@@Duskxdawnx man if I could do that I wouldn't be complaining about it on yt comments. 😔 Art is my hobby anyway, spending 20 hours over a week in a single piece is something I like to do.
@@Why_who_where I can definitely relate and it happens more often than not. My thoughtless sketches look amazing but when I try to take it seriously it comes out stiff and weird. There are however some pieces where I push through it and the stars align to make for an amazing piece.
@@Why_who_whereI can relate i am only experienced in drawing on a4 or a5 paper I draw super tiny then I used some a3 paper and was scared to use space💀
for 10 years i have tried to understand Anatomy but, because of my Autism it hard for me to learn if i am given a lot information. so i am still only know the basic. this tutorial makes it so much easier for me to understand. thank you!
I have adhd and my art worsens and gets better from time to time, my anatomy used to be perfect and flawless, i can't believe i'm coming back to the basics, personally i feel like my art is a skill that is given to me for a weekend and then taken away right as i have school work😭
Adhd-autism person here: I feel you. Also I tend to only practice whats fun (lighting) so for the last 14 years of me drawing regularly my light and rendering game got good enough to gloss over my anatomy issues :,)
Autism person here: most of the things art teachers tell us are stupid or hard to understand. It took me four years to figure out simple things like doing trace studies because I take things too literally
I think I have that exact same problem of getting discouraged because of the required time to go over a full body drawing when practicing, which is often killing my consistency I will try to break it in different parts As always, thank you for the positive vibes ❤
As of right now, I'm a 9th grader and my mum limits my tech, so I'm drawing on paper. But applying you tips (even on paper drawings) is definitely clutch. Thanks!
You're actually in the best place you could possibly be. Learning how to draw on traditional media will help you _immensely,_ especially if you choose to switch to digital. You don't _need_ "tech" to become an artist, but what you learn "traditionally" will carry over if you _do_ decide to switch. Keep up the hard work!
i am depressed after a year of no progress, learning something just to know that i cant absorb the knowledge, i was about to give up but then you popped up on my recommendation and it was your drawing faces video that reignite my motivation so thank you sir for popping up in my youtube feed
It all makes sense now... Yes, dividing the body parts, studying each one individually, cutting down on the details, the CCC. It's all so clear to me! I've been utterly blind for not noticing it sooner. I want to express my gratitude to you kind Sir, for teaching me of what I had thought to be unfathomable, and yet so crystal clear now. Thanks Ori!💙
Finally a detailed step-by-step breakdown of something I have been stuck on for a while. No vague explanations, no "you draw a circle and then boom its a babe". You have helped me in this video more than my fancy-ass digital art course has been able to. Your Head breakdown video helped me out tremendously as well. THANK YOUx3 ! Now for the hardest part of art, that no amount of money, UA-cam videos or talent can replace ... Disciplined Diligent Practice. Hajimemashou!! P.S. Your art and rendering skills are amazing! And your videos are truly helpful, really appreciate the effort you put in.
I was JUST having trouble trying to tell myself that I can get better at anatomy and poses, it really is my biggest weakness. I've no practice methods, proportions I work on are a little more... complex... and clothing has always been trouble for me. I always shoved myself off the deep end and went straight into full illustrations, because I was like that. I never took into account of learning effectively. No way you just came in clutch with this. Thank you man.
It used to be really popular to these small posable mannequins/models of bodies/hands to use as a reference. Surprised these tools don’t get recommended as much for digital artists
Comparing art practice to the gym is really helpful to me, so thank you for this advice. Focus on my chest today, my legs tomorrow. I don't want to be sore everywhere.
you have no idea how usefull your videos have been not just in the study aspect but you have helped a lot in terms motivation and patience with myself, thank you so much
Omg i love you oridays, you are saving my dignity and skill in drawing!!!!! i normally hate tutorials because it doesn't show anything but yours are on top ❤️❤️💯💯
I don’t normally leave comments but I just wanted to thank you for making such an INSANELY amazing and descriptive educational video on this subject. I’ve spent over 48 hours watching so many videos to try and get a grasp on anatomy and this was the first video I found that broke everything down into every little part in order for me to understand. This is incredible. Thank you SO MUCH for doing this video. Breaking it down even as far as you did into explaining things like the pelvis and how it’s shaped and where it sits naturally was astounding to learn and see. A total game changer. Keep making these amazing videos!
korean artists are a game changer. About 1 year ago the art game and progression changed. Mogoon,Chyan,OKKU,etc. coloso really changed the game Tppo,oridays,and noelucc have brought a new style of editing,learning,planning,and a new era of illustration and advanced concepts,at your fingertips. I would also recommend reading Deep Work by cal newport,really the only things I would recommend from that list if "flow" by mr mihaly or mastery by robert greene,but atomic habits by james clear and deep work by cal newports are must reads. Thanks for amazing content
My favorite teachers are proko for basic anatomy, sycra for beginning painting, Mogoon aka jeonghee1414 for character illustration (there are reuploaded twitch vods on YT), Marco Bucci and Krenz for intermediate painting. Most coloso lessons are similar to each other and targeted at beginners so after a certain point you won’t learn anything crazy new, so if u want to learn from them, just pick your favorite illustrator.
