I love how Ori just explained how to prepare before your exam and how to make your art better in one video.
@JeetKunDrawYT7 ай бұрын
this is how I studied for exams and I never thought to apply it to my art💀 tho with my exams it was 1- blind copy (recall) 2- reference copy (review) 3- blind copy (recall)
@anapple69127 ай бұрын
@@JeetKunDrawYT can you recall even when someone forgot all the basics?
@JeetKunDrawYT7 ай бұрын
@@anapple6912 as someone who stopped drawing for 5 years and basically lost all of what I thought was "skill", it was fairly easy to get back the basics by easting myself back into my drawing process
@aguyontheinternet84367 ай бұрын
@@anapple6912 I believe one would do a recall first, without grounding themselves in the proper knowledge first, for two main reasons. First, to see what exactly you have for prior knowledge, properly understanding where the biggest and most noticeable holes are, and second, to seriously engage your critical thinking so you can better absorb the knowledge in the review.
@fatematuzjohra34517 ай бұрын
Thanks for the tips guys :D
@RvNovae7 ай бұрын
For future reference: 1. Pick one part to learn (e.g. eyes, head, etc.): limit the scope, don't try to do too much at once 2. Quick analysis: get a feel for the overall structure, break it down into simple shapes, understand what you're looking at 3. Normal copy (optional): draw a copy while being allowed to look at the reference 4. Compare-Analyze-Fix 5. Blind copy: draw a blind copy, remember the lessons you've learned so far, don't feel down when the first blind copy doesn't look good 6. Compare-Analyze-Fix 7. Repeat: each repetition usually takes 10-20 minutes, but may vary depending on the complexity of the part you draw; repeat until you think that you've learned enough from this particular artist/artwork Compare, Analyze, Fix: 1. create a duplicate of the reference with 50% transparency 2. adjust the size of your copy to roughly match the reference 3. create two duplicates of your copy and line them up next to each other 4. use a different color and try to find and mark improvement points 5. fix differences on copy 1 by trace or transform and note down the changes (why did the master do it differently? -> write down your best guess) 6. fix copy 2 without tracing (only use eraser and brush) 7. compare your two fixed copies with the original copy and appreciate the improvement
@sebastianarevalo91137 ай бұрын
Nope, if you learn only a part, later you will struggling putting all together like eyes.
@francis73367 ай бұрын
@@sebastianarevalo9113 If you want to memorise a list of items, do you repeat the entire list over and over again or do you memorise small bits first and learn to put them together at the end? Both methods work just fine and which one you choose depends on what you want to practice and what works best for you. For example you can draw crap faces with correct anatomy and learn the details later, or you can learn to draw everything nicely individually and learn how to connect them correctly later on. The latter one worked for me, and maybe the fomer worked better for you. People learn differently. Saying "Your approach of studying is wrong bc it doesn't work for me" is really narrowminded imo
@dragonslayer-is4ow7 ай бұрын
@@francis7336as a guy who loves playing games I agree practice a thing so much or remember it u will be good at that
@blueishbeatrice7 ай бұрын
thank you so much, random commenter! this will save a lot of time since i'm quite forgetful
@lukemichael84967 ай бұрын
but what if I don't have an artist as an inspiration, is using photo references a problem here?
@PrimaryStrawberry7 ай бұрын
4:02 - I read somewhere that the human brain learns stuff much easier if it has a need too. I applied the same strategy to language learning, its almost like a cheat skill!
@alexmccaleb21527 ай бұрын
Ohhhh yes. That it does. "Needing" something can be simulated too. Enriched Wheat Flour: Wheat flour, malted barley flour, folic acid, riboflavin, thiamin mononitrate, reduced iron, niacin. Made myself recite potentially meaningless ingredients from bun back in 2021... STILL remember it for no reason. Simulated a need to USE the information every day for that week and a few rehearsals later on. Needing Information = Using it regularly for any reason.
@maxyakool7 ай бұрын
so it will be easy for me to learn how to draw?
@corasundae7 ай бұрын
@@alexmccaleb2152 thought this was gonna end in a pun about kneading bread.
@alexmccaleb21527 ай бұрын
@@corasundae LOLZ no pun this time 🤣. Just the fact that the importance has less to do with memory retention as reciting or using the information with spaced repetition.
