The Master Bob Ross once did a painting using just grays, for a fan who one was color blind, and couldn't follow along with his tutorial. Thus proving that painting is for everyone, and no one should be limited by colors.
That's the beautiful thing about art, it's for everyone and there's so many different ways to do it. There's something for everyone, whether you can see color or not!
Can you imagine how wild that must be? Like if you're using color but you can't see those colors, it's just like "this gray looks really good with yellow, and this gray looks really good with blue, but if I mix the two grays everyone else says it looks awful." I get it, I'm wrong, multiple people have told me, no one else needs to. Thanks.
I had a professor who was colorblind. He would correct people's color. Very witty and sharp tongued man. There was a student who he wasn't a fan of due to his lack of effort-also, he was a digital artist and it was a traditional drawing class, so he struggled to shine. After that semester, me and that student took color theory under a different professor. Our color blind professor came in during a project critique, and ended up LOVING the lazy students work, who would always slack and do the minimum, sometimes not even correctly. The irony was pretty great lol.
So fun to see your take on this as well! I was surprised how much i enjoyed doing my video and the results! How bad was your head aching after a few hours? haha
I have a red green colorblindness and when I first went to art school I was so discouraged by the fact that I'd get told that it takes me too long to get results. I almost gave up. I even dropped out of school because of it. Then I saw the video of you and your son and how much you encouraged him and a few other youtube artists who were very encouraging to color blind people. And I'm happy to be back to doing art. Thank you so much for the inspiration
Famous artist Jin Kim is actually colour blind. He works for Disney and he does character design in movies like frozen, Rapunzel, and wreck it Ralph. Definitely need to check him out
"Everything is red but our brains interpret it as black and white and gray" Reminds me that the set of the original black and white Addams Family show was in shades of pink because you couldn't get that stark contrast of blacks and whites with actual black and white objects on camera
The “red” dress in the 1938 Jezebel (B&W) was actually grey, as the color test showed that the red dress they originally planned to use didn’t read as red in B&W, but the gray one did.
He might be surprised he picked the right shades of the colors he was looking for....brands can have vastly different colors with the same or similar color name.
@@meanncat3050 Aye, I suppose so. I just thought he would have gone in without knowing the colours. I think that would have made it more interesting, if he happened to make the Jazza avatar blue like a smurf.
He did it from a colorblind perspective. That doesn't exclude using color names. A colorblind person would read the names. I don't think it breaks a rule
I'm colorblind, and i love painting. Sure, things happen that i don't anticipate, but sometimes it really adds to the painting and makes it unique and more eye-catching. Also i literally just learned that mint chocolate chip icecream is green, after 18 years on this earth. Such is the life of a colorblind person lol
WOAH WOAH WOAH!!! Let me get this perfectly straight: You comment something that is completely unrelated to the fact that I have two HAZARDOUSLY HOT girlfriends? Considering that I am the unprettiest UA-camr worldwide, it is really incredible. Yet you did not mention it at all. I am VERY disappointed, dear sina
I kept waiting for the next level where someone shuffled the colors around first. The inks he placed from the labeled bottles, so obviously while he couldn't as easily tell tones and ratios, he knew which was were and knew when he was adding red vs yellow just based off of placement on the palette. The clay and pastels were still in their packaging order when he broke into them, so again, had a rough idea of what color family was where. It would have been fun to watch one where the colors were mixed up before given to him so he truly had nothing to go off of except the colors as he saw it. Still was an interesting video though!
@@baconsoda7011 I think that what they’re saying is that the video would have been more interesting if he hadn’t known the colors and instead had to go off of what he thought they were.
Completely agree, seemed like cheating almost or missing the point. If you want to see a more "blind" attempt at this watch the video he mentions he go the inspiration from
@@baconsoda7011 Yes but the knowledge that Jazza has on colors, how is he supposed to understand how it feels to paint without knowing what color is what when he already knows what a color looks like by the name? A color blind person can read the name, but not know exactly what they're supposed to be looking at color-wise. The knowledge that he has on colors is not the same as someone who is colorblind, so that puts him at an advantage and doesn't really truly puts him in their shoes.
@@shadowknightskye2783 1) monochromatic red doesn’t actually simulate any real form of color blindness. 2) colorblind people can read the colors, but if they can’t truly see some of them in their entire life, then they don’t have Jazza’s level of understanding on how they appear and mix. 3) a video with crazy colored drawings instead of a bunch of pretty normal Jazza cartoons that look almost as good as any regular drawing scenario was MUCH more boring than what I thought I was clicking on. Sorry Jazza, I like you and this was impressive, but it wasn’t exciting. Like every time the camera went out of red mode, I was a little bummed everything just looked right. I wanted to see that clown with red skin, or that fashion girl wearing highlighter yellow glasses or something else crazy.
@@shadowknightskye2783 no one is saying that there’s anything wrong with the way the video was done. People are more curious of how difficult it would be if he couldn’t read the names of the colors. It would make for a more entertaining video, but it would also help people to understand the struggles of colorblind people. Not ever color has a name on it, so being able to see the difficulty he would have with finding a color would help people understand this and perhaps widen their perspective. The video was great, but I believe that a sequel without color names would he beneficial as well.
