Learn more about shading and other fundamentals in the Drawing Basics course! You can save 20% right now during our Black Friday sale with the code BLACK20 - proko.com/drawing
Something I like to do to practice my perception of value and value range is to watch old film and tv shows that were shot in black and white. And as an added bonus it’s pretty awesome seeing their deliberate staging, wardrobe, and composition choices when they’re conscious of the fact that the values need to read on screen to an audience who will see it in black and white. Of course this is still the case today but something about seeing how they made decisions around value and readability during that time can really drive it home, or at least it has for me.
Tunnel vision is why the old masters would stand while drawing and draw on a surface that was set on 80 - 90 angle so they could easily step back and see the whole image. I find that drawing at a table makes it easier to tunnel vision while working.
I have been enjoying your content for 10-12yrs now, and it never disappoints. This is another episode of fantastic insights. Your episode has just helped me assimilate thoughts fr two other artists on value. The first was how we really only see about 100 diff values at a time and that local context is what we use to ensure things look real and 3D, as opposed to flat or bizarre and unreal. Her presentation was clunky, but yours really brought it all together and gave it a practical method of application. The second deals with values in colour, ensuring you get the base values right all over the subject before getting too detailed. But he didn't really talk much about the "local context" that fools our eyes to see the groups of values (shd we call those "family values"? 😉) so that things look right overall, but which have overlapping of values between the various value families. I think that I'll try this next piece, where I'll do an overlapping of value families fr the overall piece and see where they intersect, kind of like doing multiple colour triad studies and seeing how they intersect. Thanks so much for your informative and fun videos!
my god this is so helpful xD i knew you should take a step back and look at your work, but i knew it as stepping back so you can keep the work from looking over crowded and more balanced, spot the empty space that makes it look odd and all xD
0:42 slow as much as you can,they're different until they touched each other Edit: since people keep trying to be smart,yes i know how it works, i'm just showing that you don't notice until they touch each other
Speaking of values, Proko, can we talk about the value of not blinding your audience with that pure white background? :) An ambient and darker value would make your otherwise fantastic videos easier to watch.
If I'm not wrong, it is not just 'expectations', but rather the contraction and dilation of the pupil at work. I had to look up the word for it: "Pupillary response".
Also tunnel vision is even worse when drawing digitally, everytime I zoom in to do some details and then zoom out, everything is wrong. Maybe putting the navigator on my second screen to keep a full view of the picture could help.
I find it difficult to be consistent with a specific value. For example, if the value under the chin and behind the ear is same and I am using just a single shade of pencil, I find it difficult to keep them same. I face this special when i am doing the details. Any tips?
My tip would be: Try starting with just two values: if you're working with pencil, then it's best to start with the lightest light value and the lightest shadow value (or you just leave the light part blank for now). Draw in all the shadow shapes in that one shadow value. You then have a baseline from where to start and deepen the shadows where they need it. That way you can constantly compare different areas and judge whether one is darker than the other or not (by taking the value context effect from the video into consideration). It's basically what one does when painting: first block in color and go from there. It's always easier to manipulate stuff that's already on the canvas than to add in completely new things.
I am so broke that i can't even afford for a pencil I have to be dependent on my parents for a while I am sry.. But i will be present next year in premium.. Thx ✨
No need to buy a premium course! We're just happy if you're getting to find some time to make art in that situation. Just stick to the free lessons and hopefully learn something along the way! Thanks for watching!
@ProkoTV Thank you. I just started watching. Not sure I'll be able to do much but want to try. I had spinal surgery in January, and have another coming in February, God willing. Am disabled. Wanted to see what I can do with practice. it's been over 40 years since I've done any drawing/sketching. My shoulder, hands and neck are my biggest obstacles. Thank you, for all you do, and listening.
Why so much focus on values in drawing? I don't see this preoccupation with hyper realistic values in the drawings of Sargent or other artists of his time. Nowadays artists seem to be after the look of a b/w photograph.
Your chessboard not enough contrast actually it isn't a black it 's a gray dude a gray chessboard wtf without dependence would be cast shadow or own shadow, black is black...
