Seeing this 9 years later and it was SUPER helpful! Already knew about the spiral, and the rule of 3rds, but never thought it appliedn to my art. I wanted to comment so you knew how much videos like this help beginners starting their art journey, or for people like myself getting back into art :)
I once heard a mathematician state that art and math are two methods of doing the same thing: exploring the beauty of the underlying structures of our universe. (Ian Stewart in Nature's Numbers if I remember correctly) He spent half a chapter explaining it, so I'm probably mangling the argument, but I still love the core idea, especially framed in a scientific view: Since a lot of our aesthetic preferences have some hardwired basis, these are most likely related to patterns that are beneficial to recognize quickly and with positive feedback. I would also add that they're both the result of something that makes us truely us: the ability to see beyond the moment, to explore potentialities and explicitly create mental models that we can manipulate to explore consequences. It is what takes us from "dude, this rock looks like a face!" To "dude, wanna bet I can make this rock look like a face?". Or "plant good for tying stuff" to "lets extract the fibers then twine them to make what I shall henceforth call rope". (That last one requires more ingenuity and material knowledge and insight than anyone has had since then)
I think the reason it all works so well together is because math was created to quantify and measure nature. And we find beauty in nature because it's evolutionarily advantageous to have an eye for healthy symmetry. So it only makes sense for math to be very helpful in making beautiful art
What makes your videos so dynamic and immediate is the palpable delight and discovery as you speak. It's less student/teacher than co-adventurer. Very fun.
Best tutorial i've ever seen on these technical approaches to composition! I love how you emphasize the "feeling it" part and that it mostly just happens to fit. Well done Sir! Thank you!
I really love those pictures of the tiger in the water with the lilly pads and the earlier bear walking across the water. Wonderful! I dream to be able to paint like that. I'm working on it, with the help of Aaron's videos!
We went through this in math class but I never thought about applying it to my art. I'll definitely keep this in mind when thumbnailing later, it is really helpful. Love your videos!
I put the thirds grid on my personal favourite piece and I was blown away at how it perfectly fit everything. This is really cool and helpful and it's getting my art senses tingling to play around with this idea.
If enough golden sections are applied to the painting one of them is bound to hit a point of interest. Even as your painting is turned black with golden triangle lines.
Exactly, this video (and the whole golden ratio concept) feels like bullshit, 11:51 is a perfect example of him trying too hard to demonstrate something that just isn't there.
This was so clearly explained. After watching a half a dozen videos which explained the math (and I do like math), this really brought the concept home!
So many douchey "know it all" comments. He's just showing examples of interesting composition techniques to help give a sense of balance to those that may struggle with composition. He even says these are just some interesting observations but if you're happy with your compositions just go with it. Why don't you wise guys use some of that energy to try and build at least 5% of the repertoire that this guy has?!
Thank you. Yeah...i think I explained it wrong but my point was was that even if you distort a golden ratio it still works from a compositional standpoint.
The Art of Aaron Blaise yeah. It's not an arbitrary distortion. It's the golden ratio made congruent to the image size, or the golden ratio in that realm of perception
How to make the golden ratio fit in any drawing: step one. make the most detailed parts of your drawing near one of the four corners step two. slap the golden ratio in there step four. sound smart by saying that the detail is near the golden ratio end point step five. profit
I really enjoy your teaching style and how you breakdown complex subjects and explain them in easy to understand terms. I am just embarking on illustrating at 60 years young!
Aaron has not said anything that is confusing or misleading he has just made interesting observations - nothing to get all bent out of shape about - these rules are not set in cement - they are just tools - I don't think the "rules" were ever meant to be applied so literally that the area of focus is always on exact mathematical point Bottom Line he said if it Looks Good it is Good. I think that most great artists gravitate towards the guidelines without ever really knowing them - as artists it is a natural inclination to create pleasing balance Thanks Aaron for the great video
🤔 Actually the golden ratio is a rule that is "set in cement". It's 1:1.6, not 1:1.75 or 1.2:1.6, as he was doing in the video when he kept breaking up the ratio spiral and placing it where it looked like it would fit. Just because it fits doesn't mean it's part of the golden ratio, and nobody is going to learn a thing if they think that they can just break up the ratio portions and drop them anywhere they want and it will make it work. Doesn't work like that. That's what all the commenters are saying.
