I once experimented and made blue oil paper but didn't know what to do with it I finally learned that it looks pretty good as a fishtank backdrop. It looks like frosted glass and more expensive than it is I think I remember reading that oiled paper was used for windows in early pioneer days
If you go to 5 minute crafts, there’s hours worth of bad art hacks😂 oh god the cut your hair off and glue it to a stick paint brush hack. A classic 😌
true but do we reallllly want to give them views LOOL
Amazing...
This is why we love Five Minute Crafts
😌
That’s exactly what I was thinking 😂😂
Great minds think alike! 😄
Don’t forget that Jazza did the paint brush thing with horse hair
The foil and water is conducting the electricity out of your body to make the stylus work 😊
Ya beat me
Yes, i use this trick all the time for digital art because i don't have a stylus.
I watch you !
The pen, cotton swab and water aren't necessary. Just roll up foil and use that as it is conductive.
That’s a bit creepy lol
How DARE Tik Tok be this useful! We really must take this into our own hands. We must rise against the norms!
Haha
Lmao well there's a first time for everything😂😂😱
Viva la revolution
Yes I agree we should start a revolution
@@kurtthecat2950 let’s do it...
let’s start the FIRST EVER ART REVOLUTION!!!
Expectations: Jazza frustrated over bad art hacks
Reality: Jazza frustrated over good art hacks
Ikr!
Then proceeds to make a useless art hack
не совсем так. физику надо в школе учить, а не на Энштейну очки в учебнике рисовать...
@@SaironW excuse me
I love the completely unfounded confidence Jazza has that the aluminum foil is useless until he actually tries the stylus without it.
"There are no bad art hacks, so I must fix this." You are the definition of chaotic neutral.
Yes.
FR
Yes.
actively seeking bad is quite literally not neutral
@@plusonepercent9119 it's neutral because he's creating balance. If there were an equal amount of good hacks to bad hacks he wouldn't make more. If there were too many bad hacks he'd make some good ones.
Therefore. Chaotic neutral.
I like how jazz tries to search for bad art hacks but ends up making a bad one
Omg true! 🤣🤣🤣
oh how the turn tables
@@yoonghoul2317 you genius
@@SnickersEatsCookies no u genius
ya like jazz
“jazza stressing over good art hacks for 14 minutes straight”
AAAAAAHHHHH!!!! PAAAAAIIIINNNN!!!!!!
I broke my hand yesterday because of the hate comments I get all the time. I was so angry that I punched a hole in my computer. Please don't hate me, dear stu
@@AxxLAfriku I mean
Really?
Man these bots should get creative
New Title-
🙃✨
Trying to find bad things and failing
IKR, I am listening to this as I work & I am trying not to crack up laughing in the office. I am working, but I have glanced over at it here n there, especially when we have our loving #jazzaexpressive moments. lol
We made "stained glass" in school years ago and it was just colored pencil on paper with baby oil rubbed over the top. Smoothed everything out and the sun shines straight through lol
Woah! That’s sounds awesome! You just gave us another art hack.
I was wondering if we could use different oils , great idea
Acetone also works as a pencil blur-er /smoother without creating translucent paper, if you want to try this without the seethroughness
woah I remember when in a lab experiment (we were learning chemistry stuff) we put oil on paper and let it dry. It was interesting when it became and stayed see through, but I hadnt realized how that can be used in art! that "stained glass" is so cool, I'll try stained glass sometime!
Lol
It has to be wax colored pencils, doesn't it? We did it with crayons and vegetable oil.
“There are no bad art hacks on Tiktok” has the same energy as “there is no Avatar movie in Ba Sing Se
HAHA YES
as someone who's been drawing with their finger and HAS NO STYLUS THIS IS SO FREAKING USEFUL
Yup,same here buddy
I also made my own stylus
But i got tired of it after an hour of use, gave up and gone back to my fingers
Plus it seems like my screen was a little bit scratched
If the stylus isn’t a Apple Pencil or one of those 30 dollar brand one, then finger is just better
I made one myself and ended up ruining my phone screen.
stick to your fingers 👍
@@DarkGamer-qh7ql yup,i tried these once.A little frustrating indeed.Returned to drawing with finger after this
You should 3D print tiny characters and use them as chess pieces, paint them, and them use them to play a chess match with your wife.
