Genuinely want to thank you for creating all of these study guides. I am someone who struggles to learn and be motivated without a structured curriculum and ends up jumping from one rescourse to another. This video as well as your other ones on concept art guides has really motivated me to get back into drawing. Hopefully more people see your videos in the future.
I am extremely grateful for the content you put out there and the fact that it is free is really amazing. thank you for helping out other self taught artist on their journey and i wish you the best on yours ❤❤
@@sketch-habit YO! One more question. I might get started with (Perspective Made Easy) first, then I will follow your plan. Bc I want to get my foundation right and I kinda find it hard to start with these books first when you don't have a general understanding of what perspective is. So, what do you think?
I agree! Perspective made easy is a very good start for beginners, it will create a lot of the foundation that you can use to build on top. I’m planning on doing a series based on Perspective Made Easy, as it is on public domain.
@@sketch-habit Good then! starting with (Perspective Made Easy) and with my experience in engineering drawing, it will build a big strong foundation for me. Thanks alot! And good luck with your series!
Thanks so much for this. I have a question though. I already have how to draw what would I miss out on if I don't work with framed perspective and only use how to draw? Are there maybe some ressources on youtube that contain simular knowledge or a cheap online course?
The biggest strength of Framed Perspective is the application in complex scenes and environments. I'd suggest using Perspective Made Easy as a complement instead of Framed Perspective if budget is an issue. Perspective Made Easy is on public domain and you can find online. I'm going to start a series on Perspective using this book as a basis, but I need time to do that haha
They are filled with concepts and examples of the application of perspective. I’d definitely follow some of the step by step exercises to understand the concepts, but try to apply them in drawings from imagination or deconstructing what you see.
@@sketch-habit could you elaborate more on what you mean by deconstructing them? Is it like drawing lines to find the vanishing points in pictures or breaking it down to simple shapes or is it like a mental simulation of how i would go about drawing what i see on paper using the techniques in the books?
I'd say all of the above haha you can approach drawing from observation in a very 2D way (drawing on the right side of the brain kind of approach) or more on a 3D way (vanishing points, boxes, cylinders, ellipses and so on). One great exercise is to look at an object or furniture and break it down to the simple primitive forms, understand how those are positioned in perspective and how you would go by translating them on the paper, especially in a different angle.
THIS VIDEO DESERVES 10 MILLION VIEWS oh my god. you are out here saving lives. you've just earned a loyal subscriber
Haha thanks Daniel! Glad you enjoyed it :)
Genuinely want to thank you for creating all of these study guides. I am someone who struggles to learn and be motivated without a structured curriculum and ends up jumping from one rescourse to another. This video as well as your other ones on concept art guides has really motivated me to get back into drawing. Hopefully more people see your videos in the future.
Thank you so much for the kind words and the super thanks :) I’m so happy to read that it motivated you to get back to drawing 🎉
I really appreciate your videos. It's great to have a thought out curriculum laid out for self-study artists. Thank you very much!
Thank you for watching and for the kind words!
I am extremely grateful for the content you put out there and the fact that it is free is really amazing. thank you for helping out other self taught artist on their journey and i wish you the best on yours ❤❤
Glad it was useful! Wishing the best on your studies :)
TE AMO 😭
❤️
THANK YOU SO MUCH😭. I CANT GIFT YOU ANYTHING RIGHT NOW BUT I WON'T FORGET YOU.
Thank you for watching! Good luck on your studies :)
I could really kiss you on the forehead for doing all of this AMAZING content. Keep it up man! 😅
🤣🤣 glad you like it!
@@sketch-habit YO! One more question. I might get started with (Perspective Made Easy) first, then I will follow your plan. Bc I want to get my foundation right and I kinda find it hard to start with these books first when you don't have a general understanding of what perspective is. So, what do you think?
I agree! Perspective made easy is a very good start for beginners, it will create a lot of the foundation that you can use to build on top. I’m planning on doing a series based on Perspective Made Easy, as it is on public domain.
@@sketch-habit Good then! starting with (Perspective Made Easy) and with my experience in engineering drawing, it will build a big strong foundation for me. Thanks alot! And good luck with your series!
hi im having trouuble finding exercises from FZD and brain storm yo mentioned at 19:13. thanks a lot!!!
this is so good man ty so much
Glad you liked it :)
Thanks so much for this. I have a question though. I already have how to draw what would I miss out on if I don't work with framed perspective and only use how to draw? Are there maybe some ressources on youtube that contain simular knowledge or a cheap online course?
The biggest strength of Framed Perspective is the application in complex scenes and environments. I'd suggest using Perspective Made Easy as a complement instead of Framed Perspective if budget is an issue. Perspective Made Easy is on public domain and you can find online. I'm going to start a series on Perspective using this book as a basis, but I need time to do that haha
@@sketch-habit thanks for the answer
Wow thank you for sharing!!!!!
Thank you for watching!
how do you study these books? Do you copy the pictures or are there exercises in them for you to do?
They are filled with concepts and examples of the application of perspective. I’d definitely follow some of the step by step exercises to understand the concepts, but try to apply them in drawings from imagination or deconstructing what you see.
@@sketch-habit could you elaborate more on what you mean by deconstructing them? Is it like drawing lines to find the vanishing points in pictures or breaking it down to simple shapes or is it like a mental simulation of how i would go about drawing what i see on paper using the techniques in the books?
I'd say all of the above haha you can approach drawing from observation in a very 2D way (drawing on the right side of the brain kind of approach) or more on a 3D way (vanishing points, boxes, cylinders, ellipses and so on). One great exercise is to look at an object or furniture and break it down to the simple primitive forms, understand how those are positioned in perspective and how you would go by translating them on the paper, especially in a different angle.
@@sketch-habit I c . Thanks for the advice!
Yall know these books are free rt?