This theory/concept/rule/guideline/method has mesmerized me for years and I have a very good grasp of it's application in my art. As well, you have explained it exceedingly well here. I also feel that there is more to this than meets our eye. (No pun intended.) Haven't figured out exactly what that is yet, but my theory supposes that it also has something to with three dimensions, as they are perceived on a two dimensional surface, well as the arrangement of single subject matter(s) onto a flat surface. An excellent video, sir! It truly makes me think about what makes "good" composition and what makes "masterful" composition. Cheers! -John F Willis
Thanks, Aaron! Great video once again. I have known about the "Rule of Thirds" and the "Golden Rectangle" for years, but never really seen anyone explain the application of these tools. The fog cleared about halfway through the video. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge and skills.
Let me just say beforehand that your art is absolutely AMAZING . I draw myself on Deviantart in a group of "Darpg" and I am glad to say that you Aaron, are my idol . My dream is to one day be able to create art as well as you do . You're so inspiring and while I havent been able to watch much videos I look forward to watching them! ^-^
Guides like these are very important to beginners. He is worth listening as we need guides that are universal. However, later we paint, how we would want things be painted and slowly we depart from rigid rules.
Thanks for posting this. The only video I could find that shows real world examples and the golden ratio. Perfect explanation. If you have more to add to this, make another video.
Thanks for being on UA-cam Aaron. You're a true inspiration. I've studied the golden number and all some years ago, but it was in art history class and the teacher was so boring... :P We (your viewers) won't be able to say thank you enough, compared to all the good advices you give in your videos. Thank you so much :) ♥ Greetings from Paris!
I have a Wacom Cintiq and have only ever managed to draw sketches with it, mainly from not knowing how photoshop works. I just found your channel while looking for time lapse videos to show me how to colour in. I love your content and have been flicking through all your videos. They're incredibly useful and easy to understand. I'm in awe of your art and hope to learn a lot off you. Subscribed.
Hi Aaron and your viewers, I don't know if this would be easier for you but i use the grid option that's built into Photoshop. To get it to work hit cmd k to open the preferences then under guides, grid & slices in the grid section change it to grid line every 100 percent and subdivisions 3 and click ok to accept the changes. Now when you open any project press cmd apostrophe (cmd ') and it will super impose the rule of thirds grid on your project to suit the aspect. I just find it helps in my work flow. Hope this helps.
***** You are welcome! I am glad you will be able to put it to use! I have just told our son that i have taught a top Disney artist something on Photoshop and he just stood looking at me in disbelief! 😃
Awesome explanation! I wish my art professors had gone this in depth with examples. Very easy to understand! Kinda takes the scaryness out of that complicated lookin spiral. Ive always had a kinda "I ...sort of know what this is?" Knowledge about the golden rectangle but now I understand much better. Thank you! And thanks in general, your videos helped pull me out of a nasty artistic slump and really inspired me to get my butt in gear and enjoy learning again.
Great advice! Heard of the "rule of thirds" before, but never the "golden rectangle". Very interesting. As an aspiring artist, these lessons are valuable to me. Yours, in particular, have opened me eyes to things. This is one of my favorites of yours, right along with the "using the greater than & less than signs to add direction to character construction". You're a fantastic artist and I love all of these instructions. Don't stop! :)
You can't force the golden ratio to fit something in that way. If you distort it, break it down or shift it, then you can justify literally any composition within the rules of the golden ratio, good or bad. Sometimes it fits, sometimes it doesn't - that's just that. They are guidelines, not rules. And on that note you can use these guidelines to help your decisions if you're having trouble - for eg. the lioness standing to the left looking right over the savanna. Your composition was more or less appealing, but had you fitted your drawing to the mathematics a priori then you may have ended up with an even better composition than you actually did. Or, even so, maybe not. From there we could go onto debate subjectivity... but I think you get my meaning.
He didn't distort it... He just took a piece of it and found out that it fit... It doesn't meen that you have to distort or shift the golden ratio to fit your composition, it was just like a secondary point of interest...
Hey thank you for some clear starting points. I used your advice on something I started drawing today and it looks like it's coming together well. Thank you for the video! ^^
Aaron, I was looking to refresh my understanding of composition no camw across this. Fascinating and it kind of explains why some of my work which doesn't seem to,follow the rules, yet are pleasing, really do work with the sub rules.