@@shadowknightskye2783 the point wasn't to simulate how actual colorblind people would work around being colorblind, the point was to make it a challenge where he doesn't know what colors he's using. if you read the color names it's just a test of how well you can link a color to a name rather than seeing what colors you ended up using when working with greyscale vision. I was personally expecting more of an experiment showing how a monochrome filter can make a strangely colored piece look normal, not necessarily someone trying their hardest to pick/make the more traditional colors based on what they already know about colors and color names and not sight
Jazzy I just wanted to say thank you!!!! I am legaly blind have depression 2 types of anxiety and ptsd but with your quirky attitude and you supportive personality you inspire me to do things that most would not exspect. I sew both by hand and machine . I work with leather as well beads and I am in to photography. But because of people like you putting out positive content that not only is fun but shows that it is ok to fail sometimes helps me ecsept that I don’t have to do things perfectly as long as I have fun and enjoy what I am doing. So again......THANK YOU JAZZA!!!!!!! ✏️🖌✒️🖋🖍📝🖊✂️📍📌📐📏
My mother is extremely color blind. Her mom told her when she was young to keep making art so others could see the world how she saw it. Thanks for this video. I think she would feel uplifted by it.
In college when I took an advanced painting class, the teacher once told us about a student he had years before who was completely colorblind. The student would always set up their paint colors in the same order with the tubes above them for reference as they mixed colors to use in their painting and apparently the colors in the student's finished paintings were always the most eye-catching and wonderfully in depth that the teacher had ever seen.
Had a friend from an art course I did. They were colour blind, and leant into it to creat incredibly complex, specific and unorthodox paintings and colour combinations. I remember one painting they did of a burning cityscape which they apparently did based off how fire looked to them. It had these fantastic little bits of brown, blue and chromatic greys mixed in amongst a primarily red scene.
Happy to see you doing this. Not only because colorblindness is a thing that affects many people (I'm not one of them to my knowledge), but I use welding glasses as sunglasses, so when I'm driving I see everything in shades of green. You get a feel for it after a while, and as long as you know what to pay attention to it's fine. I don't have much of a choice but to go with welding glasses because normal sunglasses don't block enough light.
As a color blind person that likes to do art, I am so glad you tried this! Though, since you already know what 'yellow' looks like, etc, and able to read the names its not quite the same as those of us who have always been color blind. It is quite a challenge! I took your illustrator class on skill share and posted two versions of a dragon story and think I mentioned there the color blind issues. :) Also, being color blind is a bit different, at least for me, then washing everything out with red. :) But it was a good attempt at trying to see what it is like for color blind artists.
This reminds me of when I was working in art class on something, making some kind of shading on a a drawing and the teacher looks over my shoulder and says: "Oh, that's truly wonderful! How you use those blues and purples together" and colourblind me was just insanely saddened by this compliment cause I thought it was all blue...
3 роки тому+237
Jazza every single time he does a challenge: *Lets take it to tHa nExT leVeL 🤌💪*
I honestly adore that you enjoy your own art so much. Nothing is worse than an artist who constantly criticises his own art. You always see your own art as good, allowing it to make you happy gives an incredibly positive vibe and it's really uplifting to watch you. Thank you so much for that. In these frustrating times, your videos are always a ray of sunshine that make me smile.
I've always loved your videos. Usually full of silliness and double entendres. But, for entirely different reasons, this one is my favourite by far. Inspirational and heart warming. Love your work.
@@peterbonucci9661 I think the point of what they were saying was that it didn’t seem like a “challenge” if he knew what the colors were. The only difficulty seemed to be with blending. I don’t think this comment was meant to offend colorblind people. I think that it just implies that a video without him reading the labels would be more entertaining and interesting.
@@SuperKatiki Yeah but then he said he was just going to make multiple shades of brown because, like he says, if you mix enough colors together you will eventually get brown. I felt like he played way too safe on his sculpture with the colors, we only got lucky that he found green for the eyes because he wasn't going for a shade of brown for that he was just looking for black.
I studied graphic design and one of our subjects was illustration. The 2 best illustrators in the school were colourblind. One of them explained that he worked mainly by the name of the colour and sometimes had to ask. Every now and then he would come up with a very interesting combination.
I am colourblind and have been creating some sort of art for about 14 years now. In my experience it is a hit or miss game. Sometimes you put together a very interesting color scheme, other times they look horrible together to other people. Whatever the case you can always work in black and white if you can't get it right but it is really fun to surprise others with your weird but balanced colour choices.
I’ve been a fan of yours for a few years now and for those years you have made everyday bloody wonderful. I have only one thing to say DONT BLOODLY TOUCH IT
I can't tell if that fact that he preformed basically just as well with goggles as without them means that he's very skilled after years of drawing, or if he always just chooses random colors and hopes for the best lol
I love doing this! If colors don't just pop out for me, why not go blind! Some of the wackiest, beautiful and creepily coincidental color match ups! I'd love to see you do this again, NO NAME CHEATS, with paint. You'd see the name before you put them on the board but then you're on your own! Each of your creations came out better than I would've thought! Had to wait half a day to see the final results, it was worth it!! ✨ Always love your videos! Many blessing to you, your family and team!