@mayaneko10947 ай бұрын
It's less about necessity and more about consequences. Like in school tests, it is necessary to learn everything as good as possible to get a grade as good as possible, but that obviously doesn't turn everyone into someone who gets A+ on everything. The thing that people miss, who get worse grades are often the consequences, since getting anything above D usually makes you pass the classes and less strict parents might not punish you for it (or even worse, you might even form a group with others, making fun of people who're doing too good, that might even happen in drawing groups, where there's only praise, but never critique). However, when you might get punished or rewarded by your parents or you need a specific grade to pass the year, then that might make you perform better Same with learning languages. The best results can be achieved, when living in said country, as not being able to speak the language has the consequence of not being able to communicate properly. As for studies, universities often work with monetary incentives for the test subjects (usually students, who might have money problems to begin with) to introduce an external motivation to be as productive as possible, thus it ensure, that all testers actually try to perform properly (since making mistakes will actually make you loose money in these cases). So even though these studies imply, that some methods work better than others, you should still be aware, that trying to use it for hobby learning might miss this crucial motivational part about the studies. And for drawing the problem is, that when starting out as a hobby, we simply don't have any consequences, as nothing happens when we're bad. Sadly i don't really have any way to give tips on this, as this is a very subjective matter. Everybody needs to find the motivation in themselves and build a habbit around it (or try to get paid for doing good i guess^^)
@swatdude27 ай бұрын
My dumbself thought I was supposed to put a blindfold and draw blindly for the Blind technique
@it-s-a-me-oli7 ай бұрын
i literally thought the same
@sasvkeee._7 ай бұрын
wait you arent?
@it-s-a-me-oli7 ай бұрын
@@sasvkeee._ nope, just not looking at the original
@Carboy457 ай бұрын
FR
@pyechos7 ай бұрын
that was my thought too. that's why i clicked on the video like : wait a minute
@ryuandmi7 ай бұрын
New artist here! I've been using this method for the past seven days, and tried drawing something from scratch today and I feel like I got a new pair of hands. The techniques and methods I memorized while doing this made the drawing process way faster and I'm way happier about the result than before. Going to binge all of your videos right now. Thank you!
@clover35273 ай бұрын
Kind of a late reply but it would be interesting to see your art ^^
@briezeee3 күн бұрын
Well damn ... Now I gotta try it
@quietspark87037 ай бұрын
The fastest way to learn anything is to learn how NOT to do it first. Most people are so afraid of failure that they don't realize that failure itself is the greatest teacher of all.
@Hxnn_03 ай бұрын
I've never understood it that way, thank you
@wewo98722 ай бұрын
This sentence goes so hard ure so right
@Itachilover12100002 ай бұрын
Yeah thats true. For me it is the hardest to accept because in my childhood I was never allowed by the outside to do mistakes or I will be punished. This thinking is also with me when I draw... Wish I could unlearn that
@SirJr.alot2372 ай бұрын
right, thats what i do
@reverseshrimp989318 күн бұрын
Reminds me of when learning skiing you first need to know how to fall and get up again properly, before actually trying to go down the slope
@APKE7 ай бұрын
everytime I start to lose motivation ori posts a video and it gives me motivation to continue drawing again
@octobsession30617 ай бұрын
Ori : all according to keikaku
@unlimitedquickworks73877 ай бұрын
Build a routine, don't depend on motivation, it makes your progress too slow...
@CunnyVirus7 ай бұрын
I draw like my life depend on it. (dont be me though)
@unlimitedquickworks73877 ай бұрын
@@CunnyVirus same lol
@Orincraft0007 ай бұрын
also for me
@justsomejojo7 ай бұрын
I actually kinda did this as a kid (not consciously as practice of course) by copying from my grandpa's dinosaur books (I started out copying but since I didn't always have access to the book, I ended up drawing them "blind" a lot as well) and later the Pokemon artworks from the guidebooks. I did it every day too, since I wasn't all that sporty. Didn't know it was considered a valid method though. That's cool.
@asvenlairarcens10617 ай бұрын
For the past week, I've tried to go back to the basics like drawing with circles, etc. but ended up feeling like my art skill are getting worse. I just got a notification that ori uploaded a video, It's nighttime but I suddenly feel motivated to draw now. Kinda feel exaggerated, but its not. Big thanks!