Thats a great idea!
I agree
Bro that’s big brain! I agree too
Cool spam
He does have a chess set if I'm not wrong.
Omg! My watercolor art hack was shown! I’m glad that jazza approved my art hack!
omg its you lol
Is it the Dry Watercolor art hack?
Omg hi lol
Oh YOU
Waw, nice hack
hate to tell you this jazza, but this video gave me a free stylus, helped me complete a portrait for my art project (i was struggling with the hair) and gifted me with the tracing paper i couldn't go out to buy because of quarantine. thanks!
Your fingers are an electrical conductor, much like aluminum foil, so when you're touching the aluminum foil, the phone registers it like a finger.
Oh my goodness, I’ve known foil and wrappers can be used to make styluses but i never knew that that was how it worked, that’s really cool!
Thank you for this explaination
I was also mind-blown when it worked lol
Whoa! this is life changing...
And that's how u know ur smort 😎
Yes! But also better not use aluminium foil, it will scratch the screen.
The watercolor hack wasn't adding honey to dry watercolor it was adding honey to make watercolors (and gouache btw) better and keep it from being bad and cracked when they do dry.
Thank you. I was very confused for a bit.
Indeed ! An actually a lot of high grade watercolors contains honey (Like Sennelier for example :) )
I might try it.
Thanks for making a tik tok that lets people watch paint dry!
🤣🤣🤣
Oh my gosh you’re right
2:30 A quick explanation:
a phone touchscreen works by small electric charges coming from your hand, it conducts to the screen and starts responding, the foil's purpose is to conduct the electric charges to the damp cotton, which is conductive due to the water on it, and when the electric charges travel to the screen it starts responding!
there's a lot I didn't mention, so I encourage you yogo and learn about it!
5:08 This actually is not dumb. It's the traditional way of making tracing paper. You use an oil and then rub the paper with a flour or bran to get rid of excess oil. Let it dry and you have a tracing paper old masters style.
Jazza: "The younglings are getting too good, I need to stop them... In the name of ART!"
"younglings" makes me feel like Jazza is about to stop them Anakin style.
This just in, Jazza learns about conductivity.
This was the sweetest reaction tbh
All those tools in the jazzy art box and here you are using a screwdriver LEGEND.
I'll summarize the result:
"Go, my minions! make Tiktok bad again!"
I’ve been so incredibly busy being a first time parent, that I’ve hardly had any time to watch yt videos, but coming back I always love watching yours and getting the feeling of comfort from them. If that even makes any sense!
Basically, your videos are comforting to me when the rest of my life is utter chaos. So thank you ❤️
The part i enjoyed most about this video is Jazza's increasing frustration at not being able to find a bad art hack and listening to his brain unravel.
The reason the stylus hack works is because the aluminum foil is transmitting the electrical current from your body down to the wet Q-tip. So that's what makes the stylus work. And why it won't work without it. If the Q-tip was dry wouldn't work either.
Exactly
Touch screen actually rely on capacitance, not the transmission of external electrical current. Your finger acts as a capacitor which changes the internal capacitance and results in a measurable difference in voltage at a given electrode.
I concur 😊
Not completely true. The foil is making the "stylus" more capacitive.
@@GivenFailure noo it's because it's designed to sense electric charge
That oil thing makes sense, oil makes paper bags and stuff translucent. It's actually a way to demonstrate lipids, they use it in elementary schools and middle schools all the time.
It does make sense but what about the oily smudges on your precious artworks? It's safer to just buy the actual thing
Yes, but I was most impressed by the fact that the paint went on so well!