My nephew is colour blind and loves making art with sketching and markers, which is why I bought him some copic markers for Christmas. He just laughs and says he doesn’t realise he’s put down the wrong colour until it’s too late but he still makes it work somehow. So excellent video and excellent message for the new year.
Colour is so often more about value (strength of tone) as opposed to what the colour looks like to the eye. It's the contrast between strong value and light value, as proved in this video. Fascinating!
For me I kinda slowly figured out what color was what thinking of the color contrast or the color wheel it got a bit easier although some were still hard to figure out! Anyway thanks for the video jazza!
It's 4:28 in the morning, my dog doesn't let me sleep and the fact that i have a test tommorow is just nice 😃 so imma just watch this video to pass the time that i have left before the test 🙃
i'm a self taught artistand i too am colour blind. over the years i've been so nervous to apply colour to my art work. it was during 2020 when i took the leap of faith and began usinging colour in my art. lol my friends love that i'm colour blind and enjoy teasing me with the hey whats this colour to you and i say what i think it is and they're reactions are priceless. i quite enjoyed this episode where you used a red spectrum and went with it fantastic job Jazza. I've been subed to you for about 7 years now and have been enjoying your content every time. keep up the amazing work, oh and i'm also a kinesthetic learner as well.
There is a company now called EnChroma that make glasses which allow colour blind people see in colour. You should search them on UA-cam, they are pretty life changing for many people. 😊
@@Gemini-Lion not true. Some blues will appear green (when the color is towards green spectrum) and same with purple (towards red). Same with (army)green/brown. Differs per colorblind type and person.
That's a bit heartbreaking in a way, being the son of a famous artist, and finding out that you are colorblind, and thus not being able to experience your fathers work in the same way as everybody else. But in the other hand, since it is Jazza we are talking about, maybe it could be turned in to a superpower instead.
I think if his son actually wanted to go into art, he'd probably have the same love that his dad does since he's been watching his dad do art his whole life pretty much. If you love doing something, you will find a way, like Mozart being deaf didn't stop him from making music.
There are some fantastic glasses out there for colorblind people, which basically help them to differentiate between reds, greens and browns better. Technology has truly come a long way, so I definitely don't think colorblindness is as big of an issue nowadays than it was, say, not even 20 years ago.
@@TeenyTinyTiggy Not all art uses colours. Some great art is just black or white, or perhaps he'll be a sculptor or modelmaker and leave the painting to others. Most colour blindness is mild and barely affects most applications. Also, it was Beethoven who was deaf.
Everything happened so fast from the notification. I’m just happy during my most anxious of nights I have another upload to watch and feel better. Love ya Jazza ❤️❤️
It broke my heart when i heard MJ was colourblind , but there are alot of ways to express art like pencil sketching, sculpture and alot ... so if he wants , he cqn still explore art
As someone who is a monochromatic colour blind artist, I loved this video. Growing up with my impairment really made insecure and lacking confidence in my art but through learning colour theory and other techniques I became really proud of my art and the challenges I was able to overcome. Conclusion; Anyone can be an artist!
I 100% agree and regularly tout that everyone can be an artist. Creating art is like a language; you must learn the structure, skill and techniques in order to translate your mental imagery to the physical realm. Those who say they cannot learn those skills are usually afraid of failure
I have so much respect for artists with colourblindness. Like this one I follow on Twitter. Her style is so unique, but the colours are always spot on despite the fact she is monochromatic colourblind.
What's neat is sometimes your mind will make you see colors where colors aren't. I used to have a black and white tv as a kid and my mind automatically would assign a sort of "green" to the gray grass because I instinctively knew it was grass and should be green(ish).
My grandpa's best friend (wasnt family but still called him uncle!) was an amazing artist and he was colorblind! He only could see in black and white, and could tell what colors where what by the different shades of grays. He and I connected through art and I miss him dearly.
I have known a ton of color blind artists and they do great - some times they make wonky things but usually I completely forget they are color blind, they are just great artists
"Holding the glasses up to the camera is really annoying, especially with a multi-camera setup. Let's stick some red filter to the lens" Everyone else using the filter in Davinci Resolve... 😁
Red Filter? Nah mate, that's lighting gel, my guess is R26.. or maybe R24, depends what colour temp he films with. In my opinion, the gel is much more authentic than the post edit filter. Gel means it's recorded the exact way he sees it, as opposed to attempting to recreate it digitally.
@@SpazMonkeyBeck Umm... What? A gel is considered a colour filter. Also, blocking out the blue & green channel wouldn't involve colour temperature. I can bet you those glasses' filters don't match the gel he used anyway.
@@rhystedstone Well evidently my sarcasm didn't come across in my first sentence. I'm fully aware that gels are technically filters. Colour temperature definitely matters, R26 at 5k looks drastically different to 3200.
