The level of art talent in China is insane. It feels like you could shake a bush there, and two or three art gods would pop out. Incredible work!
@SuperIdol-ky3kjКүн бұрын
Fr
@dakshajasingh2529Күн бұрын
that is a really nice way to put it ... i love ur comment man!😂
@ArtiskoollllКүн бұрын
Maybe I should go to china
@MargaretS-e1gКүн бұрын
Well they have 2 billion of the total population of the world, so they're going to have a lot of talent lol.
@McCloud23892Күн бұрын
Chinese do great art but there’s amazing Artist all accross the world.
@asphyxiia-Күн бұрын
This is a great eye-opener. I would like to help with some search terms to copy and paste: 绘画过程 - painting process 绘画教程 - painting tutorial 绘画参考 - painting reference 绘画日常 - daily painting 人体解剖 - human anatomy 速涂过程 - speed paint 材质教程 - material tutorial 透视练习 - perspective practice 透视 - perspective 新手学画画 - learn to draw for beginners 过程图 - process diagrams 插画学习 - illustration learning 插画教程 - illustration tutorial 素描 - sketch
@zulsolarКүн бұрын
Not all heroes wear capes. Thank you.
@tiitussaukko4645Күн бұрын
Thank you so much!!!
@samdoesartsКүн бұрын
This is helpful!
@J-GosephКүн бұрын
As a Spanish speaker, I say thank you.
@jeynaiiКүн бұрын
I hope ur pillow is nice and cold tonight! thank you!
@victhatgirlwhodrawsКүн бұрын
I've been on RedNote for a while and the competition for art is FIERCE
@hajimehinata5854Күн бұрын
Stress ofc
@McCloud2389212 сағат бұрын
Just because is fierce doesn't mean you can't create and learn everyday
@SaikoThorns2 сағат бұрын
Nah there is no competition, just vibes and a lot of learning
@diabolicalfoxСағат бұрын
There's no competition, just the Chinese wiping the floor with every other artist in the world 😂
@RobertaDogbeyКүн бұрын
The fact that I got a rednote ad before this video makes this better
@DeletiriumКүн бұрын
"Targeted advertising is so based. Late stage capitalism really understands me. Privacy is cringe."
@v-buckschan111Күн бұрын
You're one step ahead of us
@madaxgaming6405Күн бұрын
It's SO funny that before i always got Tiktok ads but now it's allá Rednote ads 😂 the same format too lol.
@tomoyochyanКүн бұрын
there's been aloooot rednote ads on yt when tiktok got "banned" 😂
@sS0O0L16 сағат бұрын
now you got two
@nycsim-r8tКүн бұрын
Can we talk about how technically adept Asian artists are? This isn't just a Chinese thing. You see this throughout Asia including Korea, Japan, Vietnam, etc... While some Westerners may say that Asian artists are not creative, I beg to differ. The creativity is off the charts. I'm glad Rednote is showcasing how good Chinese/Asian artists are.
@meanncat3050Күн бұрын
To be fair a LOT of Americans especially art snobs only see anime and manga [a very very tiny portion of anime and manga] so they just assume assume assume. One time I watched like a a documentary or vlog or whatever it was of an art class in japan, and holy hell....the talent! Not to mention the art study challenges are much bigger on asian centered social media. I'd say even more than america.
@Raimu_uКүн бұрын
@meanncat3050 I wouldn't say a lot, maybe some and anyone who likes art doesn't just see anime and manga, so this comment makes no sense. Go to a professional art school and it will n be more challenging
@null644Күн бұрын
I think it has to do with Asia's rigorous education system and culture in general, like Asian culture puts a lot of emphasis on success in all aspects of studies, not just sciences/math. Western Art school does go by fundamentals but the education system isn't so intense.
@DL-idkКүн бұрын
@@null644I honestly cannot agree. 90% of my art classes and PE classes had been taken by math teachers and English teachers from elementary school to high school. The thing is, the only people who are sharing their arts are the masters. You won’t see as many noobs posting in Asian as in the west. Western kids are much more comfortable with posting even when they are still learning. But when an Asian kid doesn’t feel being good enough at something, THEY WILL NEVER POST! And most of the time they will not feel good enough unless they’ve become an absolute master. This is just the Asian art version of survival bias.