@Badartist8887 ай бұрын
You might be training your eye faster than your hand. This was a problem I had when I first started (not saying you a noob, it could happen any time). I rapidly learned a million problems to spot and so for every 1 thing I improved on I learned 3 errors to spot. It got frustrating and I ended up stopping watching all tutorials. Letting my hand catch up with my eyes. Then once I stopped finding errors I started to learn new things again.
@Malcommind7 ай бұрын
the circle thing is something I can't seem to ever understand i don't see how ppl draw a circle and a few lines and automatically know how to turn it into a perfect head and body
@_paixi7 ай бұрын
A concept artist taught me to include blind studies after reconstruction from reference, plus studies for imagining subjects from completely different perspectives and making modifications without reference. It felt impossible at first but it helped me improve a lot when I was starting out. I gave up studying though when I hit a plateau and realized a few years later I have visual aphantasia. I was basically just memorizing how to reconstruct specific works methodically, step by step, rather than improving visual memory and having a vivid picture in my mind to work with. Drawing from imagination for me is like going through a complex algorithm in my head I can barely remember anymore and the sense of touch I feel looking at a drawing. Blind people identify things using their hands and that's basically how I work with art in my imagination. For lighting I use my sense of heat. This video makes me think I might be able to still improve though by analyzing drawings by feeling them in my imagination first before doing a blind study because then I could be like 'oh yeah, I remember what this part feels like.' I never thought of studying like that before.
@cryptid35204 ай бұрын
oh wow I have visual aphantasia too! so interesting to hear another artist explain their approach with it
@AlphaEnt24 ай бұрын
I kinda feel the same, i close my eyes, i can't help myself but see just nothing or a blurry mess. So my drawing skills plateaud at 14 and stopped drawing. Now 18 years later, i kinda want to start drawing all over again, but find it very difficult to endure that so many years went by and got stuck in the past. (I moved into programming and did few games with other people's art, but now kinda want to make one with my own art, it will be nightmare incarnated, but already did 2 game jams and one of them ended up in third place.)
@meggycrystal99Ай бұрын
I thought this video was great but I was looking for a comment from someone with visual aphantasia since I have it as well. I’m glad to see your comment! For me, it’s also helpful if I watch someone make the art in a process video or hear them explain what methods they used, because then i can imagine it that way (imagining the feeling of the brush vs how the brush looks)
@heartaura7 ай бұрын
Honestly, I was skeptical about how well this would work... but I gave it a go and was making near perfect blind copies after my 4th repetition! And it really did only take an hour!! Gonna try doing this regularly now xD Thanks Ori-Sensei!
@rataV75173 ай бұрын
In each practice, did you use a different reference?
@heartaura3 ай бұрын
@@rataV7517 I practiced with 1 reference until I felt I could replicate it accurately. Then I'd move to a new one. It can get a little repetitive, but the results are definitely worth it in my experience!
@-jxssie-38944 ай бұрын
for peeps out there that use pen and paper to do blind copies, theres a way! first just make a copy looking at the og, then cover it up, making a blind copy based on what you remember. yes, it will be harder, but afterwards, reveal your og copy and note down the differences using your own eye, since it should be quite noticeable (sadly) and repeat! you woukd actually be surprised how much you remember after the third copy! tips: note down even the tiniest differences (like longer hair strands, thicker hair, etc...) hope this helps!❤
@zascoco6617Ай бұрын
thanks
@Tubatu44197 ай бұрын
"There isnt a correct answer in art, but we can find our correct answer" thats so good, i already love this
@marselo13167 ай бұрын
theres no correct path to becoming a master, but some paths are definitely shorter than others
@jnes37367 ай бұрын
I feel encouraged when you said having this mental sense about something feeling off when you’re noticing something not correct in your drawing because I recognizing that same feeling too, and it help improve my drawing process.
@windowwax7 ай бұрын
This is honestly one of my favorite videos for art studies. The method just makes so much since on how it relates to how people retain and study information. Absolutely game changer for me personally!
@美咲MisakiJP5 ай бұрын
Thank you for Japanese subtitles! It helps. アートと物事の見方を改善するのを手助けしてくれてありがとうございます!これらを心に留めておくよ。
@chienshyonglee74277 ай бұрын
Hello ori, I found your videos 4 months ago and have been practicing every day since then and I have improved so much since!
@twilightreaperx83827 ай бұрын
perchance a video to see some of your artwork?
@chienshyonglee74277 ай бұрын
@@twilightreaperx8382 can't link but my art acc is arcticaviary!