Only a few weeks left to get the ULTIMATE CREATIVITY COLLECTION! Don't miss out! smartartbox.com/pages/jazzaboxes
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I am second lol
I'm watching this at 3:00 am in america
I'm 3rd. Hooray
you are so inspiring
The Master Bob Ross once did a painting using just grays, for a fan who one was color blind, and couldn't follow along with his tutorial. Thus proving that painting is for everyone, and no one should be limited by colors.
Man, I'm gonna cry.
Though I am listening to The Hoteliers right now so that could be helping make this more sad.
Yeah its kinda annoying to color drawings so i just leave it in gray
That's the beautiful thing about art, it's for everyone and there's so many different ways to do it. There's something for everyone, whether you can see color or not!
Pure facts I have many friends who like drawing in black and white and chose to not use colors you just have so many possibilities it just awesome
Wait omg 😢
Fun fact: my college art professor is colorblind. And he’s a better illustrator than me.
Can you imagine how wild that must be? Like if you're using color but you can't see those colors, it's just like "this gray looks really good with yellow, and this gray looks really good with blue, but if I mix the two grays everyone else says it looks awful."
I get it, I'm wrong, multiple people have told me, no one else needs to. Thanks.
A person who won project runway (i think allstars?) Was colorblind!
I am colorblind
I had a professor who was colorblind. He would correct people's color. Very witty and sharp tongued man. There was a student who he wasn't a fan of due to his lack of effort-also, he was a digital artist and it was a traditional drawing class, so he struggled to shine. After that semester, me and that student took color theory under a different professor. Our color blind professor came in during a project critique, and ended up LOVING the lazy students work, who would always slack and do the minimum, sometimes not even correctly. The irony was pretty great lol.
But your not good
So fun to see your take on this as well! I was surprised how much i enjoyed doing my video and the results!
How bad was your head aching after a few hours? haha
haha i wonder too
Squidmar!,!!
Pog
YES U LIKE WARHAMMER
i saw ur vid squidmar and itwas so funny how the colors came out
I have a red green colorblindness and when I first went to art school I was so discouraged by the fact that I'd get told that it takes me too long to get results. I almost gave up. I even dropped out of school because of it. Then I saw the video of you and your son and how much you encouraged him and a few other youtube artists who were very encouraging to color blind people. And I'm happy to be back to doing art. Thank you so much for the inspiration
There's a hypothesis that Van Gough had a color blindness as an explanation for why his sun flowers are on the orangey side. Keep at it.
Good luck keep going just necause your colourblind doesn't mean you can't make amazing art
I'm glad ypu got ypur confidence back. Having critiques are good, but some people don't know the balance and ruins things for others.
I know someone who has the same problem as you red and green color blindness
Famous artist Jin Kim is actually colour blind. He works for Disney and he does character design in movies like frozen, Rapunzel, and wreck it Ralph. Definitely need to check him out
it's Jin not Jim
(Thanks for mentioning him though)
Wow, I’ve seen his sketches but I never knew he was colorblind
I love his work! :D
Yes he has excellent designs
"Everything is red but our brains interpret it as black and white and gray"
Reminds me that the set of the original black and white Addams Family show was in shades of pink because you couldn't get that stark contrast of blacks and whites with actual black and white objects on camera
Oh that’s hilarious!
You're telling me the gothest family ever wore and lived in pink?? lmao that's incredible
@@d.sadster5684 quite irony
The “red” dress in the 1938 Jezebel (B&W) was actually grey, as the color test showed that the red dress they originally planned to use didn’t read as red in B&W, but the gray one did.
They were original pastel goths lol
Jazza: 'I'm going to do this colourblind.'
Also Jazza: *reads the colour names and is surprised he picked the correct ones*
My thoughts exactly
He might be surprised he picked the right shades of the colors he was looking for....brands can have vastly different colors with the same or similar color name.
@@meanncat3050 Aye, I suppose so. I just thought he would have gone in without knowing the colours. I think that would have made it more interesting, if he happened to make the Jazza avatar blue like a smurf.
He did it from a colorblind perspective. That doesn't exclude using color names. A colorblind person would read the names. I don't think it breaks a rule
colourblind people can read too
I'm colorblind, and i love painting. Sure, things happen that i don't anticipate, but sometimes it really adds to the painting and makes it unique and more eye-catching.
Also i literally just learned that mint chocolate chip icecream is green, after 18 years on this earth. Such is the life of a colorblind person lol
well, if they use food coloring it is, the green isn't natural so sometimes it's just white.
-"I did get to read the color names"
Yup... that would be the one saving grace us colorblind people have when it comes to picking the right color.
WOAH WOAH WOAH!!! Let me get this perfectly straight: You comment something that is completely unrelated to the fact that I have two HAZARDOUSLY HOT girlfriends? Considering that I am the unprettiest UA-camr worldwide, it is really incredible. Yet you did not mention it at all. I am VERY disappointed, dear sina
@@AxxLAfriku I hope you're joking
And if you are, Youre not doing a good job
F lol
@@AxxLAfriku um... Ok?