Me watching this video: "Wow, this is amazing! Results like that after *two months?* That's so motivating!" 13:10 - "For this part, I've been practicing ~2 hours 45 minutes a day for 46 days!" "Oh." 16:29 - "I've practiced ~7.5 hours a day for 8 days!" "Ow... ._." Still, a lot of very helpful stuff to know. In particular learning anatomy by breaking it up into individual single subjects (torso, specific limb, proportions) and practicing it separately is a game changer, and I hate it that there isn't enough emphasis being given to this in most art tutorials and courses.
im currently doing the box method gotta say it really did help me make my body proportion good i gotta master this for atleast 2 months then i might practice to coloring
I've been using references and breaking it down so I can draw it myself while still using a reference. I wonder if I learn anything from that. I feel like I kind of am because I am understanding how the body moves and works. But watching this video really helped. Breaking down the body and using simplified fundimentals makes me understand even more about the human body.
Every artist has used a reference at some point. It's good to use references & you will learn from it. But at the same time try practicing without one to see just how much you can remember. You'll see progress & become happy with yourself, just keep trying out new things & working hard. 💪💜
9:42 "カジュアル(casual)" is Japanese. It means thinking flexibly and without being constrained by conventional thinking. Typically, it is used to transform (deform) a real human body into an animated character.
the fact that you take the time to learn how to learn effectively, and about overcoming the forgetting curve.. this is some good stuff. 👍🏻 like that’s actually what we need to do besides just drawing.
Hello, I am a Korean student who became a freshman in high school this year When I went to high school, I wanted to draw illustrations for the first time, and that thought led to the idea of becoming an illustrator But I couldn't attend the academy and I taught myself when I watched UA-cam But I didn't know how to draw, and unlike when I was having fun drawing, I didn't get the quality of the painting I wanted, so I was very stressed out and even spent less time drawing However, I came across your video today and learned such a good way to study, so I'm going to apply it from today Thank you so much for posting such a great video. Thank you so much
Thank you so much for this video. I think what I’ve been missing is a dedicated place where I store notes and can revise at any point. I am going to rewatch your video at least 2 more times to take notes because I’m seriously fed up at being fed up when I draw. Thank you for this video and all the resources you referenced. I felt like I was watching a mini colosso course myself lol. I love the concept of calling practice sessions training arcs and gaining exp points. Side note: I just love how you sound as though you’re always smiling when talking. Your videos are such a gem!
i noticed that i over-simplified a lot of the body structures and it was making my figures look kinda funky, plus i've never really done actual practice/training soooo... this video made me want to start 🙂
You should definitely add "The Inner Game of Tennis" to that list of books about how to improve. It talks about how getting better at things with external goals requires controlling your inner thought process behind what it means to be good; managing self doubt, being overly critical of your work, overemphasizing the "theory" behind learning rather than experience and practice.
A way to practice how the parts of the body fit to together is not only practicing the parts, but also practice joints, like hips and shoulders. Thats what i use to do tho i havent draw in years so back to basics is really helpful
i've been trying to practice by myself, and already bought Chyan's course, but your breakdown of what he's teaching helped stopping me from looking too much into the details, and rather see the structure of what he's trying to teach. it's hard with a full time job, and it seems every art youtuber somehow has all the time in the world to me, so i'm always wondering if you folks have a job or not (not saying you don't, just that it doesn't seem to be the case)
The rotten part of my brain keeps telling me that this'll take too long to harness & that i wont progress enough like i want to, but the more logical part of my brain knows that it'll be worth it even if i progress slower than i'd like. All i have on my hands right now is time, so i might as well start trying now. As soon as i see that clear progress i'll get a motivation boost. Just gotta stay consistent in the long runs 💪💪
For anatomy learn to draw anatomy and simplify it to basic shapes (you know take an arm and draw the major muscles and most protuberant bones), for poses learn to draw gesture (free your hand and draw fluently) the struggle comes when stitching those two topics
Glad you breakdown what you have learned in Chyan's course. I've tried the course and those long videos bored me so much that i didn't retain anything useful. Maybe ill try to pick up again only this part you have covered
i like this video so much. and im actually trying my best to follow this example with my own pace, however. i have so many issues getting myself to draw the exercise. i keep cringing at myself
I have always thought that there was something wrong with how I draw anatomy. I didn't know what it was but this tutorial helped me find what I was doing wrong. Tysm!
Lately i found out that i havent tooken the time to actually learn to draw anything so i decided to just restart my art journey! So this video was really helpful!
Hi, I'm a programmer and I always want to learn drawing) I'm at the beginning of my journey. I accidentally saw your channel. It's amazing channel. Thank you :)
great video with a lot of details that many UA-cam tutorials miss out on. It cleared all my doubts and gave me a proper guideline to trace to improve my anatomy and sketches.
