The Art & Science of Drawing: Shading Fundamentals Class
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- Опубліковано 13 чер 2024
- This is one lesson from Brent's Shading Fundamentals course. To learn drawing fundamentals from Brent enroll in his courses: www.brenteviston.com/store and use the coupon UA-cam for 10% off
In this course you’ll learn how to draw using dramatic light and shadow. All form, no matter how complex, follows a basic set of shading principles. By understanding how light operates on the fundamental volumes of the sphere, cylinder and cube, you’ll be able to realistically shade and render basic forms and be prepared to draw and shade more complex subjects. It’s essential that every artist and creative professional know and be able to use these powerful shading techniques.
This course is a perfect prerequisite to painting and figure drawing.
THE ART & SCIENCE of DRAWING is a remarkable program that will teach you how to draw one day at a time. The program is simple, each day you’ll watch one video lesson that will introduce an essential drawing skill, and then do the recommended practice. THE ART & SCIENCE of DRAWING is overflowing with powerful insights into the drawing process and offers some of the clearest, most accessible drawing instruction available. Many of the tools and techniques you'll learn here are rarely seen outside of private art academies.
This course is the seventh installment of an 8-part series. If you're a beginner, we recommend going through the entire series in order. If you've got some drawing experience, feel free to mix and match The Art & Science of Drawing courses to suit your personal needs as an artist!
For more information visit Brent's website: www.brenteviston.com/
Check out Brent's first book: The Art & Science of Drawing: Learn to Observe, Analyze and Draw Any Subject amzn.to/46Wm1GM
Read a free sample from Brent's first book: mailchi.mp/bf463623d380/book-... (Downloadable PDF)
Brent's second book (forthcoming November 2023): The Art and Science of Figure Drawing: Learn to Observe, Analyze, and Draw the Human Body amzn.to/3DrRCCB
Beginner Drawing Materials: www.amazon.com/shop/theartsci...
Watch all of Brent's classes with one month free on Skillshare: www.skillshare.com/en/r/user/...
with all the drawing classes - online, this man is sincerely the best. Worth the membership to cut through everyone else's, time wasting, learn nothing videos!!!
Wow, thank you! It's wonderful to hear how much value you are getting from the courses.
I must agree with you... I started learning how to draw with his course of basic skills, when I mooved to another courses, I could not keep up with their methods. His Basic Skills course prepare you to draw everything you can imagine. Other courses just made me more confused
Thank you so much for this great lesson,you are really a great teacher.
EXCELLENT section on measuring!!!
Thanks a million
Thank you
thank you
👌👌👌👌👌👌👌Excellent👌
Way
Of
Teaching😊🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷GREAT
TEACHER🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷
Gracias sense
Like today saying pocusing several points or practices.
Hi, is there any book you would recommend me to understand this subject?
You can see recommended books on the Evolve Your Art website: www.evolveyourart.com/resources
I’m curious if the black color pencil you’re using for these is a pastel pencil eg stabillo or Faber Castel Pitt Pastel, or a compressed charcoal pencil? It doesn’t look like dark graphite as I see no waxy glare (correct me if I’m wrong).
Hi Rob, Lyra Rembrandt Polycolor Pencils are what I use in The Art & Science of Drawing series. They are oil-based colored pencils. You can see the colors I use and recommend on my website: www.evolveyourart.com/resources/
Are all the classes still available?
Absolutely. Check out my website: www.brenteviston.com/learn-to-draw and use the code UA-cam for 10% off.
Im watching this in 2021
Light shadowing means absence of personal opinion jou malist'value to draws should be based on facts observation and interiors with expert sources.
I notice you are using 5 for the darkest, and 1 for white. But this is the opposite of every other system for value. Everyone else uses 10 for white, maximum light, and 0 or 1 for black, the absence of light.
This is rather petty because he called it a scale implying there are many scales for values.
Also he specifically chose this one because 1 is basically the white of paper WHEN it's white. It CAN'T get whiter than this. This is more intuitive. And making it 5 more simply demonstrates this concept. It actually shows a proficiency in shading concepts.
So what you're insinuating is such and such is not standard while not understanding why we have these systems in the first place. It's more important to know what you're doing rather than following rules for the sake of it.
@@omoddulus4933 Not sure why you’re accusing this person of being petty. Seems really aggressive… just make a point, you know, without name calling maybe?
Can't we use normal pencil