@@lvbboi9 he comments this shit on so many videos that I almost want to report him
I kept waiting for the next level where someone shuffled the colors around first. The inks he placed from the labeled bottles, so obviously while he couldn't as easily tell tones and ratios, he knew which was were and knew when he was adding red vs yellow just based off of placement on the palette. The clay and pastels were still in their packaging order when he broke into them, so again, had a rough idea of what color family was where. It would have been fun to watch one where the colors were mixed up before given to him so he truly had nothing to go off of except the colors as he saw it. Still was an interesting video though!
and cover up color names too!!
@@rigorcorvus Colorblind people can still read labels and color names though so covering them up doesn’t really make sense
@@baconsoda7011 I think that what they’re saying is that the video would have been more interesting if he hadn’t known the colors and instead had to go off of what he thought they were.
Completely agree, seemed like cheating almost or missing the point. If you want to see a more "blind" attempt at this watch the video he mentions he go the inspiration from
@@baconsoda7011 Yes but the knowledge that Jazza has on colors, how is he supposed to understand how it feels to paint without knowing what color is what when he already knows what a color looks like by the name? A color blind person can read the name, but not know exactly what they're supposed to be looking at color-wise. The knowledge that he has on colors is not the same as someone who is colorblind, so that puts him at an advantage and doesn't really truly puts him in their shoes.
You should do one more where you can't read the colour names. Or do a Bob Ross tutorial using paints that are already squeezed onto a palette for you
I said the same thing. He basically cheated. Would've been more fun if he didn't know what each color was.
Colorblind people would read the color names, idk what's wrong with it
@@shadowknightskye2783 1) monochromatic red doesn’t actually simulate any real form of color blindness.
2) colorblind people can read the colors, but if they can’t truly see some of them in their entire life, then they don’t have Jazza’s level of understanding on how they appear and mix.
3) a video with crazy colored drawings instead of a bunch of pretty normal Jazza cartoons that look almost as good as any regular drawing scenario was MUCH more boring than what I thought I was clicking on.
Sorry Jazza, I like you and this was impressive, but it wasn’t exciting. Like every time the camera went out of red mode, I was a little bummed everything just looked right. I wanted to see that clown with red skin, or that fashion girl wearing highlighter yellow glasses or something else crazy.
@@shadowknightskye2783 no one is saying that there’s anything wrong with the way the video was done. People are more curious of how difficult it would be if he couldn’t read the names of the colors. It would make for a more entertaining video, but it would also help people to understand the struggles of colorblind people. Not ever color has a name on it, so being able to see the difficulty he would have with finding a color would help people understand this and perhaps widen their perspective. The video was great, but I believe that a sequel without color names would he beneficial as well.
@@shadowknightskye2783 the point wasn't to simulate how actual colorblind people would work around being colorblind, the point was to make it a challenge where he doesn't know what colors he's using. if you read the color names it's just a test of how well you can link a color to a name rather than seeing what colors you ended up using when working with greyscale vision. I was personally expecting more of an experiment showing how a monochrome filter can make a strangely colored piece look normal, not necessarily someone trying their hardest to pick/make the more traditional colors based on what they already know about colors and color names and not sight
Jazzy I just wanted to say thank you!!!! I am legaly blind have depression 2 types of anxiety and ptsd but with your quirky attitude and you supportive personality you inspire me to do things that most would not exspect. I sew both by hand and machine . I work with leather as well beads and I am in to photography. But because of people like you putting out positive content that not only is fun but shows that it is ok to fail sometimes helps me ecsept that I don’t have to do things perfectly as long as I have fun and enjoy what I am doing. So again......THANK YOU JAZZA!!!!!!! ✏️🖌✒️🖋🖍📝🖊✂️📍📌📐📏
My mother is extremely color blind. Her mom told her when she was young to keep making art so others could see the world how she saw it.
Thanks for this video. I think she would feel uplifted by it.
In college when I took an advanced painting class, the teacher once told us about a student he had years before who was completely colorblind. The student would always set up their paint colors in the same order with the tubes above them for reference as they mixed colors to use in their painting and apparently the colors in the student's finished paintings were always the most eye-catching and wonderfully in depth that the teacher had ever seen.
Had a friend from an art course I did. They were colour blind, and leant into it to creat incredibly complex, specific and unorthodox paintings and colour combinations. I remember one painting they did of a burning cityscape which they apparently did based off how fire looked to them. It had these fantastic little bits of brown, blue and chromatic greys mixed in amongst a primarily red scene.
Happy to see you doing this. Not only because colorblindness is a thing that affects many people (I'm not one of them to my knowledge), but I use welding glasses as sunglasses, so when I'm driving I see everything in shades of green. You get a feel for it after a while, and as long as you know what to pay attention to it's fine. I don't have much of a choice but to go with welding glasses because normal sunglasses don't block enough light.
I'm so happy to see you're enjoying sculpting and painting, and doing things you enjoy! It's so nice to see!
Wow your so good at drawing!
@Banana Goanna Thank you!
@@sumissketchbookd9237 I watched the dog drawing it was soooo cute 😍 your a very underappreciated UA-camr! Ik you'll get rly big one day;
@@Nanners_Art Aww thank you so much!