Surely if you stretch or compress the golden ratio to fit an existing composition, it's no longer a golden ratio. It may fit the image, but the ratio 1:1.618 is distorted. After all a square is always a square never a rectangle especially when the ratio of the original image is not 1:1.618. I wrote a thesis on ratios and proportion through the ages and can't agree that this type of distortion is 'golden.' I do agree, however, that if it feels right then it (usually) is right.
Nicholas Fox I agree with you, and it comes down to feeling right after all if its not right for the artist it probably won't be right for the art viewer. cheers!
he's distorting the golden ratio relative to the image size. it's not an arbitrary distortion. it's the golden ratio if it were congruent to the size of the image.
When you used the golden ratio on the lioness and it didn't spiral onto the head as you would have liked for the perfect eye leading and pleasing composition, you decided to take a bit of the Golden Ratio and move that little piece over its eye, and sounded quite pleased with yourself...i'm a photographer and of course rules of composition are a key factor but also they are there as a guide line and breaking these rules is a must at points, but that what you did is just cheating yourself... you may as well take the rule of thirds pop the grid over your picture and if it doesn't hit the sweet spots then split them all and make the rule of sixths and when that doesn't work just keep dividing it until you feel cheated enough by yourself to move on to the next, I'm sure Fibonacci would turn in his grave if he saw this... great paintings by the way!
Without a doubt the best explanations I've stumbled across! As a self-taught "dabbler" in art, you have opened amazing windows I've never look through before. I can't wait to view all your videos! You've got a new subscriber.
Your video does a great job of showing how the golden ratio can be used to create pleasing compositions. It seems as though you could’ve cropped your photos, so that they fit the golden ratio and therefore have better compositions. Perhaps you might want to consider creating a video with you tweaking your photos to fit the golden ratio. You could also show how the golden ratio is present in some of the most famous works of art. Thanks for the video. Great job!
Thanks for sharing with us your attentive observation in composition, especially this is interesting to see how the golden ratio works in the environment!
If you look for patterns you will find them. I'm still sceptical about the golden ratio. I'm actually doing a video right now to test out the theory for cinematography. Hopefully I will come to some conclusions.
The Golden Ratio is evident throughout Creation - Life - it is "Form - Balance aka Harmony" Balance is a 🔑 to our Life Journey - achieving and keeping it the Goal Trust the facts of the Golden Ratio and the Patterns it result in - truly Beautiful in the Grand Plan.
I found this video very helpful, and I like your attitude of a sort of "Go with your gut" approach. I think that there are such strict opinions about all of this, and I was looking for just a bit of guidance. But I think people who are snooty about it are ridiculous. Clearly, you're an amazing talent, and your work speaks for that. I found all of it pleasing to the eye, even though wild life art isn't really my thing. I can certainly appreciate your eye for details - wow, and the majestic stillness of these large cats is amazing and you've captured it beautifully. I never thought to subdivide the thirds into secondary thirds, and that was the most important thing that I will take away from this. Thanks.
Composition rules are just a tiny part of the story. There's much more going on: size of the objects, layering, colors, tones, light. Studying composition rules seems just the very tip of the iceberg to me. I would argue that the best works of composition (in photos, movies, and paintings) are very far from following such rigid rules. On the contrary, they all break such rules by considering the other factors I mentioned above. That said, this video is very helpful.
You are not rambling. I think your analysis fit very well and nicely with theory. If you take the golden point rule further, you'll notice that other composition findings such as triangles, large objects, S & L shapes, horizon placement and other fit very well with it. Thumbs up!
This is the best explanation I watched so far.. I kinda clearly understand the golden ratio now... Good job sir.. I would love to learn more from you.. I am learning to take better photos..
I think he’s just showing examples of the ratio inside the ratio and how using it in more than one way in a single work may help the overall composition
Just for historical reasons. The golden ratio or phi from the Greek letter φ was first employed by Phidias, a very famous Greek sculptor who had the general supervision during the construction of Parthenon and had charge of the sculptural decoration . it's equal to (a+b)/a=a/b=1.618. Phi (φ) was also used by Pythagoras and of course Euclid.......... (you can read about it in "Euclid's Elements" )
It's very cool that overlaying the golden ratio syncs up to a lot of art, but If you're skewing the golden ratio to overlay the canvas, wouldn't it no longer be the golden ratio? Or would it still be the golden ratio, just skewed?
he didn’t skew it, he squashed it. It’s still a logical ratio, maybe not THE golden one, however, it did sync on the ratio of his canvas and ended up on points of interest on really nice compositions. Coincidence or not?