Breaking down the body is a really good tip. I often try to force myself to draw as much of the full body as I can in my illustrations to practice each part, but I find that it takes so much time and makes every part feel lacking. So I've lately been trying to focus on the upper body and I've been noticing some improvement.
Same like you before, I was choosing Chyan's method to study, in Coloso, but somehow I feel that I was too addicting with poses's drawing, and I became useless without poses or references, so I switched to Mogoon's way, is using box method, and I failed also, cuz boxed without pose -> mess. Then I tried to combine them into 1 and I could fix my problem now. Btw, thanks for the tips, really useful for my practicing
Weird question but your name seemed very familiar and I just had to ask: are you the same Oridays that used to be in Kakage-sensei's stream translator back when he'd do Morning Croquis? If so I have to say, what a small world it is, your art has come a long way!
Ori THANK YOU SO MUCH and what you had teach is so precious seriously man it help to open my mind. The last thing you had said is to never give i keep believing on that currently struggling it at anatomy but man you video dud sure helpz its easy to understand and it show how much effort you did to improve and just to teach us for free. Please dont stop posting toturial videos I am looking forward your getting improve day by day ❤ God bless ❤️❤️
Oof, anatomy, proportions and poses is really hard… but I think it’s slowly getting better at least in some ways. When I looked at the drawings I made 8 months ago I saw how weird they look. Giant head, upper body just slightly longer than the head+neck, legs 3-4 times as long as the upper body and almost as slim as the arms, wonky hands, forgotten fingers, too embarrassed to draw the female parts of the body anatomically accurate, too much smudge shading, weird hair and so on. It has gotten a bit better over time, I also had a short phase of sketching from references. Also shorter phases of trying to study specific things like the head shape, the hands, the torso etc. But nothing big yet. One problem I have is that I can’t stay motivated about studying. I suddenly get an idea for a drawing in between, I can’t keep focusing, I draw my idea, I notice the mistakes I made, the cycle repeats. Now my sketchbook doesn’t really have any more pages and I don’t know yet when I‘m going to buy a new one. I hope I can get myself to use some empty spaces in my old sketchbook to do study drawings because there’s not enough space for more serious drawings…
Hi Ori! I've been thoroughly enjoying your videos; they're both awesome and incredibly insightful. Watching them has ignited a real desire in me to start drawing as well! However, there's a slight hitch - I can't draw to save my life. During my high school years, I was primarily self-taught in game design and spent a lot of time developing my own games as a hobby. Art has always been on my radar, especially anime-style art, which I find incredibly fascinating, but never had the time to start. The challenge I'm facing is that my current art skills are at a first-grader level, so I'm not sure where to even begin. You mentioned art like it's a game, so I can say I'm playing for the very first time at level 1. Now, I'm wondering if you have any advice or beginner's guides that could serve as a "starter pack" to help me get me off the ground and gain some momentum. I want to apply the knowledge and inspiration I've gained from your videos, but my technical skills are holding me back. I would greatly appreciate any guidance you could provide!!!❤
What I did to get better was start drawing basic shapes like circles,squares and lines.After I got comfortable I started drawing 3d shapes like cubes and cylinders.After that I started looking a different tutorials on figure drawing and construction which helped me connect and visualize everything in 3d.Also maybe look into perspective I am nowhere near a expert at it but just understanding that a different angle will make the shape different will improve your art.I was a anti-talent for art not being able to draw a circle and I am nowhere near where I want to be now but I hope this can give you at least some guidance.Also remember to be patient and consistent because art improvement can feel slow sometimes.
personally I think that the most important thing is having fun, especially if you don't have a lot of experience. art is hard and you need to be motivated, if you want to continue doing it. it will take years to be good. you need to not be harsh on yourself, do exercises or look at tutorials for beginners. everyone starts somewhere. I think the good starting point is making copies of art you like, you can change it a bit to your liking. you can trace it, it will train your hand and your lines will become less wobbly (just don't post it and claim it's your original art). there are also exercises with drawing circles and lines, if you're curious google drawabox. don't do only exercises, don't study all the time. most of your time needs to be spent on making drawings you enjoy or want to make
Your guides are excellent. I'd love to see a guide elaborating on some of the basic features of your guides -- you often reference "doing studies" or "studying" a reference, but it would be very helpful to know *exactly* what that looks like on a finer level.
The most important 'skill' I've been teaching myself is to slowly build up the amount of time I can spend working on my art (both free art for fun and practice). I love doing it... in theory. But I am/ have been so critical it costs me a lot mentally do actually do stuff. But I've been teaching myself to enjoy it (working on my mental health and doing a few other tricks) and I'm slowly building up the amount of time I spend a day on my art. Still not 2.5 hours a day but I hope to get there sometime soon.
thank you for the video, I hope I get better now since September this year I started drawing seriously. A pity I can't pay Chyan's course because it costs a hole month's worth of salary in my country
I wish I have time to practice as a 12th grade student admission to a university take all of my time. I will definitely start after everything is sorted out.