@bubblesparksКүн бұрын
I mean.. even van gogh was inspired by the japanese style painting
@-cloxd-22 сағат бұрын
I think this is the first time in history that Sam is actually impressed by every single art piece
@KUR0doesgachaКүн бұрын
“WE LOVE YOU SAM” we all say in unison
@S1llyr3tКүн бұрын
WE LOVE YOU SAM!!!
@juliaobko8369Күн бұрын
WE LOVE YOU SAM!!!!!
@marcy003Күн бұрын
WE LOVE YOU SAM!!
@autumnliluКүн бұрын
WE LOOVEEEE YOUU SAMM!!!
@kookooartstudio8363Күн бұрын
WE LOVE YOU SAM!!!
@VoixsuКүн бұрын
Sam's motivation is motivating me lol. Explains why artists like Wlop & Guweiz are so good.
@lonestarr149018 сағат бұрын
Frankly, it makes it less obvious for me how they got so popular. I mean, how do you manage to stick out when there's hundreds or even thousands of others who are more or less on the same level as you?
@biazacha15 сағат бұрын
@@lonestarr1490striking and consistent art style. According to my friends that grew up in China and Japan that hardest part is break the technical conditioning and apply it on your terms - basically knowing the theory enough to be comfortable breaking it when it suits you.
@meptune0335Күн бұрын
was literally just about to go draw. you’re a huge inspiration for me sam! keep it up!
@ChantelleArtsКүн бұрын
sam's mum managing the account is honestly so cute! tempted to make an account just to support sam's mum really 😂
@vilde6408Күн бұрын
Wait what? It is? Thats so cute
@humanos73749 сағат бұрын
11:48
@lemonstarbooКүн бұрын
小红书 has so much more diverse art and a lot more fundamentals than TikTok... I love it for that, and I preferred using it ever since I got it last year.
@witcheryeКүн бұрын
I wish I had an art education from childhood like Sam did, but at the same time, when he talks about it it seems like it was a little stressful, IDK, but I admire his knowledge
@DebTheDevastatorКүн бұрын
Yeah, I feel the same. Like I wish my parents had taken my interest as seriously as Sam's did, but at the same time, the rigorous dedication may have destroyed my passion.
@witcheryeКүн бұрын
@@DebTheDevastator just shows how passionate about art he is
@ThegaydisasterКүн бұрын
@@DebTheDevastator you have google , you can always teach yourself now without being traumatized
@akuma1362Күн бұрын
@@DebTheDevastator i didnt get any too, infact my parents EVEN as a grown person (30) still prohibit me from doing art. But I didnt care. I think that im not living my life if I took a different path. People will say but those path makes you more money or you will find the passion eventually ( in different field) . Perhaps? maybe others can give it up but I cant. Why? . Because I never had the privileged and had a easy start but I got here. Im not the next revolutionary artist or what ever. BUT IT TOOK ME YEARS , self teaching my self, being broke and cant afford online art class tutorial because everything is behind a payed wall. Sure im always going to be bitter, some people had it better than me, got to that part faster than me, wealth, supportive family. But now youre telling me, its too hard maybe i should stop? no. Sam can do what th F he wants, proko can sit on his chair, sip his wine and get thousands of passive income from his art tutorials, and ill still be learning and pushing even if I reach 50 one day. I dont want to give it up. I dont believe in luck, but hardwork will pay off for sure. We can be bitter about it guys, but fck it. Be angry and realize you have it harder but use that anger to push you further. If you want to keep continuing this path ofcourse
@mrreemann8313Күн бұрын
highly likely that Sam's childhood art education would be soul-crushing and mind-numbing and he's only able to laugh about it in hindsight. I do agree with Sam that western education doesn't focus enough on "hard" skills across the board and isn't rigorous enough about embedding fundamental skills/knowledge for a discipline like art. I don't think that Western society should flip flop hard to China's way of doing things, involving 8 (OR MORE) hour school days plus homework, as well as potentially 6 day school weeks.
@chrissketches4357Күн бұрын
Another thing I find pretty cool is that in some of those tutorials, they even give the courtesy of showing what brush they use for each panel. I really appreciate that. Another China W
@mrpurple11Күн бұрын
As someone from South America, there's no W or L because it's another "war" between giants stroking each other. It doesn't really pertain to you or your craft.
@KeaStarfireКүн бұрын
The amount of seriously talented individuals on that app is INSANE.