@chienshyonglee74277 ай бұрын
@@twilightreaperx8382 art acc is arcticaviary!
@chienshyonglee74277 ай бұрын
@@twilightreaperx8382 arcticaviary
@fufu_noot7 ай бұрын
@@twilightreaperx8382you can't just say perchance
@armorkny7 ай бұрын
this is gotta be the best kind of sponsor video there is
@TopatTom7 ай бұрын
H yeah
@TopatTom7 ай бұрын
h aeyh
@vivishii_7 ай бұрын
yeah i really love how he incorporated the sponsor into the video!! i dont think ive ever seen anyone do it this well haha
@octobsession30617 ай бұрын
@@vivishii_that's how good creator do things. they create not because the sponsor, they create just because they want to. And sponsor come right after Love him
@Desned3697 ай бұрын
It actually feels like he plays/would play the game ngl
@ShrtStfflp7 ай бұрын
Love the work Anders Ericson did and hate how Malcolm Gladwell basically turned his work practically into a meme with the "10,000 hours rule". Glad to see more people going to the source though! great vid!
@cavemann_7 ай бұрын
I have narrowed down on a similar method, so seeing someone else advertise it actually gave me a boost of confidence. Thanks bro.
@cheesypoohalo7 ай бұрын
I'm not even an artist but this was extremely well made- explaining the theory as discovered by experts, explaining how to apply it, then demonstrating yourself following it with plenty of examples. Excellent video, what you've talked about could apply to learning many skills!
@kaidou-peanut41417 ай бұрын
Babe wake up! Ori-Sensei posted again!
@xxriellixx978yt37 ай бұрын
bruh
@CoolPiggy7 ай бұрын
This is amazing, I always struggle with doing studies and always looking at the reference doesn't often help me, explained learning better and taught me how to get better at chess as well. Thanks Ori!
@ItzBrielle7 ай бұрын
You're literally the best teacher ever! Your past and this video has made me improve a lot. I'm so glad that you're here to teach us.
@awwkieb38647 ай бұрын
I have been unknowingly using a very similar method for months when doing studies from real life images, and can definetly say that this sort of "blind copy" aproach has been helpful for me!
@maxis2k7 ай бұрын
I was going to say, I wouldn't recommend people just jump into the blind study first. Then you showed both the analysis and reference steps. This is what I stumbled upon myself. Try and draw it once with the reference, then all other steps after that, try and draw it without the reference. Often my second and so on attempts without the reference end up better than the first. Because I'm remembering and actively fixing/changing the mistakes from the reference step. But I still needed to do the first reference step.
@sabrepilot7 ай бұрын
I accidentally have been doing this and I thought I was crazy for not actively using references, thank you for validating my sanity
@Rleosd.7 ай бұрын
Thank you, Ori. I've made massive progress since watching your last videos. I'm finally starting to understand the small improvements that I need to make and how to fix and learn from my mistakes. This guide will help me improve even more! Most importantly I'm actually starting to have fun finally.
@anemone02pau5 ай бұрын
This actually works! I used to do this method whenever I feel stuck with my art. Doing this method sparks creativity and the same excitement that I'm looking for when I'm in an art slump ☺️
@esmeirosanchez33927 ай бұрын
no way! you are a genius, i never thought of using active recall in drawing even though it works great in my studies. but now that you show it, it's like how i never thought of it? thanks a lot, i'll make good use of it!
@claystate7 ай бұрын
the transparent overlay comparison reminds me a lot about the metric scott young used to improve at drawing portraits in 30 days, i recommend finding his post about it if you havent seen it before very cool video and love that more learning theory is being applied here :)
@kirbyx25737 ай бұрын
Ori your art is quite literaly what got me to start drawing difitaly. Especialy your Laplus art got me wanting to draw as well. Thank you yet again for another helpfull video Ori!
@kirbyx25737 ай бұрын
Edit here, I Messed up writing digitaly lol.
@artnino7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! I just tried the blind method and it makes the studying way more fun too! Maybe because you can see the improvement a lot sooner.
@evelkiaАй бұрын
I do think there needs to be a part in this video where you talk about potentially copying the master’s failures, more importantly being able to identify them, as that’s something a lot of beginners tend to do in the beginning. Other than that I think this is a great video with a lot of helpful info on how to grow as an artist!