As a color blind person that likes to do art, I am so glad you tried this! Though, since you already know what 'yellow' looks like, etc, and able to read the names its not quite the same as those of us who have always been color blind. It is quite a challenge! I took your illustrator class on skill share and posted two versions of a dragon story and think I mentioned there the color blind issues. :) Also, being color blind is a bit different, at least for me, then washing everything out with red. :) But it was a good attempt at trying to see what it is like for color blind artists.
Jazza is damn seriously talented. Anything he tries with a bit of practice immediately turns out beautiful. I'm soo jealous.
This reminds me of when I was working in art class on something, making some kind of shading on a a drawing and the teacher looks over my shoulder and says: "Oh, that's truly wonderful! How you use those blues and purples together" and colourblind me was just insanely saddened by this compliment cause I thought it was all blue...
Jazza every single time he does a challenge: *Lets take it to tHa nExT leVeL 🤌💪*
:D
@@geckowithapencil :>
@ °∆°
Oh ad! Hii
@@Mikaelamofu mikaaa! Henlooo xD
I honestly adore that you enjoy your own art so much. Nothing is worse than an artist who constantly criticises his own art. You always see your own art as good, allowing it to make you happy gives an incredibly positive vibe and it's really uplifting to watch you. Thank you so much for that. In these frustrating times, your videos are always a ray of sunshine that make me smile.
If there was a moral, it could be...
That Jazza nails every challenge he does.
Don’t read my profile picture
@@dont1772 I read it
@@dont1772 you come again
I've always loved your videos. Usually full of silliness and double entendres. But, for entirely different reasons, this one is my favourite by far. Inspirational and heart warming. Love your work.
Watching jazza be amzed by his own art is adorable
Jazza: “I’m doing a colorblind challenge!”
Also Jazza: “so I read all the color names and knew what all the colors were”
That's what colorblind people do.
@@peterbonucci9661 I think the point of what they were saying was that it didn’t seem like a “challenge” if he knew what the colors were. The only difficulty seemed to be with blending. I don’t think this comment was meant to offend colorblind people. I think that it just implies that a video without him reading the labels would be more entertaining and interesting.
He worked his way up to more difficult levels, with his last project not having any labelled colors. This is how he does a lot of his challenges.
@@SuperKatiki Yeah but then he said he was just going to make multiple shades of brown because, like he says, if you mix enough colors together you will eventually get brown. I felt like he played way too safe on his sculpture with the colors, we only got lucky that he found green for the eyes because he wasn't going for a shade of brown for that he was just looking for black.
@@HeatherGermaine essentially what you're saying is you wanted to see him fail?
Jazza: "Yellow Yellow Yellow....."
Me: "Yellow?, if that's yellow, maybe I'm colorblind?"
"Oh! And pastels!" 😂 that was me in every art class where you get to choose what you want to use.
I studied graphic design and one of our subjects was illustration. The 2 best illustrators in the school were colourblind.
One of them explained that he worked mainly by the name of the colour and sometimes had to ask. Every now and then he would come up with a very interesting combination.
"Yellow?"
"Nope"
"Yellow?"
"Nope"
"Yellow?"
"Nope"
"Yellow?"
"Nope"
"Yellow?"
"Nope"
"Yellow?"
"Yeah!"
First try!!!
@@miki957 😂😂
6th times the charm!
ultimate troll would be to give him try to find yellow with those on while not having any yellow.
AI learning in a nutshell
I am colourblind and have been creating some sort of art for about 14 years now. In my experience it is a hit or miss game. Sometimes you put together a very interesting color scheme, other times they look horrible together to other people. Whatever the case you can always work in black and white if you can't get it right but it is really fun to surprise others with your weird but balanced colour choices.
I’ve been a fan of yours for a few years now and for those years you have made everyday bloody wonderful. I have only one thing to say
DONT BLOODLY TOUCH IT
Yesssssssss
These colourblind glasses with the drunk goggles would be an amusing idea.
Jazza: I’m completely in the dark about what it’s turned out like.
Me: aren’t you completely in the red?!
Don’t read my profile picture
I certainly hope he's not. Being in the red means debt for the business 😂
@@dawnthegoblin good point!
@@dont1772 ok
Me: reads your comment
Me: reads your profile name
Also me: it’s perfect
Hahaha 0:29 was hilarious! “You can do that in post right?”
If yellow appears to be invisible while wearing the red goggles, should a cooked egg appear to be 'invisible' against a white background? 🙂
take a photo of white egg and look only at red channel of the image, it would probably look white yeah
The "You are my Sunshine" one made me happy.
Why? My mama used to sing it to me to get me to go to sleep. Very heartwarming.
Egg is the most underrated fruit.
Don’t read my profile picture
Yummy egg 🥚 😋
Butt fruit
Wise words
I agree ಥ‿ಥ
I can't tell if that fact that he preformed basically just as well with goggles as without them means that he's very skilled after years of drawing, or if he always just chooses random colors and hopes for the best lol
A mix of both plus reading the colors.