@ArtinworlddКүн бұрын
Sam is the only Artist that can make me wanna be a nerd in art Love you Sam❤
@paperknigth2263Күн бұрын
8:10 When you see a tangerine so well drawn that it becomes the best orange you have ever seen in your life.
@blessing_ify15 сағат бұрын
Tangerine and orange?😂
@Odincraft-j6vКүн бұрын
Welp, it's official. I'm getting on the next plane to China to learn from these incredible artists.
@erdongchen082315 сағат бұрын
直接在bilibili网站就可以学习到了,里面是各行各业的技术教程。
@someoneyoudonthavetoworryabtКүн бұрын
Believe it or not Rednote is the most wholesome and non toxic community I have ever found
@miracookie44413 сағат бұрын
Yeah, because Rednote actually means "little red book of mao" and the censor is strong with this one :) because the CCP wants it to be like this. Ofc you can say that Mao is great, and it was totally valid that he let chinese starve and destroy the chinese culture. Just don't post any critic of Mao or the CCP.
@jodyangelКүн бұрын
I remember doing studies like these in Middle School, High School, and College. But that was back in the 90s and early 2000s. I don’t know how art is taught currently in the USA. I definitely want to get back into studying like this.
@valerievankerckhove9325Күн бұрын
I joined Xiaohongshu a couple months ago because of artists on KZbin gushing over the drawing tutorials there. Now it's filled with Chinese and Americans comparing their budgets. x'D
@mrpurple11Күн бұрын
Their budgets?
@valerievankerckhove932523 сағат бұрын
@@mrpurple11 They're comparing how much they make and spend. Over on the Chinese side, they call it the “Great China-USA Accounts Comparisons."
@jiaxii13 сағат бұрын
@@valerievankerckhove9325oh echt, ik heb dat nog niet gezien maar da’s echt vreemd 😭😭
@Gardennk13 сағат бұрын
Please tell me, is it available on android or iphone? I'm going to get a new one, don't want to get it wrong @-@
@valerievankerckhove932511 сағат бұрын
@ I think it's available on both android and iphone.
@TalonFredricksКүн бұрын
10:09 i believe thats for self taught artist mainly, for people in art school there is a lot more attention to the fundamentals than most self taught artist.
@null644Күн бұрын
Yeah I think a lot of people who had that education available to them are just as good, not necessarily that Western art school doesn't teach fundamentals. It's just that majority of younger people are self-taught now and didn't go to art school and therefore jump straight to stylized art instead of the fundamentals. Education in all aspects is a lot more rigorous in Asia lol so it only makes sense that they're better at drawing.
@lockm7380Күн бұрын
Western Europe is even worse, people in art schools are "taught" to focus on expression and ideas with little to no attention of fundamentals skill. Doubt most teachers here would even be admitted to an american artschool, let alone a chinese one. Ateliers are the only ones keeping the knowledge alive.
@comicalmustachetwirlingvillianКүн бұрын
i tried following the art tutorials on there about a month ago and was so confused 😭😭 i think their immense talent just intimidated me lol overall, this was a great video and i definitely watched the entire thing already!
@nickorange488123 сағат бұрын
take it little by little
@AlexLionson19 сағат бұрын
Well, it's just that this "tutorials" are completely useless unless you draw for 10 like years, you have to be really good to understand and follow it. I draw for 16 years, trust me. Just study fundamentals.
@lonestarr149017 сағат бұрын
What @AlexLionson said: a breakdown of a coloring process isn't exactly a tutorial. It's more of a, "here's how I do it. Maybe you can adopt some of it into your process." Take the one about coloring the shirt for instance. The actual hard stuff that requires the most knowledge and skills all happens in the very first and second step (given that the sketch in the first step isn't traced, of which I'm not convinced). There all the form definition happens, informed by knowledge about anatomy and how clothing folds work. Everything after that is refinement - still interesting from a technical point of view, if you're looking for how to efficiently create certain effects. But nothing from which you can infer any fundamental skills as a beginner. Same goes for the tangerine and the portrait study. There are very few actual tutorials shown in this video (like the one where she measures the head proportions - that one's conveying an actual technical approach on a fundamental level).
@Skykristal12 сағат бұрын
11:10 probably one of the best foreshortenings I've ever seen. Rednote is so so good, really. The art on there actually tickles my brain. Could watch it for hours.