I think many here are missing a simple point he made early on - if it looks good it IS good. It's not the MECHANICAL formula that defines the art and composition; it's the HUMAN aspect. I believe he was just trying to show the relationship of mathematics in relation to our minds. The real explanations are the squares and what fills them, not the spiral itself. People truly don't take something so simple to postulate a model of the creative mind? After all, aren't rules meant to be broken? Mathematician here studying marketing myself :)
Joanna Skor, you're right. What is happening here is really misunderstanding (or ignorance) of the golden ratio and what is it, in depth. If any distortion is applied, it is not the golden ratio, is another ratio. It's all about proportions. And there is a golden one. About this issue, everything here is wrong.
@@pedrocunhachannel he's distorting the golden ratio relative to the image size. it's not an arbitrary distortion... it's the golden ratio in the realm of the image.
Isn't the golden ratio a myth? =) Some old dudes wanted to explain everything in existence by way of mathematics because maths was the "language of god". And so they set out to explain beauty with it. But the truth is we don't really know why some times that leads to a pleasing image and other times it does nothing.
I freaken stopped and checked the comments after he seriosly made he golden ratio fit the lion....that aint the golden ration no more..that's called "THE FREE-TRANSFORMED" ratio.... this is the first video I've watched so far that distorted the GR...
wait, how would ik where the center of interest is in an artwork? do I just have to like choose where to start my spiral? is there like a way to know if thats the middle of the spiral? p PLS REPLY ASAP I NEED IT FOR MY HOMEWORK
Seeing this 9 years later and it was SUPER helpful! Already knew about the spiral, and the rule of 3rds, but never thought it appliedn to my art. I wanted to comment so you knew how much videos like this help beginners starting their art journey, or for people like myself getting back into art :)
The Fibonacci sequence is beautiful. It's amazing how art and math and nature fall together.
I once heard a mathematician state that art and math are two methods of doing the same thing: exploring the beauty of the underlying structures of our universe. (Ian Stewart in Nature's Numbers if I remember correctly)
He spent half a chapter explaining it, so I'm probably mangling the argument, but I still love the core idea, especially framed in a scientific view:
Since a lot of our aesthetic preferences have some hardwired basis, these are most likely related to patterns that are beneficial to recognize quickly and with positive feedback.
I would also add that they're both the result of something that makes us truely us: the ability to see beyond the moment, to explore potentialities and explicitly create mental models that we can manipulate to explore consequences. It is what takes us from "dude, this rock looks like a face!" To "dude, wanna bet I can make this rock look like a face?". Or "plant good for tying stuff" to "lets extract the fibers then twine them to make what I shall henceforth call rope". (That last one requires more ingenuity and material knowledge and insight than anyone has had since then)
I think the reason it all works so well together is because math was created to quantify and measure nature. And we find beauty in nature because it's evolutionarily advantageous to have an eye for healthy symmetry. So it only makes sense for math to be very helpful in making beautiful art
Your “rambling” sure helped me understand this. Can’t wait to try it!!!
What makes your videos so dynamic and immediate is the palpable delight and discovery as you speak. It's less student/teacher than co-adventurer. Very fun.
Best tutorial i've ever seen on these technical approaches to composition! I love how you emphasize the "feeling it" part and that it mostly just happens to fit. Well done Sir! Thank you!
I really love those pictures of the tiger in the water with the lilly pads and the earlier bear walking across the water. Wonderful! I dream to be able to paint like that. I'm working on it, with the help of Aaron's videos!
We went through this in math class but I never thought about applying it to my art. I'll definitely keep this in mind when thumbnailing later, it is really helpful. Love your videos!
Thanks for making these awesome lessons Aaron! I'm going to learn as much as I can from them.
I put the thirds grid on my personal favourite piece and I was blown away at how it perfectly fit everything. This is really cool and helpful and it's getting my art senses tingling to play around with this idea.