Hey this is what i need right now on my anatomy study! :D The learning nethod is good, making to rotate the anatomy body is made me easy when animate! also i need to simplify shape than tried to look exactly same, like too realism
Dang, I love how you take stuff from Chyan’s course and add your own stuff to it that you learned along the way! Just curious, but does Chyan cover male anatomy and posing as well, or would I have to take a different course or self-study for that part after learning to draw the female?
he doesn't specifically draw males much in his class but he includes them in his class material as examples..and he mentions that its better to draw men to understand the muscles better if I'm remembering correctly.
yeah he said you can draw exclusively females if you want but if you want to draw female characters with alot of muscles you have to draw males its the same as female but in reverse its not too hard if you know anatomy@@Prince8927
Female anatomy isn’t too different from male anatomy, only the musculature volume and fat areas like boobs and hips will be different. If u remember those facts and study a little you should be able to draw male anatomy in no time.
@@exiaax I mean, if we're being real, the very skeletal structure of a woman is different from that of a man, and every single cell in a woman's body is coded differently than that of a man as well, but for the purpose of art, you're probably right. Knowing the differences is probably all that matters, and once you make those changes, you can draw a man instead of a woman! Thanks for the encouragement!
The way you have consistently been going at learning to draw Ori, it makes me curious: have you have ever read the book that is called The Slight Edge by Jeff Olson? It is an amazing book that is universally useful and beneficial. I have been using it and it has vastly sped up the process in which I learn to consistently stick with art while learning it.
⌚タイムスタンプ (JP Timestamps)
日本語のタイムスタンプ表示がバグってるのでここに貼っておきます!
00:00 はじめに
00:31 効果的な方法を見つけるには
01:13 Chyanさんの方法
02:27 人体の練習方法
03:21 上達できなかった理由
04:01 忘却曲線
04:50 複雑さとミス多発の関係
05:36 トレーニング・第1段階
06:56 骨盤
07:21 胸郭と胴体
08:22 脚
08:48 脚+胴体
10:36 腕
11:10 腕+脚+胴体
11:20 手
12:00 全身組み合わせ
13:06 第一段階・所要時間は?
13:40 ポーズの練習方法
14:45 CCC方法に関する最新情報
15:06 トレーニング・第2段階
16:29 第2段階・所要時間は?
16:44 結果
ありがとう!
これが必要でした。ありがとう!
本当にありがとうございます!
itadakimasu tenshi tatakae oi oi oi ryoiki tenkai chakra sugoi (im definetly japanese)
Most beginners make one big mistake that has nothing to do with their skill: when they start drawing they just abandon what they learned
Exactly, i learn so much techniques on how to draw, that i start to forget everything slowly
I swear have trouble retaining information when it comes to art-it’s like trying to fill a colander with water
as a Beginner, I feel called out hahahhaa
stop calling me out 😭
me started drawing at 2017 and just dont draw till 2022 and feel regret
My worst quality is that I will spend literally 20 hours on a single extremely complicated piece but get too bored after 20 minutes of practice 😭
that's okay! You'll burn yourself out after 20 hours😭😭 just focus on one part at a time, practice5 times a week, like 5-20 minutes a day.
@@Duskxdawnx man if I could do that I wouldn't be complaining about it on yt comments. 😔 Art is my hobby anyway, spending 20 hours over a week in a single piece is something I like to do.
@@tsakeboya for me when i make a big piece my art Instantly becomes bad and ugly😭😭
@@Why_who_where I can definitely relate and it happens more often than not. My thoughtless sketches look amazing but when I try to take it seriously it comes out stiff and weird. There are however some pieces where I push through it and the stars align to make for an amazing piece.
@@Why_who_whereI can relate i am only experienced in drawing on a4 or a5 paper I draw super tiny then I used some a3 paper and was scared to use space💀
for 10 years i have tried to understand Anatomy but, because of my Autism it hard for me to learn if i am given a lot information. so i am still only know the basic. this tutorial makes it so much easier for me to understand. thank you!
same but not for 10 years
I have adhd and my art worsens and gets better from time to time, my anatomy used to be perfect and flawless, i can't believe i'm coming back to the basics, personally i feel like my art is a skill that is given to me for a weekend and then taken away right as i have school work😭
@@Why_who_whereme too ;(
Adhd-autism person here: I feel you. Also I tend to only practice whats fun (lighting) so for the last 14 years of me drawing regularly my light and rendering game got good enough to gloss over my anatomy issues :,)
Autism person here: most of the things art teachers tell us are stupid or hard to understand. It took me four years to figure out simple things like doing trace studies because I take things too literally
ori coming in clutch with this one fr
True
Fr
Just when i needed help, he comes in with the W titourial
yeah
I think I have that exact same problem of getting discouraged because of the required time to go over a full body drawing when practicing, which is often killing my consistency
I will try to break it in different parts
As always, thank you for the positive vibes ❤
As of right now, I'm a 9th grader and my mum limits my tech, so I'm drawing on paper.
