Great great great tutorial!!!!!! what temperature would be the dark halftone just at the edge of the terminator? it's still in the light but turning away from it, so less saturated and cooler????
@xinglin962 сағат бұрын
this is so helpful to me,thank you
@MFDOOOOM6 сағат бұрын
I'm craving some new courses Mr Bucci, any planned in the coming weeks/months ?
@itarfer17 сағат бұрын
Just fyi, the term Caucasian is racist.
@TypicalEveningPictures17 сағат бұрын
I’m a cg guy who watches these to be a better painter so the Blender stuff is sooooo helpful. Really makes me remember I can use the cg to help me learn drawing haha
@fuzzydragons21 сағат бұрын
Blender is evil...but this was very helpful 😀
@MillywiggZ2 сағат бұрын
Please explain why Blender is evil.
@Master_Mirror1305Күн бұрын
Did... did.. I just actually comprehended a topic that always wanted to understand better in a random Sunday morning after I woke up just saying to myself "let's see what is this weeks video about?" ?!?!
@greenmouliКүн бұрын
Have you looked at color models that are in alignment with human perception? Like LCH, LAB, or Google's HCT (though there isn't a way to view this in apps as it's just designed to cater to UI designers) - all these are in a way based on the Munsell color model.
@ericmasker6330Күн бұрын
"I've got a little flesh ball I can light," I murmured to myself, covered in Cheeto dust and shame.
@esuramanКүн бұрын
My name is Kira Yoshikage. I am 33 years old.
@matthewrausch1837Күн бұрын
This is such an amazing video. I seen so many art tutorial videos and I rarely see people talk about line of actions and gestures. Mostly in stylized art styles like animation. It is refreshing to see a video like this. In all honestly. I think this is the easiest way to do construction in my personal opinion. I also think it makes your art look move lively and have a flow. Something I've been always wanting to achieve. I am no teacher nor have a job at Disney or anything but I legit recommend drawing like this practicing these techniques myself. If I ever become an art teacher I will defiantly show this video. Heck I feel like drawing this way is great for illustration as well. Not just animating. I am so happy a video like this exists. I think many people can benefit from this.
@spookyzeta2 күн бұрын
isn't ryerson university an art school though q-q
@ziviler.teebeutel2 күн бұрын
This was just the tutorial I needed! Thank you so much! 🥰
@achuuuooooosuu2 күн бұрын
Marco's built. Something you can admire. Beneficial for studying yourself for anatomy.
@quietestkitten2 күн бұрын
I learned so much every time I watch you make art! Thank you so much
@Spherius2 күн бұрын
Time to add realistic hands to a simple character
@stinkleboinkle3472 күн бұрын
Always adored this sort of painting. Super happy to find a tutorial on it! Helps so much to see the thought process behind it all.
@jimmydragonstudios2 күн бұрын
Once again, another golden nugget in this grand space that is KZfaq. Thank you much for this wonderful video that makes this easy to understand. ❤
@darkknight43533 күн бұрын
How to get this simplified version of color wheel like in the video ?
@darkknight43533 күн бұрын
Man... Lose some weight.. it's not healthy
@brylidan3 күн бұрын
imagine stoping someone at a party to take a photo of a great half lock fold
@adapixei8363 күн бұрын
Is it also true for black skin tones? I often see blueish highlights in African portraits, I think their skin might be more reflective? It's hard to understand and it makes me more stressed to paint!
@etttie13 күн бұрын
Great
@JerryLecor3 күн бұрын
Marco your videos are always a breath of fresh air, I hope you know that.
@user-ko9hb5wu4l3 күн бұрын
in my experience Less saturate in warm color = more tends to cool color so using grey in shadow with warm base color can also work. It doesn't mean that your color wheel should go toward cooler hue in some situation this is definitely one of the most valuable color tutorials on youtube
@neilagangitlog3 күн бұрын
What about darker flesh tones?
@photonsonpixels3 күн бұрын
Marco, thank you for your educational tutorials. What application are you using for drawing in this video? Jorge.
@razputin92673 күн бұрын
Alternatively you could go into your computer's accessibility settings and switch the colour filters to greyscale. Maybe unreliable, but it is a bit useful imo.
@Heisenburg173 күн бұрын
Thank you for showing this, nice hack!
@damunda99633 күн бұрын
Very clear and beautiful explanation! Thank you!
@kitchensinktree57243 күн бұрын
Forget flesh tones, this helped me with all my coloring so much??? You explain things in a way that just makes so much sense and I appreciate that so much. Lighting in art feels like common sense when you hear it but I've always struggled with it. Thank you so much for this video, it really helped a lot!