@alhamdulillah9176Күн бұрын
i remember downloading rednote for the first time and realising how superior the art on there is. completely mind blown!
@ByronWrightJrКүн бұрын
I love seeing great artwork from artist because it inspires me so much to want to learn more and to constantly get better.
@exclamatio.nКүн бұрын
5:49 aaa, i’m a huge fan of LQY, so happy to see them featured in sam’s video!!
@victorsegura3670Күн бұрын
¡Gracias!
@DamselReviewsКүн бұрын
art here (in australia) is more theory work than it is practice, i took studio art in high school for two years and all i did was paint a pretty background and a very stylized bird as my final piece. we were never taught the basics of art, we only focused on dead artists and their techniques instead of actually learning how to do art studies. my art teachers were actually very upset that i drew in the anime/manga style but they never taught me how to do realism or art studies to get out of that habit. i was just insulted and talked down for it.
@lonestarr149017 сағат бұрын
Same experience for me in Germany: went to "art school" as a teen where they didn't teach us anything; they just provided materials and equipment and let us draw and paint whatever we want, then they sent our pieces to some strange competitions, where people wearing wooden jewelry decided on the winners. I even won two or three prices over the years and still don't have a clue what for. My art didn't improve in the slightest during those years. My mom eventually let me quit after I begged long enough (the prices won surely prolonged the process). Later on, I chose art class as a major in highschool. Same thing you described: study the old masters, do some expressionism pieces of your own, etc. On top of that, write pages upon pages of art interpretation slop so the teacher has something to grade. Surely, there were lessons about perspective for instance. But it all focused on how they figured it out during the renaissance. We did maybe one exercise where we drew lines on images of old masterworks. But that was about the extent of actually practicing the fundamentals. I took me will into my 20's until I leaned that there's a distinctive set of art fundamentals from KZbin. I'm now in my late thirties and finally I'm reading the right books and doing all those exercises and studying I could and should have been doing from the age of 12 or 13. I feel so cheated.
@Saga_Anserum4 сағат бұрын
This was my (American) experience until high school. In my last year, I took the most basic art course they offered, and the teacher was actually pretty good! She taught us about drawing from observation. Unfortunately, a lot of people in that class were just seniors trying to get an art credit (technically, I was one of them, but I was actually interested in learning about art so I'm not counting myself)
@HaileyRosenauКүн бұрын
I love how beautifully precise but also stylized the art is
@maivyahliКүн бұрын
Please dissect more Rednote videos in the future. This is gold right here ✨✨
@anonymous-q9g17 сағат бұрын
I had absolutely no idea you grew up in China. Don’t know how I didn’t realize until now- I’ve been a fan of your channel since it started- but yeah! You learn something new every day I guess :)
@AkagamiShanks141Күн бұрын
After a day of suffering, your notification is the only thing that puts a smile on my face. Thank you man
@MoranaPetrusic7 минут бұрын
I love how they are focused on being good tehnically, need more of that here
@Mr-ratartКүн бұрын
This is getting weirder and weirder.. everytime I have my notebook in my hands and am about to study, you post. I swear to God, every single time. How is this possible
@mariebunny14 сағат бұрын
Congratulations, Sam. This is how we all feel looking at your art 😄
@draftkingsleyКүн бұрын
Once I downloaded rednote and started looking at art, I knew within a few minutes that I could just keep scrolling at all of the amazing art forever. So I had to limit myself.
@lionandkitsuneКүн бұрын
I always love to see Asian art, many people from those countries make art really creative and really beautiful. I downloaded this app months ago thanks to another artist suggesting this app to get inspiration.
@Gardennk13 сағат бұрын
Does it work on both iphone and android?
@angelesc6059Күн бұрын
That's exactly what I thought when I first downloaded the app like the people there are so good!! It's just masterpiece after masterpiece 😭💖
@AIIuminiumКүн бұрын
Legitimately cried from how good the art is. I want to learn chinese now.
@Cut3_N00dl3sКүн бұрын
I think we all need a video of Sam just picking up a pen and doing an art study. Like, a full length one of him just drawing and yapping
@ZeldiaKnight-ok4ng15 сағат бұрын
I feel I saw art so godtier my eyes feel blessed like the comparison of ticktock and red note on art is like heaven and hell. You know when I look at ticktock and see how prepositions and all lack something, it doesn't in Chinese art. Damn anyone else feel like a newbie watching these pros?