But applying you tips (even on paper drawings) is definitely clutch. Thanks!
Just keep drawing, don't stop. I only got my iPad after high school. It'll be worth it ^^
@@HoshikawaHikari Thanks 😆✌️
You're actually in the best place you could possibly be. Learning how to draw on traditional media will help you _immensely,_ especially if you choose to switch to digital.
You don't _need_ "tech" to become an artist, but what you learn "traditionally" will carry over if you _do_ decide to switch. Keep up the hard work!
Dw bout it for me drawing on paper is much easier than drawing on a device
@@chills_tiny_mom Agreed 😁✌️
i am depressed after a year of no progress, learning something just to know that i cant absorb the knowledge, i was about to give up but then you popped up on my recommendation and it was your drawing faces video that reignite my motivation
so thank you sir for popping up in my youtube feed
It all makes sense now... Yes, dividing the body parts, studying each one individually, cutting down on the details, the CCC. It's all so clear to me! I've been utterly blind for not noticing it sooner. I want to express my gratitude to you kind Sir, for teaching me of what I had thought to be unfathomable, and yet so crystal clear now.
Thanks Ori!💙
Finally a detailed step-by-step breakdown of something I have been stuck on for a while. No vague explanations, no "you draw a circle and then boom its a babe". You have helped me in this video more than my fancy-ass digital art course has been able to. Your Head breakdown video helped me out tremendously as well. THANK YOUx3 !
Now for the hardest part of art, that no amount of money, UA-cam videos or talent can replace ... Disciplined Diligent Practice.
Hajimemashou!!
P.S. Your art and rendering skills are amazing! And your videos are truly helpful, really appreciate the effort you put in.
"you draw a circle and then boom its a babe"
Yo that's been the exact thing I've been saying every time I look at 'tutorials' XD
The only anatomy tutorial that is useful and understandable for me
I was JUST having trouble trying to tell myself that I can get better at anatomy and poses, it really is my biggest weakness. I've no practice methods, proportions I work on are a little more... complex... and clothing has always been trouble for me.
I always shoved myself off the deep end and went straight into full illustrations, because I was like that. I never took into account of learning effectively.
No way you just came in clutch with this.
Thank you man.
It used to be really popular to these small posable mannequins/models of bodies/hands to use as a reference. Surprised these tools don’t get recommended as much for digital artists
Comparing art practice to the gym is really helpful to me, so thank you for this advice. Focus on my chest today, my legs tomorrow. I don't want to be sore everywhere.
you have no idea how usefull your videos have been not just in the study aspect but you have helped a lot in terms motivation and patience with myself, thank you so much
I have been trying so hard lately to learn art and this is one of the things i struggled with the most, this is perfect, thank you
Omg i love you oridays, you are saving my dignity and skill in drawing!!!!! i normally hate tutorials because it doesn't show anything but yours are on top ❤️❤️💯💯
I don’t normally leave comments but I just wanted to thank you for making such an INSANELY amazing and descriptive educational video on this subject. I’ve spent over 48 hours watching so many videos to try and get a grasp on anatomy and this was the first video I found that broke everything down into every little part in order for me to understand. This is incredible. Thank you SO MUCH for doing this video. Breaking it down even as far as you did into explaining things like the pelvis and how it’s shaped and where it sits naturally was astounding to learn and see. A total game changer. Keep making these amazing videos!
I WAS JUST ABOUT TO START LEARNING ANATOMY TOO WHAT A LIFESAVER
korean artists are a game changer.
About 1 year ago the art game and progression changed. Mogoon,Chyan,OKKU,etc. coloso really changed the game
Tppo,oridays,and noelucc have brought a new style of editing,learning,planning,and a new era of illustration and advanced concepts,at your fingertips.
I would also recommend reading Deep Work by cal newport,really the only things I would recommend from that list if "flow" by mr mihaly or mastery by robert greene,but atomic habits by james clear and deep work by cal newports are must reads. Thanks for amazing content
Thank you so much!
My favorite teachers are proko for basic anatomy, sycra for beginning painting, Mogoon aka jeonghee1414 for character illustration (there are reuploaded twitch vods on YT), Marco Bucci and Krenz for intermediate painting. Most coloso lessons are similar to each other and targeted at beginners so after a certain point you won’t learn anything crazy new, so if u want to learn from them, just pick your favorite illustrator.
Me watching this video: "Wow, this is amazing! Results like that after *two months?* That's so motivating!"
13:10 - "For this part, I've been practicing ~2 hours 45 minutes a day for 46 days!"
"Oh."
16:29 - "I've practiced ~7.5 hours a day for 8 days!"
"Ow... ._."
Still, a lot of very helpful stuff to know. In particular learning anatomy by breaking it up into individual single subjects (torso, specific limb, proportions) and practicing it separately is a game changer, and I hate it that there isn't enough emphasis being given to this in most art tutorials and courses.