If enough golden sections are applied to the painting one of them is bound to hit a point of interest. Even as your painting is turned black with golden triangle lines.
Exactly, this video (and the whole golden ratio concept) feels like bullshit, 11:51 is a perfect example of him trying too hard to demonstrate something that just isn't there.
@@jurel-enlatado1THANKYOU I thought I was going insane
This was so clearly explained. After watching a half a dozen videos which explained the math (and I do like math), this really brought the concept home!
So many douchey "know it all" comments. He's just showing examples of interesting composition techniques to help give a sense of balance to those that may struggle with composition. He even says these are just some interesting observations but if you're happy with your compositions just go with it. Why don't you wise guys use some of that energy to try and build at least 5% of the repertoire that this guy has?!
Thank you. Yeah...i think I explained it wrong but my point was was that even if you distort a golden ratio it still works from a compositional standpoint.
You said it man!
The Art of Aaron Blaise yeah. It's not an arbitrary distortion. It's the golden ratio made congruent to the image size, or the golden ratio in that realm of perception
How to make the golden ratio fit in any drawing:
step one. make the most detailed parts of your drawing near one of the four corners
step two. slap the golden ratio in there
step four. sound smart by saying that the detail is near the golden ratio end point
step five. profit
I wouldn't pay any mind to any comments on art anywhere unless they link their artstation portfolio, waste of time :)
I really enjoy your teaching style and how you breakdown complex subjects and explain them in easy to understand terms. I am just embarking on illustrating at 60 years young!
Aaron has not said anything that is confusing or misleading he has just made interesting observations - nothing to get all bent out of shape about - these rules are not set in cement - they are just tools - I don't think the "rules" were ever meant to be applied so literally that the area of focus is always on exact mathematical point Bottom Line he said if it Looks Good it is Good. I think that most great artists gravitate towards the guidelines without ever really knowing them - as artists it is a natural inclination to create pleasing balance Thanks Aaron for the great video
But people trying to learn would use this as a learning tool.
🤔 Actually the golden ratio is a rule that is "set in cement". It's 1:1.6, not 1:1.75 or 1.2:1.6, as he was doing in the video when he kept breaking up the ratio spiral and placing it where it looked like it would fit.
Just because it fits doesn't mean it's part of the golden ratio, and nobody is going to learn a thing if they think that they can just break up the ratio portions and drop them anywhere they want and it will make it work. Doesn't work like that. That's what all the commenters are saying.
I love the statement, 'we were built to see that way...'
Great little crash course thank you
INTERESTING!
You may have changed the world with this video. Thank you.
Dude you must hear this all the time, you are so talented, but i think there is so much work into the talent. I envy you in a good way❤️
This theory/concept/rule/guideline/method has mesmerized me for years and I have a very good grasp of it's application in my art. As well, you have explained it exceedingly well here. I also feel that there is more to this than meets our eye. (No pun intended.) Haven't figured out exactly what that is yet, but my theory supposes that it also has something to with three dimensions, as they are perceived on a two dimensional surface, well as the arrangement of single subject matter(s) onto a flat surface. An excellent video, sir! It truly makes me think about what makes "good" composition and what makes "masterful" composition. Cheers! -John F Willis
This video is amazing! Can't tell you enough how helpful this was!!
Very interesting! Beautiful artwork too.
It was uploaded 6yrs ago and still Gem.❤️🔥🙏
Thanks, Aaron! Great video once again. I have known about the "Rule of Thirds" and the "Golden Rectangle" for years, but never really seen anyone explain the application of these tools. The fog cleared about halfway through the video. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge and skills.
Let me just say beforehand that your art is absolutely AMAZING . I draw myself on Deviantart in a group of "Darpg" and I am glad to say that you Aaron, are my idol . My dream is to one day be able to create art as well as you do . You're so inspiring and while I havent been able to watch much videos I look forward to watching them! ^-^
Great explanations 🎨Thank you
Guides like these are very important to beginners. He is worth listening as we need guides that are universal. However, later we paint, how we would want things be painted and slowly we depart from rigid rules.
Thanks for posting this. The only video I could find that shows real world examples and the golden ratio. Perfect explanation. If you have more to add to this, make another video.