@Yui.0-018 сағат бұрын
RedNote is full of amazing artists ! Definitly going to check it out !!
@catdad626Күн бұрын
The level of dedication is incredible. Also very daunting for myself who has almost zilch art education whatsoever and hasnt picked up a pencil in a year. However i am proud of myself for serendipitously performing the ball shadow study on my own back back then, i had a stress ball randomly and decided to draw it pretty much like that to learn values. Didn't come out anywhere as good but hey... Like others have said, the pressure to stand out and be a master, not just proficient, seems very different from the west. Whether it's culture or a numbers game. But maybe it's not that different. Im glad I recently started learning on HelloChinese, hopefully the two cultures become less sequestered and can interact more as rednote gains more traction. Speaking for myself ive never had a motivation to study chinese or learn about the culture beyond the cursory interest prompted by current events, i dont use tiktok but the drama around it is wild.
@ZhannaHontar-z5zКүн бұрын
I’m crying 😭… How. HOW CAN ALL THESE PIECES BE SO BEAUTIFUL?
@Michael-hb8nq7 сағат бұрын
3:43 that is one crispy edge , extremely well done
@billclinton3862Күн бұрын
Its better not to get jealous at this kind of stuff, Not everyone gets to learn art like they do but I think that creativity doesn't come from how good your studies are but from the value you see in your own work. Be whole not perfect!!!
@ThegaydisasterКүн бұрын
Everyone who can read this has access to the internet \therefore has access to literally all art knowledge from the past millennia , mostly for free due to libraries and similar services
@lonestarr149018 сағат бұрын
Not sucking so hard at the fundamentals would in fact make me see more value in my own work, though.
@iamdasnoirКүн бұрын
i think this should be a new series of your (Sam says WOW to Rednote Art). caz i truly loved it
@orange2396Күн бұрын
yay new sam video best part of the week
@JH-pe3roКүн бұрын
Our turn towards less rigorous art education built up during the Cold War for ideological reasons; very early on the US government sought a radical position and opted to promote abstract expressionist artists like Jackson Pollock, while the Soviets leaned into romanticism and maintained traditional forms throughout the arts(e.g. Russian ballet has always been world-class stuff). Fundamentals knowledge in the US has still had some continuity through illustration, comics, and animation, as well as the occasional atelier studio. But when the craft isn't state-sponsored it tends to fall into the master-apprentice model, which means it's much harder to locate the good resources and we end up with the TikTok tutorial culture. To this day, education throughout Eastern Europe retains the emphasis of the Soviets, and you can see its influence in commercial work like Disco Elysium. While I don't know if China went in precisely the same direction, it was probably influenced by the Soviet methods as well. That said, I really do enjoy abstraction too - I've been working through Jack Hamm's landscape book and he does great things with graphite that aren't rendered out so intensively and which I can reproduce in a relatively short time.
@parystyrellКүн бұрын
7:08 never thought I'd hear those words but here we are
@234cotКүн бұрын
Also because all pics from 小红书 automatically uploaded in their AI system, many Chinese digital artists students does not wanna post there anymore
@raahi2531Күн бұрын
Rednote was was such an interesting lens into an internet culture that we are kinda seperated from. (IDK)
@Darkness_DamageКүн бұрын
"Ooh backshots" -SamDoesArts
@Jahanvi6Күн бұрын
0:43 starting off strong lol
@hakimabderezack7326Күн бұрын
At least I lived long enough to see Sam just be shocked non stop😂 11:13 that wins the most things that shocked me how that can be possible 🙂
@DistantDeadWorlds21 сағат бұрын
There is a video of hundreds Chinese students taking a rigorous art exam. That’s pretty awe inspiring and may explain rednotes talent.
@ziramiziala7463Күн бұрын
I wasn't ready for the beginning 💀
@lucituci97Күн бұрын
I said this year will be my year for art improvement. Seeing this just motivates me, I hope to achieve this skill
@KhazinDoesThingsTMКүн бұрын
Father you did not acknowledge me last time, is this because you were wondering about disowning me?
@pjemje18 сағат бұрын
I much much prefer this over the conceptual stuff where people try to tell a story or "express themselves" whatever that means. I love the technical side of art because I believe there is a right and a wrong, even in art.