Pet peeve: the checkerboard illusion is not an illusion at all, not in any meaningful sense anyway. The only trickery going on is from the intellect misunderstanding vision. The question the brain is trying to answer is "what situation is the most compatible with this luminous stimulus", not "what are the properties of the surface of this image". And thank god that is so - our hability to actually make sense of the world through vision only even makes sense this way. If you were to take a real chess set and reproduce the situation, even though the same amount of light would be reaching your eyes coming from A and B, you'd be absolutely correct in saying B is of a lighter color but in shadow. If we accept that the picture is representing that situation, than "B is of a lighter color but in shadow" is also what your brain should see in the picture. Calling this an optical illusion would mean that recognizing any kind of picture at all is an optical illusion, and really that even recognizing actual objects in the world is an optical illusion - it's not, it's just vision. So we do get tricked about the surface value, but that's just because we expect the brain to do something much less useful than what it is doing, it's not a failure of vision, but of reflection on the nature of vision : p PS: this is not to say there is no such a thing as an optical illusion. Forced perspective for example leads to false expectations about what a scene represents. The one with parallel lines looking broken when occluded as well, although that one may have statistical reason, so maybe it would be in another category.
Just because an illusion has a functional purpose in our visual system doesn’t make it not an illusion. In the case of the checkerboard effect, our brain indeed helps us perceive lightness under different lightings, but in doing so, it misjudges actual brightness values in the same way as the first example at 0:28. That misjudgment is what defines an illusion-it’s not about whether it’s failure or not but about a mismatch between perception and reality. So, calling it an illusion is just an accurate description of what’s happening. And it doesn’t redefine all vision as optical illusions; it just points out a specific misperception.
@@abcchen4903 At the end of the day it comes down to definitions, but I disagree that this is a useful way to use words. Is recognizing a face in a picture an illusion? Is recognizing the surface color of an actual object in the world an illusion? Is recognizing different objects in the world through vision an illusion? All of these are extension of the same conceptualization that calls the "checkerboard illusion" an illusion, but they lead to identifying vision with illusion, which is useless. Vision is not about the brightness getting to your eyes - vision is about interpreting that signal to try and reconstruct information about the world. By the same token, understanding spoken word, instead of just noting a sequence of frequencies and amplitudes, would be an illusion. This line of thought identifies perception with illusion, which is conceptually useless and misses the whole point of perception. All perception is "misperception" if we define "correct" perception to be just parroting the "input" to the senses, because that's simply not the point of perception. The usage I'm defending is actually used in some areas as well. Take the field of Computer Vision, for example: it deals with taking in image data and using it to recognize stuff. Crucially, simply taking a picture - ie, recording brightness -, with no interpretation or classification, is not considered computer vision. This distinction is very useful and points to a better understanding of the whole subject. Not making this distinction is precisely what leads one to expect that the perception of local color in an image should be a 1:1 correspondence with brightness, causing confusion and mistakes.
I was about to write a comment pointing out the same thing. It's often discussed as the brain being "tricked" because it comes up within the context of an optical illusion. But it's more that the brain uses context in the environment to correct for varied lighting conditions and makes distinctions where we expect them to be. When we try to paint or draw, we recreate what we perceived and not what is. We have to train ourselves to undo those automatic corrections to accurately mimic natural lighting in our art pieces.
@@albericponcedeleon2696 Yeah. And, on the flip side, if we take vision for what it is, it is actually giving us way more information, which we actually use all the time to be able to do more than just blindly copy a scene. As an aside, I always imagine a little cartoon of the brain being all bummed because it's doing all this work and we're like "silly brain is tricked all the time" : p
Learn more about shading and other fundamentals in the Drawing Basics course! You can save 20% right now during our Black Friday sale with the code BLACK20 - proko.com/drawing
Something I like to do to practice my perception of value and value range is to watch old film and tv shows that were shot in black and white.
And as an added bonus it’s pretty awesome seeing their deliberate staging, wardrobe, and composition choices when they’re conscious of the fact that the values need to read on screen to an audience who will see it in black and white.
Of course this is still the case today but something about seeing how they made decisions around value and readability during that time can really drive it home, or at least it has for me.
2:04 Didn't expect MC Ride in a Proko video
Yay, Skelly is back!
I can just take my glasses off and everything is in a blur. Very useful artist tool to have a bad vision
Tunnel vision is why the old masters would stand while drawing and draw on a surface that was set on 80 - 90 angle so they could easily step back and see the whole image. I find that drawing at a table makes it easier to tunnel vision while working.