Thanks for being on UA-cam Aaron. You're a true inspiration. I've studied the golden number and all some years ago, but it was in art history class and the teacher was so boring... :P We (your viewers) won't be able to say thank you enough, compared to all the good advices you give in your videos. Thank you so much :) ♥ Greetings from Paris!
I have a Wacom Cintiq and have only ever managed to draw sketches with it, mainly from not knowing how photoshop works. I just found your channel while looking for time lapse videos to show me how to colour in. I love your content and have been flicking through all your videos. They're incredibly useful and easy to understand. I'm in awe of your art and hope to learn a lot off you. Subscribed.
I think power points and golden ratio are very helpful & could be applied thanks
thank you !
really helpful 🌻
Thank you so much for sharing!!
This must be the 20th time I watch this. I know we never meant. But, you did so much for me. ty
Intriguing. I liked how the butterfly was on the curve in the last example.
Hi Aaron and your viewers, I don't know if this would be easier for you but i use the grid option that's built into Photoshop. To get it to work hit cmd k to open the preferences then under guides, grid & slices in the grid section change it to grid line every 100 percent and subdivisions 3 and click ok to accept the changes. Now when you open any project press cmd apostrophe (cmd ') and it will super impose the rule of thirds grid on your project to suit the aspect. I just find it helps in my work flow.
Hope this helps.
***** You are welcome! I am glad you will be able to put it to use! I have just told our son that i have taught a top Disney artist something on Photoshop and he just stood looking at me in disbelief! 😃
Awesome explanation! I wish my art professors had gone this in depth with examples. Very easy to understand! Kinda takes the scaryness out of that complicated lookin spiral. Ive always had a kinda "I ...sort of know what this is?" Knowledge about the golden rectangle but now I understand much better. Thank you! And thanks in general, your videos helped pull me out of a nasty artistic slump and really inspired me to get my butt in gear and enjoy learning again.
Those sharing are really helpful. Thank you so much.
Big thanks ❤️
👍 brilliant!
Great advice! Heard of the "rule of thirds" before, but never the "golden rectangle". Very interesting. As an aspiring artist, these lessons are valuable to me. Yours, in particular, have opened me eyes to things. This is one of my favorites of yours, right along with the "using the greater than & less than signs to add direction to character construction". You're a fantastic artist and I love all of these instructions. Don't stop! :)
You can't force the golden ratio to fit something in that way. If you distort it, break it down or shift it, then you can justify literally any composition within the rules of the golden ratio, good or bad. Sometimes it fits, sometimes it doesn't - that's just that. They are guidelines, not rules. And on that note you can use these guidelines to help your decisions if you're having trouble - for eg. the lioness standing to the left looking right over the savanna. Your composition was more or less appealing, but had you fitted your drawing to the mathematics a priori then you may have ended up with an even better composition than you actually did. Or, even so, maybe not. From there we could go onto debate subjectivity... but I think you get my meaning.
good points....lets hear more from people who know what they are talking about...
becka9431
docdoowop smh
He didn't distort it... He just took a piece of it and found out that it fit... It doesn't meen that you have to distort or shift the golden ratio to fit your composition, it was just like a secondary point of interest...
@@raralex8986 The golden ratio is proportion and there´s only one. I can´t turn circles into ellipses and keep saying is the golden ratio.
Hey thank you for some clear starting points. I used your advice on something I started drawing today and it looks like it's coming together well. Thank you for the video! ^^
Aaron, I was looking to refresh my understanding of composition no camw across this. Fascinating and it kind of explains why some of my work which doesn't seem to,follow the rules, yet are pleasing, really do work with the sub rules.
Thanx for posting! Great explanation! I love art!
Lovely, very good and helpful explanation. Many thanks Aaron!
It's also about ensuring your painting has a Center Of Interest
Thank you!
Surely if you stretch or compress the golden ratio to fit an existing composition, it's no longer a golden ratio. It may fit the image, but the ratio 1:1.618 is distorted. After all a square is always a square never a rectangle especially when the ratio of the original image is not 1:1.618. I wrote a thesis on ratios and proportion through the ages and can't agree that this type of distortion is 'golden.' I do agree, however, that if it feels right then it (usually) is right.
Nicholas Fox I agree with you, and it comes down to feeling right after all if its not right for the artist it probably won't be right for the art viewer. cheers!
he's distorting the golden ratio relative to the image size. it's not an arbitrary distortion. it's the golden ratio if it were congruent to the size of the image.