I think the time they listed makes all this less daunting, as it feels "realistic?", to how long it should take to get somewhat competent.
im currently doing the box method gotta say it really did help me make my body proportion good i gotta master this for atleast 2 months then i might practice to coloring
Very underrated, and probably one of the most helpful channels. Good video!
I've been using references and breaking it down so I can draw it myself while still using a reference. I wonder if I learn anything from that. I feel like I kind of am because I am understanding how the body moves and works. But watching this video really helped. Breaking down the body and using simplified fundimentals makes me understand even more about the human body.
Every artist has used a reference at some point. It's good to use references & you will learn from it. But at the same time try practicing without one to see just how much you can remember. You'll see progress & become happy with yourself, just keep trying out new things & working hard. 💪💜
9:42
"カジュアル(casual)" is Japanese.
It means thinking flexibly and without being constrained by conventional thinking.
Typically, it is used to transform (deform) a real human body into an animated character.
You're like the number one testimonial for Coloso, I want to sign up to their courses so bad but they are brutally expensive.
the fact that you take the time to learn how to learn effectively, and about overcoming the forgetting curve.. this is some good stuff. 👍🏻 like that’s actually what we need to do besides just drawing.
Hello, I am a Korean student who became a freshman in high school this year When I went to high school, I wanted to draw illustrations for the first time, and that thought led to the idea of becoming an illustrator But I couldn't attend the academy and I taught myself when I watched UA-cam But I didn't know how to draw, and unlike when I was having fun drawing, I didn't get the quality of the painting I wanted, so I was very stressed out and even spent less time drawing However, I came across your video today and learned such a good way to study, so I'm going to apply it from today Thank you so much for posting such a great video. Thank you so much
Thank you so much for this video. I think what I’ve been missing is a dedicated place where I store notes and can revise at any point. I am going to rewatch your video at least 2 more times to take notes because I’m seriously fed up at being fed up when I draw. Thank you for this video and all the resources you referenced. I felt like I was watching a mini colosso course myself lol. I love the concept of calling practice sessions training arcs and gaining exp points.
Side note: I just love how you sound as though you’re always smiling when talking. Your videos are such a gem!
Finally a practical, useful and applicable how to learn anatomy video.
i noticed that i over-simplified a lot of the body structures and it was making my figures look kinda funky, plus i've never really done actual practice/training soooo...
this video made me want to start 🙂
You should definitely add "The Inner Game of Tennis" to that list of books about how to improve. It talks about how getting better at things with external goals requires controlling your inner thought process behind what it means to be good; managing self doubt, being overly critical of your work, overemphasizing the "theory" behind learning rather than experience and practice.
A way to practice how the parts of the body fit to together is not only practicing the parts, but also practice joints, like hips and shoulders. Thats what i use to do tho i havent draw in years so back to basics is really helpful
I have a lot to study now, I love how you explain part by part and show all the time you spend in your progress < 3
This is what i was seeking for. A way of "what i should learn now, and what to do when i'm done learning it?". Thank you author for this video.
i've been trying to practice by myself, and already bought Chyan's course, but your breakdown of what he's teaching helped stopping me from looking too much into the details, and rather see the structure of what he's trying to teach.
it's hard with a full time job, and it seems every art youtuber somehow has all the time in the world to me, so i'm always wondering if you folks have a job or not
(not saying you don't, just that it doesn't seem to be the case)
I enrolled into the class, and I'm very happy with Chyan's style of teaching so far. Motive is important in art.
The rotten part of my brain keeps telling me that this'll take too long to harness & that i wont progress enough like i want to, but the more logical part of my brain knows that it'll be worth it even if i progress slower than i'd like. All i have on my hands right now is time, so i might as well start trying now. As soon as i see that clear progress i'll get a motivation boost. Just gotta stay consistent in the long runs 💪💪
By practicing drawing pelvis i can already draw the torso...this method really help to solve my problem that i had when drawing😊
For anatomy learn to draw anatomy and simplify it to basic shapes (you know take an arm and draw the major muscles and most protuberant bones), for poses learn to draw gesture (free your hand and draw fluently) the struggle comes when stitching those two topics
Oh my god this video actualy comes in clutch. I wanted to learn how to draw New poses so thank you so much ori!
This video convinced me to try it out the class. So far i am liking the fact he draws them out in real time.
Glad you breakdown what you have learned in Chyan's course. I've tried the course and those long videos bored me so much that i didn't retain anything useful. Maybe ill try to pick up again only this part you have covered
i learned more from you in one month than any other tutorial i have ever seen
this is fantastic thank you, I'm no beginner by any means and only recently have really increased in skill. This tut, for me has come at a good time
i like this video so much. and im actually trying my best to follow this example with my own pace, however. i have so many issues getting myself to draw the exercise. i keep cringing at myself
I have always thought that there was something wrong with how I draw anatomy. I didn't know what it was but this tutorial helped me find what I was doing wrong. Tysm!
bro this be timeless i came back after a very very long time.