@Niyx-s9qКүн бұрын
Idk whether to be inspired because of the skill or uninspired because of the skill
@Alex_262Күн бұрын
I’m going to Polish art school rn and they don’t teach us any of that, which is a little sad. They just give us a bunch of objects and say to draw them, and it is helpful, you can learn like that, but teachers never explicitly tell us “hey, this is HOW you do it, we explained it to you, and now you must go and apply what we tought you by drawing those vases and flowers.” That would be great but instead we have some people that don’t know much and just trying to rawdog the drawing. I am grateful for what i have in my school but i just wanted to learn all of the art fundementals stuff and they just don’t really do that :(
@dmytrandr11 сағат бұрын
Lviv National Academy of Arts is pretty good and it's pretty close to Poland, so if you are not afraid of russian missiles, you may try your hand 😅
@Alex_26210 сағат бұрын
@dmytrandr та нє, не сильно збираюсь переїжджати назад в Україну найближчим часом, але цікава пропозиція😅
@parystyrellКүн бұрын
"back shots" Sam is getting really comfortable and I'm here for it😂
@ElkeWattsКүн бұрын
is this my sign to study the fundamentals?
@Komono_208Күн бұрын
The way his brain just overloads and he crashes out on the art works. I would crash out too but the reactions of Sam made me laugh so hard my mom thought I was dying.
@Chonky_DuckКүн бұрын
I strive for the quality and soul that goes into this ✊ Your reaction at the end is all too relatable 😂😭
@katerinap.566218 сағат бұрын
It would be so amazing if you did a fundamental series. I've seen some of your older videos and your backgrounds are beautiful!! I know it's not your main thing but I am always struck by the beautiful scenery and colors. Once I'm done with my exams in a month I plan to go all in with art and will be rewatching your older advice content. Love your humour! Να είσαι καλά και να έχεις πάντα πολλές επιτυχίες στη ζωή σου
@bunnyfreakzСағат бұрын
My friend studied in Fengzhu back in 2014 and he said all best students were from Mainland China. They were super competitive and aim so high like Disney or Dreamwork.
@manimations7007Күн бұрын
Notice I learned on day 3 on this app that Ai is allowed to scrape your artwork so make sure to add Glaze or Nightshade to your work if you can or use art that Ai already scraped maybe
@diabolicalfoxСағат бұрын
Remember kids, no matter how good you think you are at something, theres always a 10-year-old chinese kid who's way better
@AlicewatcheseverythingКүн бұрын
"and you don't mind to have another Chinese spy on your phone" dude.. 🤣 I do think it's neat though, love all the processes being shown
@ginameusel528911 сағат бұрын
I wish we'd had that level of art education and a tiny bit of that mindset for VALUEING art in Germany 😢
@shadowarmy235113 сағат бұрын
I feel like all the artists in tiktok that went to rednote just realized how much they have to learn. 😭
@AL_artzКүн бұрын
help why is it all insane 😭😭
@RobbScottVideosКүн бұрын
Very nice art. But I don't get the comments on how amazing it is compared to other places. It seems no different to me than anywhere else.
@fmalovegirl98Күн бұрын
Do I feel motivated? No I feel depressed that I suck at art after seeing the tutorials lmaoo
@fatima_sketchКүн бұрын
That's not how you're supposed to think! You should learn and study from professional artists and say I can't wait to be like them! All you need is the courage to start and try different things, and then look at the past and see the improvement! 💪
@Sidorovich_sTkКүн бұрын
Luckily, it gave me more motivation to draw and that I still have a lot to learn... and I love that!
@luna-mt7sfКүн бұрын
You're going wayyyy too far comparing yourself to Chinese artists 😂😂😂 don't do that to yourself, just admire it
@HaruKxiКүн бұрын
…Wow.
@empminelikКүн бұрын
Bruh 21 seconds ago?