@Hopischwopi7 ай бұрын
Never heard of this until now but will try it! I can also recommend to go through old art and throw away some things. I recently moved and I am slowly working through a lot of old sketches, drawings I did especially while studying. It's nice to see what I did good back then and where I improved. It doesn't make you better necessarily but it gives a mental boost of confidence that there is and will be improvement that is even more apparent in the future ☺️.
@DennisCNolasco7 ай бұрын
I’ve been experimenting with efficient learning methods and will tweak my methods with what you’ve shown here. And thanks for the book recommendation, it’s one I have yet to look into!
@solo.32837 ай бұрын
The way you use your other field of interest for studying art is pretty clever. This made me remember on how calligraphy class taken by steve jobs helped have apple earn their beautiful font
@EMO_GRLL7 ай бұрын
For anyone skeptical about this method, I just tried it and after about 30 minutes I had so many useful notes and a clear improvement to my sketches.
@Sucart127 ай бұрын
I've been doing a less extensive version of the Blind Method you described here for these last couple of months now so this is awesome to see. It really works guys! Ive imporved more than i have in years combined (this isnt even an exaggeration, when you practice right you grow right) I'll definitely follow your tips with a more critical analysis like note taking though, very helpful, thank you!
@aeipathyarts5 ай бұрын
i do something similar. i study looking at a reference first, then try to actively recall that and then decide what i messed up in my recall and try again. this might not be as productive or time efficient but it works more comfortably for me and has helped a lot :)
@chjikou4 ай бұрын
omg your art improves so much just by the pass of a few months, you are really incredible 😭😭
@rikkasummer27842 ай бұрын
man you are so lucky to have a sensei to guide you draw better some people just draw alone
@sadasd-n2f4 күн бұрын
I think this is an insanely gold mine of a video as a beginner thanks a lot man.
@wisprs_gaming7 ай бұрын
This was an incredible demonstration. Love how you put studies in but not only just putting them in, you demonstrated the why and you made it entertaining. So good. Subbed.
@ShadeJPV6 ай бұрын
I did this when i noticed that every time i copy an art and i draw anything else i get bettee and better, which exlaplains that Blind Method is actually just your muscle memory combining it with your creativity then Voila! You just created an amazing art without a reference.
@toasteroven86864 ай бұрын
I got all pumped up to draw using this method. I realized that I can't even draw a circle the moment I gripped my pencil 😭
@zenkailiz3 ай бұрын
fr this sound crazy but without line tool i can't even do *perfect straight* line 😭
@F3rnzzz7 ай бұрын
Thank you so much!! I feel like I learned so much from you! I want to improve on lighting and shading so I can't wait to try this process for my improvements ♡♡
@FirstRecords2047 ай бұрын
i have to thank you for this tutorial. one thing that's really liberating is the idea that we can select "masters" based on who appeals to us personally. in retrospect, it's obvious, but it makes it easier to have the will to practice when i'm able to say "I want to learn to draw like this"
@firsty93367 ай бұрын
This is so helpful because i want to learn how other artist draw and i don't really have a method to do it so the blind method would be perfect thank you ori.
@kainaris7 ай бұрын
This is the best art tutorial I've ever seen in my life. It just makes sense.
@natifice7 ай бұрын
Love your videos so much ori, they're so valuable, cheerful and kind, and I'm so grateful for what you do to help aspiring artist to grow up And I just realized I was already applying this method to music, when I want to learn a piece by ear I always start with what i recall of the music, trying to figure it out, then give it a listen and ajust. I always did it unconsciously, and never thought of doing the same for drawing
@Piemasta90007 ай бұрын
great video, new sub here! I have been drawing on and off for the last 25 years. I have VERY slowly improved over that time. this video is the first time I have seen something that I can actually use to get better that will work for me. even in 1 hour of trying this I noticed things that I would not have ever figured out myself. thank you
@selfhurtbae7 ай бұрын
Ok I get your point, I bought a tablet two months ago and I will try this method for a month, then i will post a video or a series of screenshots of my results. Good luck to me and thank you!
@nursyahirahrosman35264 ай бұрын
Just found your channel today. I can't believe I never did this blind method because I thought I lack imagination...I'm gonna practice drawing now thanks!
@zdeloffline7 ай бұрын
Crazy that we have oridays here, he's one the only few artist that help me improve significantly fast and keeps me motivated to drawing
@omekapo2 ай бұрын
omg your pfp is so cute
@zdeloffline2 ай бұрын
@@omekapo Ty!
