What a legend, always a pleasure to watch him with his craft. Rest in Peace.
@Moebius00718 күн бұрын
좋은 강의 감사합니다. 언제나 그립습니다~!
@ZesDem18 күн бұрын
He was the best!
@aadipie15 күн бұрын
Thank you. These are very helpful
@ZubairSheikh-zf9tm5 күн бұрын
is she translating her, or asking questions?
@quelquunici39295 күн бұрын
thanks
@rindenauge342618 күн бұрын
KJG using a photo reference? That's a first for me. I've never seen him doing this.
@errvega270517 күн бұрын
He did it for characters he didnt know about on comissions
@rindenauge342617 күн бұрын
@@errvega2705 I see, that explains it. That guy really didn't seem to need a reference for anything. It's a bit discouraging to watch him.
@TheMediaMachine17 күн бұрын
Even when I haven't seen him do this before, I knew he uses references. Or how do you think he got good? He had to use references and draw many things, get to know things so his mind had a library of information. Everyone mistake is they make tehir heroes as super heroes, like they don't follow same path as everyone else. They do, it's just they did more than anyone else would have done.
@rindenauge342617 күн бұрын
@@TheMediaMachine Of course he used references before, I never claimed the opposite. However some people just learn faster than others. It"s not all just about how much work you put in when things like photographic memories exist. To think everyone could draw like KJG is just naive.
@djo-dji601817 күн бұрын
@@rindenauge3426 He didn't need references because he studied references for many years... yet any time he had to draw something outside the limits of his personal interpretation/style, he obviously needed references again. And there are plenty of artists with no photographic memory who can draw better than him. KJG was an intelligent man and a drawing machine, but his art has little emotional power.