Lately i found out that i havent tooken the time to actually learn to draw anything so i decided to just restart my art journey! So this video was really helpful!
i started like 3 days ago and my first drawing was Ao Oni! :D but my intention was to draw Enterprise from Azure Lane. 😐
It’s very hard for me to learn new things if I do not have exact instructions. This is literally exactly what I need. Great video
Hi, I'm a programmer and I always want to learn drawing) I'm at the beginning of my journey. I accidentally saw your channel. It's amazing channel. Thank you :)
great video with a lot of details that many UA-cam tutorials miss out on. It cleared all my doubts and gave me a proper guideline to trace to improve my anatomy and sketches.
thank you so much! i had so much trouble putting my anatomy into my drawings since the anatomy i practised were irl references
Omg! I was having the same problem for so long! I tried to draw the whole body but never tried to practice individual parts!
FINALLY!
A "how do you practice" tutorial!
Breaking down the body is a really good tip. I often try to force myself to draw as much of the full body as I can in my illustrations to practice each part, but I find that it takes so much time and makes every part feel lacking. So I've lately been trying to focus on the upper body and I've been noticing some improvement.
Ori be lifesaver, been study for a year doing gestures and stuff, and keep forgetting things easily
i literally just thought about getting back into drawing and this pops up in my
recommended well god, I guess you gave me a sign
Same like you before, I was choosing Chyan's method to study, in Coloso, but somehow I feel that I was too addicting with poses's drawing, and I became useless without poses or references, so I switched to Mogoon's way, is using box method, and I failed also, cuz boxed without pose -> mess. Then I tried to combine them into 1 and I could fix my problem now. Btw, thanks for the tips, really useful for my practicing
I have exactly the same problem with improvement. I hope ill find these lessons helpful
"when i first started my drawings looked like this" *picture* DUDE I HAVE BEEN DRAWING FOR 6 YEARS EVERY DAY AND ITS NOT EVEN CLOSE TO THAT!
SAME OMG😭🙏
Thank you ori, this has been motivational! Thank you for being one of the only sane artists I know
this information is EXTREMELY valuable, I am stuck exactly at the point you were in! thank you!
THANK you so much for this life-saving art father ori!
why is this guy still underrated?! he actually needs more subscribes!
Weird question but your name seemed very familiar and I just had to ask: are you the same Oridays that used to be in Kakage-sensei's stream translator back when he'd do Morning Croquis? If so I have to say, what a small world it is, your art has come a long way!
Ori THANK YOU SO MUCH and what you had teach is so precious seriously man it help to open my mind. The last thing you had said is to never give i keep believing on that currently struggling it at anatomy but man you video dud sure helpz its easy to understand and it show how much effort you did to improve and just to teach us for free. Please dont stop posting toturial videos I am looking forward your getting improve day by day ❤ God bless ❤️❤️
Oof, anatomy, proportions and poses is really hard… but I think it’s slowly getting better at least in some ways. When I looked at the drawings I made 8 months ago I saw how weird they look. Giant head, upper body just slightly longer than the head+neck, legs 3-4 times as long as the upper body and almost as slim as the arms, wonky hands, forgotten fingers, too embarrassed to draw the female parts of the body anatomically accurate, too much smudge shading, weird hair and so on.
It has gotten a bit better over time, I also had a short phase of sketching from references. Also shorter phases of trying to study specific things like the head shape, the hands, the torso etc. But nothing big yet.
One problem I have is that I can’t stay motivated about studying. I suddenly get an idea for a drawing in between, I can’t keep focusing, I draw my idea, I notice the mistakes I made, the cycle repeats.
Now my sketchbook doesn’t really have any more pages and I don’t know yet when I‘m going to buy a new one. I hope I can get myself to use some empty spaces in my old sketchbook to do study drawings because there’s not enough space for more serious drawings…
Hi Ori! I've been thoroughly enjoying your videos; they're both awesome and incredibly insightful. Watching them has ignited a real desire in me to start drawing as well! However, there's a slight hitch - I can't draw to save my life.
During my high school years, I was primarily self-taught in game design and spent a lot of time developing my own games as a hobby. Art has always been on my radar, especially anime-style art, which I find incredibly fascinating, but never had the time to start.
The challenge I'm facing is that my current art skills are at a first-grader level, so I'm not sure where to even begin. You mentioned art like it's a game, so I can say I'm playing for the very first time at level 1. Now, I'm wondering if you have any advice or beginner's guides that could serve as a "starter pack" to help me get me off the ground and gain some momentum.