@BlackMita7 ай бұрын
Tried it just now. God it's brilliant. I'd just adjust to not do "parts" (eg: eyes, hands, ...) but "big general shapes" and then practice dividing things up in "remember-able" ways (eg: the big piece's HALFWAY point is where the neck ends, this finger starts A THIRD of the way from such and such) etc.
@Utrilus6 ай бұрын
Lol, I bet you have aphantasia too. That sounds a lot what I've been doing this week.
@dani_drawzz7 ай бұрын
“I’ve come up with the blind method.” Ericsson actually mentions the blind method in his book.”
@supermemobee6 ай бұрын
I think it's less "come up with" as in "invent" and more "come up with" as in "searched for it and found it"
@Utrilus6 ай бұрын
More like "come up with" in the sense of compiling an easy to follow version for art for a video and naming it.
@_jeezgg5 ай бұрын
I can’t find the “blind method”. What’s the actual technique called?
@dani_drawzz5 ай бұрын
@@_jeezgg idk I’m not the one that found it
@dani_drawzz5 ай бұрын
@@supermemobee it’s misleading 🤷
@trofimov862Ай бұрын
Funny enough I'm currently student trying to become a data scientist while doing art as a side hobby, this practice reminds me a lot of what they teach us in comp sci classes where once we learn something it's best to apply it somewhere else to keep it fresh in our mind, as well as expand on the concept we learned. Of course this can be applied to anything but it's truly amazing how you applied it to art.
@LinuxPiano7 ай бұрын
the idea of "blind copy" itself isn't the first time i've heard of it, but I think you bring up some really good points regarding the specifics; you say it's okay to make a normal copy of it before attempting the blind copy, which reaaaally made things click for me. Its was just way too hard before when I tried it lol, will be continuing to try this out over the next few days, thanks!!
@rosewine39367 ай бұрын
I love this channel, it's what has kept me learning to draw. Thank you very much for the guides
@Skyeleafe7 ай бұрын
Ive been waiting for this!
@literallytohruadachi3 ай бұрын
AKIHIKO⁉️
@milacchiАй бұрын
The more videos from Ori the more I think Ori enjoys the whole process of learning. Sadly I can't say the same about me. Just thinking about actively sitting down to learn something so I can improve in the future, I already loose motivation to do so 😩
@fenriru493Ай бұрын
Yessssss I feel you so much on this too 😢
@carlosleyva-calistenia64007 ай бұрын
I'm learning to draw and I'm bashing my head because I didn't think about this before. I learned this principle in a quick learning course a decade ago and I promptly used it to make people stronger faster than before. It works not only for mind things, but it also works wonders for "mindless" things, like any kind of physical training. Thanks for this!
@marcusaurelius6477 ай бұрын
This video was one of those that made me first think its probly stupid clickbait but ended up being deep and thought provoking 👍
@Wehrtupflpu7 ай бұрын
Honestly, i love THIS art advice the most from all i watched and it's really amazing! It contains everything - research about learning science, and god it's sad how NON OBVIOUS this thing is and how USEFUL it was for me from the first time i applied it (more for colors and palette choices, but damn it's really opened my eyes on differences between my color choices and choices of my fav artists. great!) Thank you! Im so grateful to be recommended such an amazing art tutorial. Thank you for publishing it for free! I really love how universally it's easy to apply to almost everything, and i love it. Would totally rewatch 1000 times. This is some really brilliant tip that others art videos and my artschool personally lacked (dont get me wrong artschools in old academic fashion are great and useful, but this can be used for any part of art and skill, indeed.)
@blodhthringa4 ай бұрын
In my art classes at university, we started every class with blind drawings as well as blind contours (looking at and drawing the reference's "bones" if you will without looking at our drawing until we are done). Not only does it teach you to recall the information, but it relaxes your brain and acts as a "warm up" to move into more strenuous, detailed drawing.
@ItsMe-zb6hd7 ай бұрын
i just knew that i can learn art using that method. cuz i already use the review method and i felt that its really hard to improve. and btw i use this method every time there's academic study, thanks ori for remembering me this method again
@randomcitizen07 ай бұрын
does this also work with traditional drawings?