Technically a square is always a square AND a rectangle
ive always wondered about this, thanks for showing it.
great tips, thank you
When you used the golden ratio on the lioness and it didn't spiral onto the head as you would have liked for the perfect eye leading and pleasing composition, you decided to take a bit of the Golden Ratio and move that little piece over its eye, and sounded quite pleased with yourself...i'm a photographer and of course rules of composition are a key factor but also they are there as a guide line and breaking these rules is a must at points, but that what you did is just cheating yourself... you may as well take the rule of thirds pop the grid over your picture and if it doesn't hit the sweet spots then split them all and make the rule of sixths and when that doesn't work just keep dividing it until you feel cheated enough by yourself to move on to the next, I'm sure Fibonacci would turn in his grave if he saw this... great paintings by the way!
Without a doubt the best explanations I've stumbled across! As a self-taught "dabbler" in art, you have opened amazing windows I've never look through before. I can't wait to view all your videos! You've got a new subscriber.
Thanks! So glad you found me :)
At the end, If you try to fit an image to the rule of thirds or the golden spiral, you can do it, even if it was not the intention
Brilliant. So well described
Thanks 😊
thnks for this lession aaron
Great explanation & demo of this theory......thanks.
skip to 2:54 to dive into it
Thank you sir! I was very confused about this golden ratio. But now I know some of this rule.
Your video does a great job of showing how the golden ratio can be used to create pleasing compositions. It seems as though you could’ve cropped your photos, so that they fit the golden ratio and therefore have better compositions. Perhaps you might want to consider creating a video with you tweaking your photos to fit the golden ratio. You could also show how the golden ratio is present in some of the most famous works of art. Thanks for the video. Great job!
Thanks for sharing with us your attentive observation in composition, especially this is interesting to see how the golden ratio works in the environment!
this was really interesting! I never thought about it like that, you are up to something good with this, and reminded me of sacred geometry, thank you
Raul Alvarado Thanks! Glad you enjoyed it :)
If you look for patterns you will find them.
I'm still sceptical about the golden ratio.
I'm actually doing a video right now to test out the theory for cinematography.
Hopefully I will come to some conclusions.
The Golden Ratio is evident throughout Creation - Life - it is "Form - Balance aka Harmony"
Balance is a 🔑 to our Life Journey - achieving and keeping it the Goal
Trust the facts of the Golden Ratio and the Patterns it result in - truly Beautiful in the Grand Plan.
That was more than wonderful , thank u for sharing .
My understanding of the video.
The composition technique is basically really good and the circle of the end of the swirl attracts the viewers eye
I have watch almost all of your videos and their are awesome, thank youuuu!
I found this video very helpful, and I like your attitude of a sort of "Go with your gut" approach. I think that there are such strict opinions about all of this, and I was looking for just a bit of guidance. But I think people who are snooty about it are ridiculous. Clearly, you're an amazing talent, and your work speaks for that. I found all of it pleasing to the eye, even though wild life art isn't really my thing. I can certainly appreciate your eye for details - wow, and the majestic stillness of these large cats is amazing and you've captured it beautifully. I never thought to subdivide the thirds into secondary thirds, and that was the most important thing that I will take away from this. Thanks.
Composition rules are just a tiny part of the story. There's much more going on: size of the objects, layering, colors, tones, light. Studying composition rules seems just the very tip of the iceberg to me. I would argue that the best works of composition (in photos, movies, and paintings) are very far from following such rigid rules. On the contrary, they all break such rules by considering the other factors I mentioned above. That said, this video is very helpful.
Thank you so much for these amazing lessons!
love your videos, you're extremely helpful. Thank you!
You are not rambling. I think your analysis fit very well and nicely with theory. If you take the golden point rule further, you'll notice that other composition findings such as triangles, large objects, S & L shapes, horizon placement and other fit very well with it. Thumbs up!
Arigatou Gyro
Edit: I had probably just read SBR so yeaaaaa
this is gold
Very cool 👍
This is the best explanation I watched so far.. I kinda clearly understand the golden ratio now... Good job sir.. I would love to learn more from you.. I am learning to take better photos..
Thank you! This is fascinating and very helpful!