@@adrianbik3366 if you dry it out properly it shouldn't be oily when using it
@@sklsdjf Indeed! I used to do it a lot when I was a kid, for geography classes. Not that my family was poor or anything, but I usually only remembered that I was going to need it at the last minute, so I would do it myself... They work fine, however, depending on the type of oil you use, it stinks after dry LOL
And high schools, during our digestive unit in bio we used a whole buncha chemicals and heat for protiens and sugars but tested for lipids with regular paper towel
There is nothing funnier than Jazza, a known sculptor, using a screwdriver instead of a ball tool, a tool, yes, used as a dotting tool on nails but also a sculpting tool.
In regards to the tracing paper. I was cleaning up and found that my 2 part epoxy had leaked onto the documents I had it on. Well, those documents became tracing paper, which was really interesting and double interesting as the text on them was not ruined
Honey is actually in the composition of some very expensive professional watercolors like Sennelier
And m.graham. It’s nice but some people have issues in hot humid climates.
@@valasafantastic1055 It can also attract bees and wasps when you are painting outside haha. I have an array of Pebeo Fragonard paints w/honey binder.
do they dry properly? I did experiments with my students having them create paint with things people might have had in the stone age.... and the kids who used honey as a binding agent just brought in a sticky mess, even weeks later!
@@wakemeupwhenpeoplearesaneagain Apparently White Nights also use honey as a binder in their paints and I can say that no, they don't fully dry. I had mine for years and they still are a little bit sticky if I touch them. (I did however heard from people that it also depends on where you live and how you store them)
@@akitalockwood oh i totally didnt know that white nights use honey!! I'm in the UK so the weather varies week by week, but the only problem I've ever had is that sometimes the paint in the pans itself arent fully solid and if you press on them with your finger they leave your fingerprint on them, but I don't think I've ever had problems with the paints themselves not drying once placed down.
At this point, this should already be a series.
0:26 omg Jazza sounds so emotional 🥺 This is such a huge leap for all of us too, we can't wait till it's over and you can move into the new studio!
Him encouraging people to invade Tiktok weirdly reminds me of the time we took over Drawception...
Jazza: I can't find any bad art hacks!
Also Jazza: Guess I'll make one myself
After doing the watercolour hack: Why are there ants all over my painting??
They came to invade the land
You also notice the paint they "rejuvinated" came out pretty liquidy already
@mikuzura SHE?? I beg you pardon, as far as i am aware Jazza goes by he/him pronounse until profen otherwise
@@UnkownWonders I think they are talking about the women that made the original tik tok.
@@thefreckledmushroom4564 ah ok
The reason it only works with foil is because of how screens work, they sense an electric difference and your fingies are conductive while the plastic pen isn't. That's why you wrap the foil so it makes it conductive.
It actually works with the que tips too but the foil makes it better .
My sis bought me two prints for my birthday this may!! Were happy to support you Jazza!
Happy birthday.
@@andyjo7838 aw thank you!
Happy birthday fam
@@vedant1595 Thank you so much
When jazza opened that paint tube, tears ran down my face.
I love that the only "bad" art hack in this entire video is the one that jazza created.
🤣🤣🤣
I wish there was a chat or something on the auction website. I wanna see some people fight over his art.
I'm not feeling so great this evening, but seeing one of my favorite artist post a video, makes me smile
Aw hope your okay
@@sakuraachuu thank you 😊 I was just probably exhausted
I love Jazza's work, and it hurts me to know that he is selling ALL his work form the past 10 years. Would buy something if I could afford it, but for now I will just sit by and continue enjoying his videos. Thanks Jazza!
It kinda sucks looking through the jazzy auction, I remember every piece there. It's so weird seeing it all going. Hate that I could never afford a piece. I hope you get all that you need for your new place. I believe in you.
I love the fact he couldn’t figure out how the stylist worked. Lmao
It's a stylus. Stylists are amazing, but they mostly do your hair and nails ;)
RIP pen, you'll be remembered.
Alternative title: jazza stressing over *bad* art hacks because their really good.
Me who uses that styles to draw my digital art on my phone : "First time?"
People who draw with fingers: Pathetic
@@coffeemug9904 people who draw with nose: you said something?
