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8 Ways To Learn Spatial Imagination (for drawing)

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  • Опубліковано 17 сер 2024
  • Here are 8 nice exercises to get or improve spatial imagination!
    0:16 Observational Drawing
    1:06 Vanishing Points
    3:11 Ghosting
    4:02 Railways
    4:56 Ellipses
    6:54 Interacting Forms
    8:24 Constructional Drawing
    9:16 Perspective Map
    Perspective Grids (as of now only one):
    drive.google.c...

КОМЕНТАРІ • 23

  • @owlytedailer-sg5cq
    @owlytedailer-sg5cq 4 місяці тому +10

    Yooooo, the man who taught me perspective is back

  • @eschatonthemustafa7041
    @eschatonthemustafa7041 4 місяці тому +8

    man i wish i did those excersis earlier on , i would have been kimjung gi by now , love your video , your "understanding perspective video" was actually a life changer , improved alot at drawiing ever since i found it , now i feell comfortable drawing figures in perspective , even with complex poses and extreme angles

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  4 місяці тому

      Very happy to read that! If you have other tips or exercises feel free to share!

  • @Bluehatake
    @Bluehatake 4 місяці тому +4

    Nice to see you're still uploading!

  • @squeen0
    @squeen0 3 місяці тому +2

    Love to see a new video by you! As an aside, I have a suggestion for you personally after looking at much of your art in this video. I think you should consider varying your light weight more, especially around the silhouette of your figures. Just a thought.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  3 місяці тому +1

      Hey thanks for that feedback! Light weight - you mean line weight? Or can you give a timestamp? :)

    • @squeen0
      @squeen0 3 місяці тому +1

      @@phipsart6424 Yup. I type like a 3 year old. Line weight, especially on the silhouettes. The line weight on the lit side should be thinner (or even broken), and the dark side heavily (sometimes MUCH heavier).

  • @popcorn_showers
    @popcorn_showers 4 місяці тому +4

    Your perspective video was the only time ive finally understood camera lenses and their effect convergence, particularly how this applies to drawing. Why'd you vanish after😢

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  4 місяці тому +1

      I dont have that much time 😅 but happy to read that!

  • @blaise8738
    @blaise8738 4 місяці тому +2

    Your channel is gold ! I learned a lot watching your videos and it gave me a lot of ideas ! Thank you very much sincerely ! :)

  • @Nihebr
    @Nihebr 27 днів тому

    Great work with this channel! All videos are well made and packed with info and deep knowledge. Superb bundle of practice lessons, thanks a lot for sharing your journey and knowledge! Super encouraging!

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  26 днів тому

      Thank you very much, happy to read that!

  • @eliasrohmer
    @eliasrohmer 4 місяці тому +1

    Bicycles are always complicated. Kim Jung Gi was a genius. Intersecting objects remind me of Vladimir London videos

  • @alanchan5936
    @alanchan5936 25 днів тому

    This is so great ! thank you !!!

  • @costal4
    @costal4 4 місяці тому +2

    thank you!!!

  • @MFDOOOOM
    @MFDOOOOM 4 місяці тому +1

    Having aphantasia sucks ass coz I literally have to brute force spatial stuff by reference etc but im slowly getting there. Even now it's a sort of "memory" of how it should be rather than visually imagining it.

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  4 місяці тому +1

      I don't know enough about aphantasia, but for spatial imagination I think it is a seamless transition anyways. Like, for ghosting, which helps to draw perspective grids: I reckon that with some practice you can tell whether a grid is off (lines not converging well), no matter if you have aphantasia or not. You get accustomed to some pattern - and that may be same for other skills that are considered to be 'spatial imagination'. So I think you can learn a lot about it, despite the term 'spatial imagination' suggesting no compatibility with aphantasia. So maybe 'how it should be' is the wrong question anyways ;)

    • @MFDOOOOM
      @MFDOOOOM 4 місяці тому

      @@phipsart6424 that makes sense, thanks for the vids and exercises bro !

    • @SyoDraws
      @SyoDraws Місяць тому

      I don't have aphantasia, but in my experience a lot of the technical stuff with drawing (even spatial reasoning) has more to do with specific knowledge of principles and patterns, such as perspective, and applying them consistently, than with imagining stuff. Hence, while I CAN imagine stuff in my head, I usually don't do that when I'm drawing.
      I hope this was useful to you, and I wish you the best in your art!

  • @caitlestial
    @caitlestial 4 місяці тому

    another great video! for the interacting forms exercise, do you have any tips for making the forms appear close to each other in space. since the distance between the viewer and the form will affect the convergence, how do you make the convergences amongst many forms with different orientations appear consistent in relation to each other? hope that makes sense 😅

    • @phipsart6424
      @phipsart6424  4 місяці тому

      I am not sure if I got you right, but have a look at 8:20. The vanishing points of the green lines all lie on the red line (lets call it horizon, the horizon of these cubes). So this horizon line gives a good anchor for every cube. Other than that, you may draw a perspective grid from this horizon, which gives you a relation for the spacing. These 2 techniques still involve some guessing (like when you estimate where the 2nd vanishing point of the cube should be on the horizon), but they narrow it down a bit. With the perspective map you could get even more exact results, but it gets more tedious. But I think these measures may give you a good orientation of the relation between the objects and their behavior when you continue to draw more objects to the left and right etc. Does this help? Thanks for your comment! 😊