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#art lesson
art-tnt · 1 month
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Color Plan and Theory with Tim Mcburnie
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thegalleonsnest · 8 months
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Some notes I wrote to help a friend understand color theory/shading and how to really go for it.
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monlikol · 1 month
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Was asked on twt how I make the lineart so soft and cool looking, here’s a little tutorial featuring my OC Imras
Bright bottom layer in pin light + dark top layer usually works the best, but you can experiment and do any other combination!
Works really good with sketches and textured brushes, makes stronger lines pop out more
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z3llous · 2 years
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Art Lesson: Line Confidence & Shapes
As requested by @blondcurly​
This is focused on the basics for people learning to draw, if you’d like something for the more experienced feel free to send an ask or hop into my dms
---LINE CONFIDENCE---
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Line confidence is really important for honing ones art skills. It means the artist doesn’t need many lines for whatever it is they are drawing and usually improves the quality of said drawing.
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That being said, the scratchy look can be good for specific things like making something appear creepy, show action, or look intense. But I recommend avoiding that unless you want everything to look creepy or intense.
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Ways you can gain more line confidence is to make it impossible to take the lines you’ve drawn back. 
If you’re drawing on paper you can use a pen instead of a pencil. That way you get used to committing to the lines you’ve draw and begin to draw better lines. I recommend either a ball point pen or a sharpie.
For digital art practice drawing without using the back button or eraser.
---SHAPES---
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Anatomy is hard so it’s a good idea to practice breaking the body into shapes. Any shapes you want. If you like a softer art style keep the shapes round and if you like sharp then do angular shapes. It is art after all, not science. So have fun.
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There are no rules when it comes to the shapes in art, it’s all a matter of style. If you want a more realistic style keep the shapes close in size to how they are in reality. If you want something more cartoony exaggerate those shapes and feel free to push the boundaries.
That’s all for now. I’ll gladly answer questions in the comments below and to any questions in reblogs
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pagansphinx · 3 months
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Édouard Manet (French, 1832-1883) • Nana • 1887 • Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany
Manet was an important painter known for shaping the transition from realism to impressionism. He painted in the "alla prima# style using broad strokes of oil paint and capturing his subjects in an immediate and authentic manner.
Alla prima is an Italian phrase that means ‘at first attempt’. It refers to a wet-on-wet approach whereby wet paint is applied to previous layers of still-wet paint, often in a single sitting. Over the years, the technique has been adopted and adapted by artists from Van Gogh to Velázquez. – Artists & Illustrators
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thepaintedroom · 4 months
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Sébastien-Charles Giraud (French, 1819-1892) • Painting Princess Mathilde’s Conservatory in the Mansion on Rue de Courcelles, Paris • 1864
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JULES DESFOSSÉ FACTORY (1851-1947) • WALLPAPER – Winter Garden • France • 1853
Princess Mathilde, cousin of Napoleon III, was a key figure in the society life of the Second Empire. After an unhappy marriage to the wealthy Prince Demidoff, she settled in Paris where she lived lavishly, entertaining all the intellectuals, politicians and artists of the day in the drawing rooms of her luxurious mansion on Rue de Courcelles. Many of her guests - such as Flaubert, the Goncourt brothers, Sainte-Beuve and Ernest Renan – paid tribute to her generosity.The views of the princess’s home painted by Charles Giraud are meticulous renderings of her living environoment. She liked to welcome her friends in the conservatory, depicted in this painting with a soft light filtering through the exotic vegetation on the walls and a variety of furniture pieces and objects taking up the center of the room: a table, a Louis XV armchair, a Moorish pedestal table, some oriental vases and precious objects of all origins – an eclectic selection, therefore, that is highly representative of the spirit of the times.
Conservatories came into fashion with the London Exhibition of 1851 when the glass roof of the Crystal Palace caused a sensation. The wallpaper displayed here, designed by Edouard Muller for the Desfossé factory and entitled Winter Garden is another reflection of this. Jules Desfossé made a significant contribution to the revival of panoramic wallpapers but abandoned the series of scenes telling a story in favor of large landscapes and decorations which he considered worthy of great paintings. – Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris
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rainwalker007 · 1 month
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Lesson 31: An Introduction to Line Quality and Line Weight
Before moving on to drawing scenes, we are going to take a little detour into Line Quality and Line Weight. We will talk a little about Dynamic sketching then move on to all the factors that controls Line weight and line control on an object. Then we will examine few examples on each factor. Finally we will do few examples with all the factors combined along with deciding how to use line weight to create a focal point in a line art drawing.
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I am having IMMENSE DIFFICULTY with proportions of the body. Any tips, tricks, ideas, or references to share?
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I will accept homework!
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sambeawesome · 9 months
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Don't want to sign up to my membership but still want a tutorial? For the first time ever, you can get an online class from me where I take you step-by-step how to draw this winter landscape!
❄️Get it Here!
Perfect for beginners wanting to have fun and get creative!
Ko-Fi | Twitter | YouTube | Art Tutorials & Resources
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rsbexpressions · 4 months
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Very Detailed info. An awesome read. S/o to @kemetic-dreams for making this post.
The application of knowledge has power.
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art-tnt · 2 months
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Aaron’s Art Tips #17 What I Carry In My Painting Pack
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thegalleonsnest · 1 year
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The drew this about a month for a friend to help them understand wings and talons more, and it turned into a whole class panel for like 30 minutes. Figured I share it here with ya’ll!
This is definitely more geared towards how I approach birds, but, the idea is still the same.
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kpop-bbg · 7 months
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jeffreyhuntart · 5 months
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Clip Studio Paint Animated Tree Mood Music #clipstudio #filmora
Clip Studio Paint Animated Glowing Tree Mood Music #clipstudio #clipstudiopaint #filmora A new clip studio paint animation created today using filmora. The scene is a glowing tree with some playful fairies staged in a magical environment concept.
Clip Studio Paint Animated Tree Mood Music #clipstudio #filmora Clip Studio Paint Animated Glowing Tree Mood Music #clipstudio #clipstudiopaint #filmora A new clip studio paint animation created today using filmora. The scene is a glowing tree with some playful fairies staged in a magical environment concept. My Books Concept Art Idea Book (2017) – https://www.amazon.com/dp/B074PFSG31 Concept…
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View On WordPress
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pagansphinx · 4 months
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George Bellows (American, 1882–1925) • Paddy Flannigan • 1908
When George Bellows arrived in New York City from Ohio in 1904, he was inside a "melting pot" of diverse faces and traditions. In the immigrant neighborhoods, life bustled in color, often confronting Bellows with a slap-on-the-face reality he'd not witnessed beforehand.
Bellows's primary reason for relocating from Columbus, Ohio to New York City was his determination to become a professional artist. He enrolled at the New York School of Art, which was nearby to where he was living. There, under the guidance of Robert Henri, Bellows pursued painting the gritty reality that was around him. This attitude toward unconventional subject matter was to later be termed "SocialRealism". – P.S. (sources: Metropolitan Museum of Art; Wikipedia)
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New York, New York • 1911 • National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
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dasnono · 9 months
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Drawing 8 Different Textures #10
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