@ashrre.7 ай бұрын
I think it might! It’s probably a bit more difficult, but you can trace in paper, or maybe you can fix it manually?
@kalystagutierrez16077 ай бұрын
Ive actually been doing this subconsciously! I would always draw something and then later come back and end up drawing it much better. I wish KZbin allowed pictures because it happened just now! I drew some legs that were way off a while ago but i came back after a couple days with some light leg study, and observing other things not related but had legs in them, and there's a massive improvement! I'll need to follow yours more since it has more structure but im happy i was doing something that helped when i thought it used to hinder!
@john-bm4du7 ай бұрын
Looks like a cool method, though as an aphantasic artist, ill probably have to keep the blind stage to very localized areas or principles (like gesture, colors). I dont think it would be productive for me to try to copy a whole peace from memory. Imma give it a try tho
@darkercore81857 ай бұрын
just picked up a job working 60 hours a week, I really needed this.
@keithrowsell68473 ай бұрын
Excellent advice, no matter how many years I already have in the industry I'm using this approach now to get the hang of model sheets quickly. Thanks a lot! Just a small critique of your heads. The fundamentals here will help since it's apparent the ear could be shifted further screen right in your studies. and the back of the skull needs enlarging to make sense of the eye positions. At the moment, because you are having to guess what's under the hair, it makes the eyes look like they are too far apart. Best of luck on your road to success and thanks again.
@monkebrainiacАй бұрын
thats crazy. this is what i used to do when i was starting to learn how to draw cause i didnt like looking at refs too much lol... thats probably why i improved to fast back then but now im stumped. thank you for this!
@changbinmybeloved7 ай бұрын
Hi Ori, Im gonna try to challenge myself to improve by following the methods you had suggested. Hopefully I'll improve even just a little everyday. Thank you so much!
@pyro86327 ай бұрын
Who else thought you actually had to draw blindfolded, not even looking at the paper/screen? lmao
@alienfortytwo7 ай бұрын
there's actually a legit exercise that has you copy lines by looking at the reference but not at where you're drawing. it's been a while but it's something like that
@medicinemouse76477 ай бұрын
@@alienfortytwoblind croquis!!
@vvghostly6 ай бұрын
@@alienfortytwoi was just about to mention this, i hated doing it so much in my drawing classes lol
@Ash-Venilla2 ай бұрын
Welp, yea me. :P
@Tyxaar6 ай бұрын
Just here to say your voice and accent are really lovely and calming and made me smile while listening to this. Like I dunno what about it, it's just generally pleasant. :D
@leiaahlswede44857 ай бұрын
I just tried this method on a pair of eyes, I even thought that the reference may be too advanced for me to try and copy off of but holy crap! The amount that I've gotten even better just from keeping in mind some key points about what I looked at. I've only done it the third time and the critique that you gave yourself makes you improve massively. I'm even having a better time with spacing and things like that. It's still hard but not as freaking impossible as it felt before. Also, he's right, beginners should definitely start with one feature at a time. Doing the whole head was a massive job when you don't even understand how to do the eyes or the lips. Look for the finate details such as angles and curves and the length/width. I even found myself mapping out land marks the more that I went through. For example: the iris circle starts between the second and third eyelash and ends a little bit further than the last eyelash. It really helps!
@alphabetkingssrb97006 ай бұрын
THE ONE PERCENT!!! THE ONE PERCENT IS REAAALLL!!!! (I can see the improvements, thank you! To anyone who is on the fence about this, take it slow until you feel comfortable. Regardless you really should use this, it's amazing. I'll be putting this into my routine now.)
@he40907 ай бұрын
Just started drawing a bit for fun. Your video's have been the best help there is. So much usefull information explained really well. Thanks alot!
@anxiousdemon4 ай бұрын
I think this method is great for not only learning but just improving your memory as a whole because like the active recall method, you're not just trying to replicate what you're looking at, but your brain is trying recall and recreate it from your own head. And in doing so it leaves more of an impact on you. It's like having a live model to draw in front of you, and then they just walk away but you still have to recreate their body shape, the pose they were doing, the lighting that was cast onto them ect. It leaves a greater impact on your brain and therefore it's easier to learn and carry over into your own art
@QXdo7 ай бұрын
Ori, you are the best, thank you for helping us how to draw. I love yours videos!