@vivilustrarte3 күн бұрын
Just when you thought there was no better way to explain colors than his old videos of Ambient Light and Occlusion... He's a master and I'm so happy to have access to his knowledge ✨
@danielwilliams71613 күн бұрын
If you find yourself having trouble with values in the "shadow" side, remember that if a surface has any value above black, it's because there's a light source on it. Figure out the properties of that light source and you're back in business. A shadow is the absence of light. No light, no information. I prefer to think in terms of lit (when the form is facing the light) and unlit (when the form turns away from a light source) rather than light and shadow.
@joemoya97433 күн бұрын
Excellent explanation.
@markanthonyart3 күн бұрын
what's really gunna bake your noodle is when using HSL mode. Adding saturation to a yellow makes it lighter... adding saturation to a blue make it darker.
@RainerXGaming_173 күн бұрын
Today i realised i cant bend my fingers backwards without pushing or pulling on them
@raptorboss66883 күн бұрын
This goes completely in line with the lighting mentor video where he talked about the shadows not actually being “colored” but the shadows being a secondary light source aka (the ambient light.) so it makes sense changing the environment doesn’t change the light side in blender but the shadows because that’s what it’s illuminating! :DD
@janosik49843 күн бұрын
Cool but I don't get it.
@orbatos3 күн бұрын
Try doing it then. That is how most people learn.
@janosik49843 күн бұрын
@@orbatos Doing what? Repeating his movements?
@orbatos2 күн бұрын
@@janosik4984 No, you don't need to do that. Did you listen to the video? He repeatedly mentioned you don't need to do exactly what he's doing, it's about the relationships of colours in a scene.
@ander_studios_yt90443 күн бұрын
YOU SHOULD LEARN TO DRAW HANDS, NOW!
@muneebkhaki3 күн бұрын
Hey! How is your blender color wheel square (instead of circle) ?
@pezorama3 күн бұрын
Excellent video! Thank you for the insight. Flesh absorbs a lot of ambient color and it's something people forget sometimes. The real question is how do we apply this to red, green, blue, purple skinned characters?
@MrEllinan3 күн бұрын
The same. You should ask yourself: is this color cooler or warmer? So if your base color is red, your ambient color is blue and your light is something in between (neither too cool or too warm or just white), then values in the light should be pretty similar to the base color, after all they all are part of the same 'family'. The shadows are effectively the opposite, as the video states; is not necessarily a specific blue rather a cool color, for instance purple compared to red is cooler, and purple is warmer than blue and so on. In a nutshell first think of the main composition: what is the subject, where is it placed and under which circumstances, then picking colors to fit your vision is relatively simple.
@pezorama3 күн бұрын
@@MrEllinan excellent tips. Thank you
@SimonTheSorcerer873 күн бұрын
This is incredible, changed the way I think! Presumably this applies to all materials?!
@SyoDraws3 күн бұрын
Yes, although the details will vary according to how each material scatters and reflects light.
@BukaVkamil3 күн бұрын
I think i understand it but i have a hard time choosing my colors since my drawing program doesnt have a color wheel but a triangle or a square. I feel like im shifting the colors in a wrong direction.
@SyoDraws3 күн бұрын
The principles will apply to whatever color choosing model you use. The base colors, influenced by the lighting, will tend toward the light based on its intensity. For example, if you have a yellow streetlight shining on a character with blue skin, the lit part will look a little more "yellow." Just adjust the hue across the shorter distance according to color order (e.g., instead of going from blue to purple, to red, to orange, to yellow, instead go from blue to green to teal to yellow). Does that help?
@PriscillaCash3 күн бұрын
This was incredible! Thank you!
@micmacha3 күн бұрын
I hadn't actually considered how the average background color contributed to the shadow. That's very clever.
@glorytoukraine55243 күн бұрын
You and Lighting Mentor are the reason I understand color now
@micmacha3 күн бұрын
Cheating with Blender? Waaaaaay ahead of you.
@Chinornor3 күн бұрын
Pretty easy understanding the cool shadow color, than warm shadow. When working with warm, the whole piece tends to go monochromatic to an extent. I really need to get an iPad honestly, this will help me work anytime. Thank you Marco
@antonioblanco30863 күн бұрын
Thank you so much Marco! When you make an illustration with multiple objects and forms, how do you apply this? And what about schemes of color like triads or split complementary?
@deadhouse38893 күн бұрын
Beat for beat this is how I figured out shadows which is paramount in the process. This is the most important video any artist can watch that works with color. It's everything.