I don't understand how it fits if you keep breaking it up, i thought its just supposed to fit without having to do any of that?.
I think he’s just showing examples of the ratio inside the ratio and how using it in more than one way in a single work may help the overall composition
yeah that didn’t really make sense to me
If it fits it sits rule. But it still works if it's not the golden ratio
I like how the lion @ 11.20 looks right at the other point of interest in the rule of 3rds.
You are amazing! Thank you for not being a pretentious prick! Took me forever to find a good video with a great teacher ❤️
you can't just increase/decrease the length and the width of the Golden ratio... ofcourse it will fit that way....
Thank you so much for this amazing videos.
HI Guy ! Hello ans thanks from France ! YOu timelapse and vidéos, vlog, etc are amazing...love it !
Just for historical reasons. The golden ratio or phi from the Greek letter φ was first employed by Phidias, a very famous Greek sculptor who had the general supervision during the construction of Parthenon and had charge of the sculptural decoration . it's equal to (a+b)/a=a/b=1.618. Phi (φ) was also used by Pythagoras and of course Euclid.......... (you can read about it in "Euclid's Elements" )
OMG! You're such a talented drawer!!!
Interesting. I'm just getting into photography and videography; this was helpful in understanding framing.
I love watching your videos, it's really inspiring, also your just such a sweet person!
It's very cool that overlaying the golden ratio syncs up to a lot of art, but If you're skewing the golden ratio to overlay the canvas, wouldn't it no longer be the golden ratio? Or would it still be the golden ratio, just skewed?
+donjonc33 Skewing things by definition changes the ratio, so it's not a golden ration anymore.
he didn’t skew it, he squashed it. It’s still a logical ratio, maybe not THE golden one, however, it did sync on the ratio of his canvas and ended up on points of interest on really nice compositions. Coincidence or not?
This will help me a lot !!!
Thank you 🙏🏻
Very good and very helpful. Thank you.
you should demonstrate this on a drawing !!!!!!!
Subscribed already. Future Animator here.♥️
When you "free-transformed" you distorted the golden ratio. It's wise to study the golden ratio first and then paint, not the other way round.
I think many here are missing a simple point he made early on - if it looks good it IS good. It's not the MECHANICAL formula that defines the art and composition; it's the HUMAN aspect. I believe he was just trying to show the relationship of mathematics in relation to our minds. The real explanations are the squares and what fills them, not the spiral itself. People truly don't take something so simple to postulate a model of the creative mind? After all, aren't rules meant to be broken? Mathematician here studying marketing myself :)
Joanna Skor, you're right. What is happening here is really misunderstanding (or ignorance) of the golden ratio and what is it, in depth. If any distortion is applied, it is not the golden ratio, is another ratio. It's all about proportions. And there is a golden one. About this issue, everything here is wrong.
@@pedrocunhachannel he's distorting the golden ratio relative to the image size. it's not an arbitrary distortion... it's the golden ratio in the realm of the image.
Isn't the golden ratio a myth? =) Some old dudes wanted to explain everything in existence by way of mathematics because maths was the "language of god". And so they set out to explain beauty with it. But the truth is we don't really know why some times that leads to a pleasing image and other times it does nothing.
I freaken stopped and checked the comments after he seriosly made he golden ratio fit the lion....that aint the golden ration no more..that's called "THE FREE-TRANSFORMED" ratio.... this is the first video I've watched so far that distorted the GR...
Great ! Love It
Wow, thank you for explaining this! I learned a lot from it!
wait, how would ik where the center of interest is in an artwork? do I just have to like choose where to start my spiral? is there like a way to know if thats the middle of the spiral? p
PLS REPLY ASAP
I NEED IT FOR MY HOMEWORK
thank you
Very good video Aaron; than you =)
I am trying learn art as fast as possible!
One of the key ingredients to art is patience :) I say this because I had your goal exactly. Enjoy the piece, love the process of making art
Your intro theme is impressive SUBSCRIBEd
You can't just squash the spiral to fit your liking because in doing this you lose the ratio that you so desire.
he's distorting the golden ratio relative to the image size. it's not an arbitrary distortion... it's the golden ratio in the realm of the image.
Don't look too long at the spiral, Aaron, you might go all Junji Ito's Uzumaki on us.