I just starting take my art skills seriously, I'm on a note taking binge, your channel has been incredibly helpful
That's awesome to hear! It means a lot to know our videos are useful.
Good luck with your learning!
So much value in this lesson. Ba dum tss!
🤣
I have been enjoying your content for 10-12yrs now, and it never disappoints. This is another episode of fantastic insights. Your episode has just helped me assimilate thoughts fr two other artists on value. The first was how we really only see about 100 diff values at a time and that local context is what we use to ensure things look real and 3D, as opposed to flat or bizarre and unreal. Her presentation was clunky, but yours really brought it all together and gave it a practical method of application. The second deals with values in colour, ensuring you get the base values right all over the subject before getting too detailed. But he didn't really talk much about the "local context" that fools our eyes to see the groups of values (shd we call those "family values"? 😉) so that things look right overall, but which have overlapping of values between the various value families. I think that I'll try this next piece, where I'll do an overlapping of value families fr the overall piece and see where they intersect, kind of like doing multiple colour triad studies and seeing how they intersect. Thanks so much for your informative and fun videos!
Popped up at the right time!
that's what I'm learning now and you upload a video on it boy what the hell boy
my god this is so helpful xD i knew you should take a step back and look at your work, but i knew it as stepping back so you can keep the work from looking over crowded and more balanced, spot the empty space that makes it look odd and all xD
Thanks for the Median blur! I used the simple blur tool to help me once and I did notice the values just leaked everywhere
thanks i needed this information a lot, love you proko
The real value is this video
2:03 was that fucking death grips??????
0:42 slow as much as you can,they're different until they touched each other
Edit: since people keep trying to be smart,yes i know how it works, i'm just showing that you don't notice until they touch each other
color pick the squares in an image editor and you'll see that they're still the same color. It's all in your eyes
Your eyes are deceiving you, they're the same
genuinely how tf does that work, they look so different
Speaking of values, Proko, can we talk about the value of not blinding your audience with that pure white background? :) An ambient and darker value would make your otherwise fantastic videos easier to watch.
Squinting your eyes helps a lot to see the values and not be distracted by colour
Values and out lines Important
If I'm not wrong, it is not just 'expectations', but rather the contraction and dilation of the pupil at work.
I had to look up the word for it: "Pupillary response".
Also tunnel vision is even worse when drawing digitally, everytime I zoom in to do some details and then zoom out, everything is wrong. Maybe putting the navigator on my second screen to keep a full view of the picture could help.
Can median tool be found in other programs?
Bravo Proko.. Great infos and knowledge👍👍💪
❤
WW3 about to end the world and im learning about drawing lets go!!
Ok!
my eyes only see values in my dreams 😵💫
I find it difficult to be consistent with a specific value. For example, if the value under the chin and behind the ear is same and I am using just a single shade of pencil, I find it difficult to keep them same. I face this special when i am doing the details. Any tips?
My tip would be: Try starting with just two values: if you're working with pencil, then it's best to start with the lightest light value and the lightest shadow value (or you just leave the light part blank for now). Draw in all the shadow shapes in that one shadow value. You then have a baseline from where to start and deepen the shadows where they need it. That way you can constantly compare different areas and judge whether one is darker than the other or not (by taking the value context effect from the video into consideration).
It's basically what one does when painting: first block in color and go from there. It's always easier to manipulate stuff that's already on the canvas than to add in completely new things.
Thanks for this! Now I can be racist more effectively!
Tru tho
💀💀💀💀
🫠
Lmao
top ten comments ive ever read
i don't have photoshop
Poor Mr. Skeleton 😢
Brain*
Just with that, I feel like I became a better artist😭
I am so broke that i can't even afford for a pencil I have to be dependent on my parents for a while I am sry.. But i will be present next year in premium.. Thx ✨
Understand, I'm so broke can't even afford to pay attention :/
No need to buy a premium course! We're just happy if you're getting to find some time to make art in that situation. Just stick to the free lessons and hopefully learn something along the way!
Thanks for watching!
@ProkoTV Thank you. I just started watching. Not sure I'll be able to do much but want to try. I had spinal surgery in January, and have another coming in February, God willing. Am disabled. Wanted to see what I can do with practice. it's been over 40 years since I've done any drawing/sketching. My shoulder, hands and neck are my biggest obstacles. Thank you, for all you do, and listening.
