Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Perspective 3: Contrast and Aerial

The air around us is not totally transparent. When you look at something that far enough, a few hundred feet perhaps, you will see a kind of white haze, especially in a humid environment. If you look at faraway mountains, this becomes very apparent. You can use this in a painting or drawing by reducing contrasts for distant objects. The colors also appears "washed out".

On Youtube:



For all of you Mac lovers (.mp4):


Click To Play


And for the Windows followers:

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Perspective 2: Using Color

Certain colors are interpreted by the brain in such a way that the items they're painted on appear to be placed further away. Usually, colder colors are associated with distance and warmer colors suggest proximity. This doesn't always work, but it can be used to add to the perspective effect of a painting or drawing.

On Youtube:


For the Mac afficionados (.mp4):


Click to play

And for the windows groupies:

Click to play

Wednesday, February 20, 2008

Perspective: I hate it too!

This is the first in a series about perspective. I tried to keep it as non-technical as possible. We'll see if I succeeded!

In Youtube:


For the Mac afficionados (.mp4) and itunes


Click to play


And for the windows Gumbies:

Click to play

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Onions and garlic

A quick demo of a still life drawing.

YouTube version:


for the mac world out there (.mp4)


Click To Play

and for the windows crowd (.wmv)

Click To Play

Thursday, January 31, 2008

Composition: Different formats

This is a simple exercise to learn how to fit a 3D model onto a 2D support

On YouTube:



For the Mac (mp4):


Click To Play


For the PC, higher definition:

Click To Play

Sunday, January 27, 2008

Format changes

Sorry for the reposting on the blog. I recompiled the videos and the feeds got republished. So your videos might reload (maybe even twice!). I wont do it again...

Tuesday, January 8, 2008

Portrait Drawing 2: Using visual observation

In this video, I explain how to draw a portrait from observation only, without using a "method".
I make reference to this book, by Betty Edwards: "Drawing on the right side of the brain"

On YouTube:


In high definition (mp4):


Click To Play