@strawberripupp7 ай бұрын
I find my reference and print it out, and then draw a circle with a line down it and start making a head over the reference so I know how the artist did it, if you don’t have a printer screenshot your reference and import it into ibis paint X
@SherBBL4 ай бұрын
this is actually so smart, thank you for making this video and explaining it! you make it seem so easy to learn art
@blueblimp7 ай бұрын
I've used approaches for music, math, and programming, and it works well. I think the key reason it helps is that you have no hope of remembering what to do unless you actually understand the original properly. You have to pay very careful attention and reduce everything to principles, or you'll be partway through the copy and have no idea what to do next.
@risingghost28094 ай бұрын
hey, just wanted to say, i tried the blind method and saw improvement almost right away, thank you so much. Still have a long way to go before I'm as good as a lot of the artists on here, but hey, there is a light at the end of the tunnel, and for once its not a train.
@kaitoalkan6 ай бұрын
I'm surprised, because active recall has been my go-to method for studying for quite a long time! I have never heard about it being the best method for quick sessions of study, but I can totally see why. And I'm glad that a method like this can be used for drawing as well, since I've never been good at it and I wanted to delve deeper into it.
@BigLoafJae196 ай бұрын
i spent so long in a hole of confusion with improving my art but thanks to you you simplified it enough for my small brain to understand
@FyodorWillLive117 ай бұрын
Why did this get my grades and art skills up, congrats on another sub
@benwills73434 ай бұрын
So, there’s a lot of videos I want to check out so I’m going though them all and liking them (my save for later isn’t working) and you’re video has drawn me in the most out of 15 videos that all interest me.
@yozorajin17477 ай бұрын
I have to say this method is what used when I was just starting out. The reason is that back then I saw this post that said using references is cheating (I know, sorry for being an idiot), but it worked decently well considering how much of a hell that was, I would literally stare at one picture for 30 minutes or so and just go ham on trying to copy it without looking. This method will definitely make a bigger impact if you already have the basic foundation solid though. Anyway nice vid
@Type_Usernamehere6 ай бұрын
I was originally trying to search up "How to draw hair" But accidentally forgot the "Hair" part and I found this more helpful. Thank you. But one question? How would I take about this method on Paper? Is it a similar process or is it something more for Digital?
@teguhsan14653 ай бұрын
The process applies to all media
@phina33326 ай бұрын
This is really good method! i'm fired up of doing this, im an artist,and i already make a living with my drawing. Lately i've been in this "Zombie" mode of just comms comms comms. This method sounds effective for me! and you explaining it how and why really throughly. I'll try this for a week everyday and will update the progress! wish me luck and whoever who gonna try this method.
@Utrilus6 ай бұрын
It works for me. Just a few days of drawing and the thing I'm copying is coming out formed mostly right. At least the first week of mine feels productive.
@phina33326 ай бұрын
It's working, its been 2 weeks. in the first week i was focused blind copy face face feature from my fav artist, after 7 day i stopped and doing my own arts again, every time i draw face i feel like i'm more thoughtful of what i learned from the blind copy.
@D_F017 ай бұрын
Thanks for being such a valuable art resource throughout mine, and others art journey's! I really appreciate these videos
@kiranreilly49167 ай бұрын
Nothing inspires confidence in an art teacher like seeing their content filled with 90s clip art
@fia17564 ай бұрын
was searching from randowm video to accompany me eating, didn't expect will learn so much from this, thank you so much
@-solo-42257 ай бұрын
I didn’t know I was doing the blind method from the start. What you’ve shown in this video, I’ve done since the very start of my art journey. I had no idea this was an actual method.
@ladd.6 ай бұрын
i used to do this most of the time but sometimes fail everything, but it worked pretty well in the past few years now. i make good art and its now easy to copy the designs of characters that are very detailed (even poses too)
@GuranPurin7 ай бұрын
I will definitely have to try this out with faces/heads, I always find it hard to draw them consistently.
@gibbygl3 ай бұрын
After drawing for a while just for fun, now trying to improve on my misstakes this Video is rather helpful! Well earned Sub
@Plushyka6 ай бұрын
I actually started drawing like 4 months ago. I always drew my favourite characters like Kuromi Serika. Then I drew Takanashi Hoshino because she is cute and for me she had the easiest hair to draw. Later I combined them both and made my oc. Since then I basicly try to find my own way to draw something that is confy for me. This Blind Drawing video is probably very similar how I drew on paper. I might even start digital soon!