I want to apply the knowledge and inspiration I've gained from your videos, but my technical skills are holding me back. I would greatly appreciate any guidance you could provide!!!❤
What I did to get better was start drawing basic shapes like circles,squares and lines.After I got comfortable I started drawing 3d shapes like cubes and cylinders.After that I started looking a different tutorials on figure drawing and construction which helped me connect and visualize everything in 3d.Also maybe look into perspective I am nowhere near a expert at it but just understanding that a different angle will make the shape different will improve your art.I was a anti-talent for art not being able to draw a circle and I am nowhere near where I want to be now but I hope this can give you at least some guidance.Also remember to be patient and consistent because art improvement can feel slow sometimes.
personally I think that the most important thing is having fun, especially if you don't have a lot of experience. art is hard and you need to be motivated, if you want to continue doing it. it will take years to be good. you need to not be harsh on yourself, do exercises or look at tutorials for beginners. everyone starts somewhere. I think the good starting point is making copies of art you like, you can change it a bit to your liking. you can trace it, it will train your hand and your lines will become less wobbly (just don't post it and claim it's your original art). there are also exercises with drawing circles and lines, if you're curious google drawabox.
don't do only exercises, don't study all the time. most of your time needs to be spent on making drawings you enjoy or want to make
You are a genius you made a video on thing you train 1 year ago and it's still really really useful
Your guides are excellent. I'd love to see a guide elaborating on some of the basic features of your guides -- you often reference "doing studies" or "studying" a reference, but it would be very helpful to know *exactly* what that looks like on a finer level.
Watching this knowing I’ll never actually study anything
The most important 'skill' I've been teaching myself is to slowly build up the amount of time I can spend working on my art (both free art for fun and practice). I love doing it... in theory. But I am/ have been so critical it costs me a lot mentally do actually do stuff. But I've been teaching myself to enjoy it (working on my mental health and doing a few other tricks) and I'm slowly building up the amount of time I spend a day on my art. Still not 2.5 hours a day but I hope to get there sometime soon.
feels like I'm watching a hero's journey, beautiful stuff 🥲
thank you for the video, I hope I get better now since September this year I started drawing seriously. A pity I can't pay Chyan's course because it costs a hole month's worth of salary in my country
Tysm for making this ori❤ I’m sure one day I will become as good as you are✌️
This has litterly changed my art forever this video made me want to do art again thank you
Thank you Ori last few days i wasnt very good with my anotomy drawing skills thank you for making this vid!
Really will be taking into account the body splitting cause I normally try to practice all of them at the same time 👍
Really useful thanks man I ussally draw the whole body now I see why it’s taking me longer to learn 😂
Another peak ori upload,
Finally saving my stick men art
This one is definitely going to REALLY help me, thank you! 😀👍🏻👍🏻
You gave me tips that no Art Book I've read had. Thank you for this video ❤
Your videos are so, so helpful, man. I really appreciate what you do and thankyou very much for making such videos
I'm really glad I found your channel! I'm just starting in digital art and these are great tools. Thank you!!!
Очень сильно помог в составлении курса для своего обучения, ещё и замотивировал, просто лучший. Спасибо!!!
OMG!!! This is the anatomy practice method that I need. Thank you!
I wish I have time to practice as a 12th grade student admission to a university take all of my time. I will definitely start after everything is sorted out.
Hey this is what i need right now on my anatomy study! :D
The learning nethod is good, making to rotate the anatomy body is made me easy when animate! also i need to simplify shape than tried to look exactly same, like too realism
Dang, I love how you take stuff from Chyan’s course and add your own stuff to it that you learned along the way! Just curious, but does Chyan cover male anatomy and posing as well, or would I have to take a different course or self-study for that part after learning to draw the female?
he doesn't specifically draw males much in his class but he includes them in his class material as examples..and he mentions that its better to draw men to understand the muscles better if I'm remembering correctly.
yeah he said you can draw exclusively females if you want but if you want to draw female characters with alot of muscles you have to draw males its the same as female but in reverse its not too hard if you know anatomy@@Prince8927
Female anatomy isn’t too different from male anatomy, only the musculature volume and fat areas like boobs and hips will be different. If u remember those facts and study a little you should be able to draw male anatomy in no time.
@@exiaax I mean, if we're being real, the very skeletal structure of a woman is different from that of a man, and every single cell in a woman's body is coded differently than that of a man as well, but for the purpose of art, you're probably right. Knowing the differences is probably all that matters, and once you make those changes, you can draw a man instead of a woman! Thanks for the encouragement!
私はイラストレーター志望の日本人です
この動画を見てチャンさんの講座を購入して練習し始めました
とても効果的です
ありがとうございます。
チャンネル登録もしました
i wanna get back into drawing again and your vids are very helpful!
if only you know how much I've been searching for this
Damn just as I was struggling with anatomy
Great vid as always Ori 👍
❤
The way you have consistently been going at learning to draw Ori, it makes me curious: have you have ever read the book that is called The Slight Edge by Jeff Olson?
It is an amazing book that is universally useful and beneficial. I have been using it and it has vastly sped up the process in which I learn to consistently stick with art while learning it.
Thank you so much for the video!❤ Your voice is very relaxing
Now i can begin my training !
Me with my autistic brain with an iq of the room temperature of Alaska: Yeah I can't focus on the details of the body 😅
Same here, I still can draw well but only front poses up to the knee and arm
This is incredibly helpful!
I was wondering if you plan on doing a video on how to to the head, I always seem to struggle with the shapes involved
I litteraly dreamt of you posting an anatomy video🎉