Jazza notice me you actually inspired me to never give up and keep drawing and evolve so thank you senpai
I love doing this! If colors don't just pop out for me, why not go blind! Some of the wackiest, beautiful and creepily coincidental color match ups! I'd love to see you do this again, NO NAME CHEATS, with paint. You'd see the name before you put them on the board but then you're on your own!
Each of your creations came out better than I would've thought! Had to wait half a day to see the final results, it was worth it!! ✨
Always love your videos! Many blessing to you, your family and team!
I was really impressed by the avatar. And then he said he read the names on the coloured pencils . . .
"I got all the colors right" like did you expect the shade sunny yellow to be purple?
My nephew is colour blind and loves making art with sketching and markers, which is why I bought him some copic markers for Christmas. He just laughs and says he doesn’t realise he’s put down the wrong colour until it’s too late but he still makes it work somehow. So excellent video and excellent message for the new year.
Live you jazze you made me start drawing everyday I never thought I could draw so thank you 😄
I felt a little sad. Then, I decided to listen to this video because Jazza always manages to make me smile. :)
This is the reason Godot lost the last case in Ace Attorney: Trials and Tribulations.
“In my world, the color red doesn’t exist.”
(I know this reference isn’t related to yours but it still reminded me of it) “This pen that I hold in my hand is RRRRROOYYAALLL BLUUUUE!”
this was actually the first thing i thought of too lmao
Colour is so often more about value (strength of tone) as opposed to what the colour looks like to the eye. It's the contrast between strong value and light value, as proved in this video. Fascinating!
UA-camrs: "omg this is so hard doing art without colour!"
Me, a colourblind artist: "oh noooooo"
For me I kinda slowly figured out what color was what thinking of the color contrast or the color wheel it got a bit easier although some were still hard to figure out! Anyway thanks for the video jazza!
"Anyone can be an artist"? Time to get a rat that can control you with your hair and see how it does.
Man... the way this guy can create anything amazing is surreal.
Can we just talk about how good he makes those arts with beeing able to only see red?
Gosh it's so amazing♡
As a colour blind person, I loved this, sliiiighty annoyed you didn't struggle more but I still feel honoured
My chemistry professor is colorblind. Titrations and anything that requires comparing colors, are the bane of his existence
A woman I quilted with was color blind, and always picked out the coolest color combos.
It's 4:28 in the morning, my dog doesn't let me sleep and the fact that i have a test tommorow is just nice 😃 so imma just watch this video to pass the time that i have left before the test 🙃
Nice, I'm doing the same
Lock your dog outside your door in the bathroom.
Leave a food and water bowl for him though! I’m not that mean... I hope
@@smokeykiwi8992 good idea i should do that 👌 thx
i'm a self taught artistand i too am colour blind. over the years i've been so nervous to apply colour to my art work. it was during 2020 when i took the leap of faith and began usinging colour in my art. lol my friends love that i'm colour blind and enjoy teasing me with the hey whats this colour to you and i say what i think it is and they're reactions are priceless. i quite enjoyed this episode where you used a red spectrum and went with it fantastic job Jazza. I've been subed to you for about 7 years now and have been enjoying your content every time. keep up the amazing work, oh and i'm also a kinesthetic learner as well.
Jazza is actually seeing his results
But the colorblind people can't even see their final product with all the colours ಠ﹏ಠ
Yup, I was so annoyed looking at that model going "but the hair and the eyes are fine!" Granted, I can't tell what colour they are.
There is a company now called EnChroma that make glasses which allow colour blind people see in colour. You should search them on UA-cam, they are pretty life changing for many people. 😊
I haven’t watched u in a few weeks and I missed ur energy and enthusiasm!!!
Colorblind people: everything looks the same
I'd hate to be red-green colorblind because the whole video would either be invisible or just black and white.
@@ZUnknownFox it's not exactly black and white it's just really grayish yellow green and brown
@@fishbish4853 Yeah, I’ve heard that reds and greens are more like a brownish yellow color for people with that kind of colorblindness
@@Gemini-Lion not true. Some blues will appear green (when the color is towards green spectrum) and same with purple (towards red). Same with (army)green/brown. Differs per colorblind type and person.
My brother has it and just sees purple and red as greys and blue he only knows as family told him what it is in the past
As someone whose colorblind, all of them look spot on to me. lovely use of black and white
That's a bit heartbreaking in a way, being the son of a famous artist, and finding out that you are colorblind, and thus not being able to experience your fathers work in the same way as everybody else. But in the other hand, since it is Jazza we are talking about, maybe it could be turned in to a superpower instead.
WTF Bruh
I think if his son actually wanted to go into art, he'd probably have the same love that his dad does since he's been watching his dad do art his whole life pretty much. If you love doing something, you will find a way, like Mozart being deaf didn't stop him from making music.
There are some fantastic glasses out there for colorblind people, which basically help them to differentiate between reds, greens and browns better. Technology has truly come a long way, so I definitely don't think colorblindness is as big of an issue nowadays than it was, say, not even 20 years ago.
@@TeenyTinyTiggy Not all art uses colours. Some great art is just black or white, or perhaps he'll be a sculptor or modelmaker and leave the painting to others. Most colour blindness is mild and barely affects most applications. Also, it was Beethoven who was deaf.