Why so much focus on values in drawing? I don't see this preoccupation with hyper realistic values in the drawings of Sargent or other artists of his time. Nowadays artists seem to be after the look of a b/w photograph.
Yay first comment!
Third. sorry.
Ts
I just unfocus my eyes. Does anyone else do this?
What took you so long!?😭😭😭
Your chessboard not enough contrast
actually it isn't a black it 's a gray dude a gray chessboard wtf
without dependence would be cast shadow or own shadow, black is black...
Pet peeve: the checkerboard illusion is not an illusion at all, not in any meaningful sense anyway. The only trickery going on is from the intellect misunderstanding vision.
The question the brain is trying to answer is "what situation is the most compatible with this luminous stimulus", not "what are the properties of the surface of this image". And thank god that is so - our hability to actually make sense of the world through vision only even makes sense this way.
If you were to take a real chess set and reproduce the situation, even though the same amount of light would be reaching your eyes coming from A and B, you'd be absolutely correct in saying B is of a lighter color but in shadow. If we accept that the picture is representing that situation, than "B is of a lighter color but in shadow" is also what your brain should see in the picture.
Calling this an optical illusion would mean that recognizing any kind of picture at all is an optical illusion, and really that even recognizing actual objects in the world is an optical illusion - it's not, it's just vision.
So we do get tricked about the surface value, but that's just because we expect the brain to do something much less useful than what it is doing, it's not a failure of vision, but of reflection on the nature of vision : p
PS: this is not to say there is no such a thing as an optical illusion. Forced perspective for example leads to false expectations about what a scene represents. The one with parallel lines looking broken when occluded as well, although that one may have statistical reason, so maybe it would be in another category.
Just because an illusion has a functional purpose in our visual system doesn’t make it not an illusion.
In the case of the checkerboard effect, our brain indeed helps us perceive lightness under different lightings, but in doing so, it misjudges actual brightness values in the same way as the first example at 0:28. That misjudgment is what defines an illusion-it’s not about whether it’s failure or not but about a mismatch between perception and reality.
So, calling it an illusion is just an accurate description of what’s happening. And it doesn’t redefine all vision as optical illusions; it just points out a specific misperception.
@@abcchen4903 At the end of the day it comes down to definitions, but I disagree that this is a useful way to use words.
Is recognizing a face in a picture an illusion? Is recognizing the surface color of an actual object in the world an illusion? Is recognizing different objects in the world through vision an illusion? All of these are extension of the same conceptualization that calls the "checkerboard illusion" an illusion, but they lead to identifying vision with illusion, which is useless.
Vision is not about the brightness getting to your eyes - vision is about interpreting that signal to try and reconstruct information about the world.
By the same token, understanding spoken word, instead of just noting a sequence of frequencies and amplitudes, would be an illusion.
This line of thought identifies perception with illusion, which is conceptually useless and misses the whole point of perception. All perception is "misperception" if we define "correct" perception to be just parroting the "input" to the senses, because that's simply not the point of perception.
The usage I'm defending is actually used in some areas as well. Take the field of Computer Vision, for example: it deals with taking in image data and using it to recognize stuff. Crucially, simply taking a picture - ie, recording brightness -, with no interpretation or classification, is not considered computer vision.
This distinction is very useful and points to a better understanding of the whole subject. Not making this distinction is precisely what leads one to expect that the perception of local color in an image should be a 1:1 correspondence with brightness, causing confusion and mistakes.
I was about to write a comment pointing out the same thing. It's often discussed as the brain being "tricked" because it comes up within the context of an optical illusion. But it's more that the brain uses context in the environment to correct for varied lighting conditions and makes distinctions where we expect them to be. When we try to paint or draw, we recreate what we perceived and not what is. We have to train ourselves to undo those automatic corrections to accurately mimic natural lighting in our art pieces.
@@albericponcedeleon2696 Yeah. And, on the flip side, if we take vision for what it is, it is actually giving us way more information, which we actually use all the time to be able to do more than just blindly copy a scene.
As an aside, I always imagine a little cartoon of the brain being all bummed because it's doing all this work and we're like "silly brain is tricked all the time" : p
8:13 Steve Huston?!