@DCUissickasfКүн бұрын
they’re actually cracked
@Charli-6Күн бұрын
this feels like everytime i go to artstation for inspiration .. just to get back with my motivation crushed by the shii they do be doin there🤧
@shroomyartКүн бұрын
seeing so much skilled artists in oneplace is depressing=_=
@empminelikКүн бұрын
10:59 This is a Drawing ? 👀👀👀👀. . . 😆😆 felt that
@denisedelcarmensamudio7366Күн бұрын
HOWWW how do you translated the app ????? min 2:04
@Misha-f8s4 сағат бұрын
I think one of the big differences is that we see a lot of people who think simply knowing the factology of the fundamentals counts as knowing the fundamentals. Like people know the rhetoric about shadows or how to have an illustration with 1 horizon (and some don't even know about the multiple horizons in a single illustration*), but then you have to draw again and again and again, and each work being better and different from the previous, until you achieve mastery. This is where a lot of art blocks come from - artists stagnating on purpose and refusing to improve, in large part because they think these cracked levels are unattainable. Wrong - they are perfectly attainable, it just requires more drawing and less watching tutorials that give you quick solutions.
@Misha-f8s4 сағат бұрын
*About the multiple horizons. Every single object that's at an angle in your drawing will have its own vanishing points, and if it's tilted (like you have your drawing, and in it there's a slope, and there's a box on the slope), it will have a different horizon and a wholly different set of vanishing points. Things like that are impossible to draw if you rely exclusively on factological knowledge about how perspective works. The only way to learn it is to draw a lot and at some point your brain will pick up what looks right and what doesn't.
@Wolfstar007_Күн бұрын
the disappointment motivation you get is so real 😭
@SomeoneSD19 сағат бұрын
I learnt about RedNote from Fungzau long ago lol. She always talks about how it has some AWESOME art stuff. But when I first heard about rednote, i didn't recognise it cause Fung likes to call it by Xiao Hong Shu
@secretlyadragon472310 сағат бұрын
A lot of that is also the way they teach art fundamentals in the Caribbean... I thought that's the way they did it everywhere honestly.
@akuma1362Күн бұрын
As the other asian, im just standing objectively right now. These are good art but nothing that I havent seen. It exist in old pinterest , tumblr - twitter artist , insta - art station. Are we praising them because they are good OR are we shilling for an app and think its better there (grass is greener on the other side syndrome) ? .
@rethhuloay782915 сағат бұрын
Very sweet of your mom to make an account of your art
@S4mirnaКүн бұрын
6:52 hear me out: carrot
@mackenzie6704Күн бұрын
The fricking oc’s that the rednote creators draw are so damn, fricking amazing (trust me)
@theartoframosКүн бұрын
THANK YOU CHINA! For pushing us artists to be better. I know i am
@sandrabalseca40923 сағат бұрын
In my country, when I went to study art in college, teachers didn’t teach anything. No techniques, no fundamentals. We just had to take out our materias and start drawing the model or still life. One day in our painting class the teacher kept telling me that my painting was no good. I asked him many times what was I doing wrong, but he never answered. I felt so stupid and incompetent that I ended up quitting.
@ric82482 сағат бұрын
With western social media apps going crap, Rednote looks like an amazing place to go.
@MyNamesHunter75Күн бұрын
I've said this for a while back when interest wasn't an AI hellscape but Asia tutorials are just built different. Nothing against Western teachers there are a lot of good ones but I find free resources that are by artists who live in Asia just seem to be significantly better and even the paid options for courses just seem to be better than Western counterparts. I think it's specifically in how things are explained and shown that works better which often Asia tutorials show you and break things down more which you can then turn into your own words which can further help you grasp it along with trying it out. For instance there is a book called 动漫人体结构表现技法专项训练 that is extremely helpful
@spacetaco048Күн бұрын
Here in the west our brains are so addicted to dopamine that not seeing absolute instant results destroys every artist 😭😭😭😭
@Phoca_VitulinaКүн бұрын
Xiaohongshu is so great for art!
@furyberserkКүн бұрын
I good term to use when doing this no one has suggested is "value distinction." This would be the point during the process where you clearly define the value differences, such as the lips at 10:47. My reasoning is when you remove the lines themselves cause realism doesn't have lines. Some people need and exact point to point guide.
@L1yaha_08Күн бұрын
I saw a lot of ppl hate on the tutorials on this app but are we seeing the same thing ever since I got so much more motivated to draw😆
@aliyah_does_art_Күн бұрын
Wooooaaahhhh wait how are all of these so good
@bonch12313 минут бұрын
Rednote somehow gives me nostalgia when I first entered TikTok. Like- most of my TikTok recommendations back then we're all Korean and Chinese art relates videos. I kinda want to go back in that era. Not just random brainrot videos and nonsense tutorials