@@UnkownWonders People who draw with their feet: PATHETIC
@@nachoghost People who draw with there elbow: PATHETIC
@@queensaharaice7376 people who draw telekinetically: I'm superior
Jazza, I'm starting to quit heroin yet again, and yet again I'm inspired by your enthusiasm in life! Thank you for your energy. There is art to be made, people
2:48 because your body electricity is what makes a touchscreen work, and aluminum conducts it.
I don’t have tiktok but someone needs to make one on how to properly use a pencil not the regular side but sharpen the eraser side until you reach the lead and add a eraser cap to the normal side!
Do it!
You can pull off the earaser and metal in one fell swoop if you keep at it long enough, its hard to get it back on the other end tho because of how its manufactured.
Source i always remove the eraser
Jazza just accidentally learnt the difference between old style resistive touch screens and modern capacitive screens.
Keep up the amazing content Jazza
😀👍
I saw your Tiktok and was so confused lol😂
this is the most frustrated I’ve ever seen someone over real and honest hacks and I love it.
No one:
Art hacker: I’m going to show you how to fix your old dry water colors
Also art hacker: *poors perfectly normal water colors into honey thinking we won’t notice*
I am so confused with the watercolour one, if your watercolour tubes dry, all you need is some water to use it again? Isn't that the whole point of watercolours?
Oh, good. I'm not the only one confused.
You can rehydrate pretty much any dried water colour by adding water to it but, unless you use extremely high quality water colours, the end result will be quite powdery. Honey gives it back a more plastic and smooth texture, more like it would have been if you'd used it before it dried. The honey gives better blending, a denser colour spread and better ability to fade/wash back the colour once applied. Without the honey the rehydrated paint tends to get caught in the fibres of the paper and causes a stain.
Well, I've only ever used solid watercolours, so I'm confused as to why they are in a tube, and why it would be a problem that it's dry. I have *seen* that kind of liquid watercolours and gouache, but never used it.
@@heatherrowles2580 is this an English-speaking country thing then? I use very cheap watercolour tubes, and that never happens to me, the only watercolours we have that get powdery are the ones for kids (yk, the ones that come with the cheap red brush with them plasticy bristles)
@@Golden_Bubblebee not just english speaking countries. There are plenty of cheap tube watercolors that are mostly filler. These stretch out the pigments but make the watercolors dry chalky and powdery.
May I ask what country you are from? I'd like to live there because good watercolors where I live (Malaysia) are soooo expensive T.T
I go through acute depression and art is like therapy to me. You being goofy and fun while doing therapy for me makes me wanna live a little more.
The crusty paint tubes... I used to buy mine from pound shop or cheap online and they used to crust up really quick
I have some watercolor tubes from 6 years ago when I was into watercolor. They were very cheap so tomorrow I’ll see if they’re dry, I’ll update then!
11:46 the disbelief in his voice 🤣🤣🤣
You need to do a TikTok duet review: Make a video where you go through all the best duets people have done with your TikToks.
I found that you can use a carrot as a stylus, too. Was cooking with my iPad one day, and randomly selected a UA-cam video with the carrot.
Thats how you know the art community has your back when most the TikTok hacks do work.
Yeah the tracing paper makes sense, since the oil from fish and chips on the packaging paper, make the paper more transparent
4:28 why is Jazza’s handwriting so good?!
I came on UA-cam for one thing. I've been here an hour.
Sitting here now wondering what I can make as a bad art hack and if it’s worth finally uploading something to my TikTok account just cause this was funny
Honey is legit an ingredient for watercolours, especially for artisan and homemade watercolours. So that art hack is literally just telling you to put an ingredient that most likely evaporated out of the paint back into it. If anything, it would probably genuinely improve lesser quality watercolours.
Finally, a life hack category that actually works and is full of useful advice!
Jazza: „Let‘s break this, shall we?“
I laughed so hard when you shot the pen my cat came running in to see what was going on. Jazza, I just love you.