@@TeenyTinyTiggy Mozart wasn't deaf, Beethoven was.
I cannot wait for the day your son makes art videos and starts breaking the boundaries of how far imagination can go!
Everything happened so fast from the notification. I’m just happy during my most anxious of nights I have another upload to watch and feel better. Love ya Jazza ❤️❤️
Reminds me of love ya neighbor
@@littleaesthetic5344 I was gonna say that! :0
@@CaptainBulbasaur :o
This was a pretty cool challenge. I love how the clay sculpture turned out.
The fashion lady: It's called fashion Jazza, look it up
I myself have trouble seeing color and as a result I never try coloring my art. I needed this video.... Thank you Jazza. :)
That clown pic looks like some Krusty The Clown concept art
Just a testament to what a master this guy is.
It broke my heart when i heard MJ was colourblind , but there are alot of ways to express art like pencil sketching, sculpture and alot ... so if he wants , he cqn still explore art
Where is this mentioned?
@@Octobris 13:00
As someone who is a monochromatic colour blind artist, I loved this video. Growing up with my impairment really made insecure and lacking confidence in my art but through learning colour theory and other techniques I became really proud of my art and the challenges I was able to overcome.
Conclusion; Anyone can be an artist!
how am i here so fast i dont have notifications on lmao
@Flavio Rodriguez same
I think youre first
To comment that is
@Flavio Rodriguez same
@@stabbedryan4613 yep they are
I 100% agree and regularly tout that everyone can be an artist. Creating art is like a language; you must learn the structure, skill and techniques in order to translate your mental imagery to the physical realm. Those who say they cannot learn those skills are usually afraid of failure
The last clay character looks like a Tim Burton creation honestly
My grandson (age 9) is partially color blind and loves drawing and painting. I love how he is not letting it hold him back
*When you accidentally bought your Jazza merch in the wrong colour but you want it red:*
I have so much respect for artists with colourblindness.
Like this one I follow on Twitter. Her style is so unique, but the colours are always spot on despite the fact she is monochromatic colourblind.
Imagine trying to solve a rubik's cube with these
Everything was good. The scenery was really cute. But man that sculpture.. it looked like it came out of some story.. Looks so perfectly cunning
Being red-green colourblind myself, the red camera almost hurt to look at
What's neat is sometimes your mind will make you see colors where colors aren't.
I used to have a black and white tv as a kid and my mind automatically would assign a sort of "green" to the gray grass because I instinctively knew it was grass and should be green(ish).
Whoever is reading this, God bless you and your family❤
I dont believe in god :)
@@hopefullynotacringyname.7310Me too
Hey Jazza, I really love this video especially because im a colorblind artist and just yesterday I got into my dream art school!!!
the clay sculpture guy looks like he's working on some device that would put makeup on everybody, but it backfired on him.
I like seeing jazzas old videos because some of them I don't remember watching but I'm sure I have I make sure to watch every upload
everyone: FIRST!!!!
Me: Actually, Jazza is first.
Don’t read my profile picture
@@dont1772 I won't read it bud. No one will ever know.... mwahhahahahhaha
@@dont1772 shut up bot
Thanks for the likes guys!!!!
1:51 - 1:56
I’m partaking in some *adult activities* and this part is making me so happy I just keep replaying it
I wanna see this concept again but with no color names to go off of.
Red is my favourite colour.........I want those glasses
“Everything is red for me except red”
-Jazza 2021
I've got to say: Jazza is absolutely rocking those glasses.
I actually know someone who's colorblind in a way that they only see blue hues
My grandpa's best friend (wasnt family but still called him uncle!) was an amazing artist and he was colorblind! He only could see in black and white, and could tell what colors where what by the different shades of grays. He and I connected through art and I miss him dearly.
i’ve never been this early in my life..
Same :D
I have known a ton of color blind artists and they do great - some times they make wonky things but usually I completely forget they are color blind, they are just great artists
"Holding the glasses up to the camera is really annoying, especially with a multi-camera setup. Let's stick some red filter to the lens"
Everyone else using the filter in Davinci Resolve... 😁
Davinky?
Red Filter? Nah mate, that's lighting gel, my guess is R26.. or maybe R24, depends what colour temp he films with. In my opinion, the gel is much more authentic than the post edit filter. Gel means it's recorded the exact way he sees it, as opposed to attempting to recreate it digitally.
@@SpazMonkeyBeck Umm... What?
A gel is considered a colour filter. Also, blocking out the blue & green channel wouldn't involve colour temperature. I can bet you those glasses' filters don't match the gel he used anyway.
@@rhystedstone Well evidently my sarcasm didn't come across in my first sentence. I'm fully aware that gels are technically filters.
Colour temperature definitely matters, R26 at 5k looks drastically different to 3200.
@@SpazMonkeyBeck Yeah but, I don't think that was the concern for this video :)
I was really impressed by the results as well. Great video
jazza made a box trolls character on accident any one remember that movie
Ohh my lord
He has my collectors dream, so many coloured pens, pencils, markers.