"All hope is lost, unless it isn't"
Jazza-2021
The part where he shot the pen, I actually thought that it might have been real. It looked so real 0_0
don't worry, handguns are pretty much not legal in Australia unless you're a cop
What?
No it doesn't lol
How have you never had a paint tube dry up before that's nuts to me.
He probably buys the expensive paints
The touch screen works by sending weak electricity trough your fingers when toucht. Non conductive materials do not work. Foil is conductive, that is why it works.
Haaha! Jazza trying to string a sentence together on the bad hack video is EXACTLY how I speak when I try to make a photography tutorial. I'm not the only one! Thank god! Words are hard.
I know nothing about art.. but I enjoy this
It’s not the algorithm, most of us are just good artists Jazza!
Jazza saying "its too short!" My mind: That's what she said
The one about embossing the paper is really good. I did a fluffy white dog on commission one time, and it would've been such a pain without that little trick.
Nobody tell him that touchscreens sense electricity from your fingers and that’s why the foil works! 😂😂 fr, I love ya Jazz’s, I love how joyful you are and you’re just a joy to watch
The only time I've seen that oil and paper thing is that episode of the Simpsons where Homer is trying to gain weight so he rubs the food against some paper to see if it's oily enough and bad enough for him 😂😂😂 Simpsons life lessons
If the paper turns clear, it's your window to weight gain!
So, the stylus works with electrical current of the human body, the tip is rubber in normal styluses and the body is metal so that the electrical current for the body travels into the stylus. The aluminum conducts electrical current from the body to the wet cotton buds as water conducts electricity well. So that's how a makeshift stylus works
Jazza: trying to start a dumpster fire
Tik Tok: Let’s have a nice campfire instead! We can even roast marshmallows!!
Lol. This video was perfection.
Jazza: "THERE ARE NO BAD ART HACKS ON TIKTOK"
Also Jazza: "But if you all chip in, we can fix that!"
I love how Jazza is trying to find bad tiktok hacks, but in the end the king must drop his crown and surrender
Will I use these hacks? ... no
Do I enjoy watching them? ...yes
#SatisfactionWhenTheyWork
7:39 His expression XD
Thanks for sharing the makeshift stylus! I've been needing a stylus to draw on my phone, but I know that touchscreens require the little bit of conducted electricity from your finger to complete the circuit... and that just so happens to let phone brands ransom you for a little stylus. >:c
Joking, there's no conspiracy here--I know the touchscreen circuit concept happened long before the phone stylus around the beginning of its invention XD--but I am legitimately stubborn and won't pay a damn dollar for a pen when I've already got a not-so-portable screen-less drawing tablet. Gimme dat pocket digital art, pls.
1:20 -- I heard that as "Dissect a dead pet" and was confused
4:00 -- Okay, I just heard that as "An old pen's rat's arse" XD
I was taught in colored pencil drawing that when your pencil is too short you take an unsharpened pencil of the same color and super glue it to the end so you have a (very long at first) never ending pencil.
Alt title, "I Tried the BEST TikTok Art Hacks"
11:14 That’s also an app that you can install
the stylus works with a foil because the static energy passes through your fingers, into the foil, and then to the cotton with water. That's how it works :p
Not static energy but ok
New hack for @Jazza: film and edit your Tik Tok video in Premier Rush, then just import into Tik Tok for titles and music. SO much easier.
You know me and my friends used to sell scented tracing paper made from paper and lip balm.the oil tracing paper should work if lip balm did
@GAUTAM VERMA sorry what was this for?
🎊🎉Congrats to the people that saw this ❤️👏👏🎉🎊
*when you’re early but have nothing to say:*
I love jazza! he inspires me to keep making art everyday!
The oil paper one actually work even with butter
I once experimented and made blue oil paper but didn't know what to do with it
I finally learned that it looks pretty good as a fishtank backdrop. It looks like frosted glass and more expensive than it is
I think I remember reading that oiled paper was used for windows in early pioneer days
You can tell you're an Aussie 90's kid when you used the phrase "that's sick" haha