I wasted years of my life( 8 years) because I wasn't enough self-disciplined and couldn't concentrate on nothing. I also didn't improve because I didn't believe in my skills and I dIdn't work hard. But recently last year this changed and I can do that 12 hours a day and I am feeling good doing because I am not focused on comparing myself with others, but focused on learning new things and analyzing shape, etc. So 27 years old with bad art in the background and history of low-self esteem. I am telling you people don't give up. If you want to sculpt, sculpt it, draw it, but don't compare your art with others, because if you want to improve you skilld you should do art with pleasure. For last 20 days, I've done things that I didn't do in 8 years, not because I am smarter, but because I changed my mindset.
@amauryoliveira154 жыл бұрын
jesus christ, your background is exactly the same as mine (even the age). I went to a college and just pushed myself through it numbly. It was a bad course and I should've dropped or at least used my free time (which I had lots of) to learn art or whatever, but I decided to waste it. Now I've only started doing 3D a year ago but my results are more than enough to push away the thoughts like: "I'm too old to start in this. There's plenty of much younger people already doing it a lot better than I ever will. It's too risky and I have no room for failure anymore." etc. It sounds cliche and all but all it really takes is flipping the switch and getting into the mindset of just doing something, then with time there will be progress and with progress there will be quality. Even now I'm not progressing as fast or as efficiently as I can because I keep finding excuses (family, my job, lack of free time, etc) but it's just the way it is. I'm still far from where I want to reach, but much closer than the me from a year ago could ever imagine.
@ErwinSuwandy4 жыл бұрын
Hey I'm 28 and I'm on the same boat.. And sadly I still haven't been able to fully switch to that mindset yet even now. It's like my body is rejecting what my brain tell me to do
@ivaniliev22724 жыл бұрын
@@ErwinSuwandy I just accepted my limitations. Bad or good I cannot reject anymore what I am. I may fail, It is possible never to be good enough, but now if I work something else I would know what I am. Maybe I will not have enough time: work, money, the family then I will know, and determine myself as an artist. And don't let other people put you down. If you decide to draw or sculpt the beginning will be very hard ..after a while you will build a habit(as said in the video)and the things gonna be a lot easier. My thoughts are with you and I hope you will find yourself and some peace in mind sooner.
@amauryoliveira154 жыл бұрын
@@ErwinSuwandy It's a daily struggle really. I for one have never found a point in which I just instantly switched into a better more productive version of myself, even after say a good few weeks of producing things that made me feel fulfilled. I would simply stop for while or postpone the next steps even though they were right there at my reach. So I've settled for trusting my better judgement of not stepping too far of my studies or practices for too long (but a good advice would be maybe to try and make a schedule or something ). Even now I'm not in a great place, I stuck myself with a pointlessly complex model that i've been working on for over a month with lots of drops and retakes (many artists suggest using deadlines even for practices, just set a timeframe and respect it, whatever the outcome, and then move on). But the thing that truly helped me was the overall Blender community, not only there's a lot of people willing to help with your technical difficulties, but there's always a new free tutorial to help inspire and teach you new stuff. Also even in my lazy pauses I took a habit of always watching CG/3d related stuff, techniques, timelapses, etc. Lenghty courses/tutorials are also good, and there's a lot of pretty affordable ones out there. So It's almost like fighting my own nature, this "body rejection" you said, by surrounding myself as much as possible with the subjects of interest. And finally, like Ivan said, understand your limitations and respect your nature. Me for example, I don't consider myself very creative, I can't come up with amazing designs out of nowhere or just figure out inventive characters/scenes so I keep flooding myself with references, saving things and making a library of ideas, when something pops in my mind I always refer to that to give depth/substance to this concept. I know it's all vague and abstract and in the end the only thing that truly helps is your own determination, but either by advancing on this or by giving up just try to find your peace.
@hugoantunesartwithblender4 жыл бұрын
We all have the same level of self discipline. The problem is just in wanting rewards right away instead of far away. That's why what works for me and I discovered that Michael Phelps also used, is building little wins trought the day. You wake up as soon your alarms rings, first victory, you fell good right away. Cold shower, second win. 10 push-ups another win. You end up felling good after all the little wins, so it will be really easy to do something that previous was hard to do.
@DannyMac3d4 жыл бұрын
Still rocking a great workflow Yan I love it!
@yansculpts4 жыл бұрын
Thanks Danny!
@ZephrusPrime4 жыл бұрын
When I do take breaks, I tend to watch a lot of tutorials so that my mind is still with it and it's good to see other artists workflows to learn things you may have missed.
@sigh.23824 жыл бұрын
I needed this. I thought that taking breaks would make me less of an artist
@TheEclecticPagan4 жыл бұрын
That is not true. Taking breaks is a must because we artists cannot function without taking rests in between. If you overwork yourself you’ll run the risk of burn out or your health. It’s not healthy. Depending how many minutes you spend on practicing drawing. Try to think of how many minutes you want your break to be as long you can get back to work after. For me, normally when I study takes me an hour to study, take a 25 minute break, and then get back to studying. But when I draw that depends how long, but it’s important to pause and take breaks. Use a timer on your phone or download a free pomodoro timer app.
@midnightproductions44674 жыл бұрын
sigh. Samw
@nightomchan30543 жыл бұрын
Without fresh air, your brain will collapse on its own.
@Gatz3D4 жыл бұрын
You always find the right thing to talk about involving art and working hard to make it happen. Thanks for being so dedicated to what you do, and for sharing your experience/incite along the way.
@yansculpts4 жыл бұрын
My pleasure, glad it helped :)
@Krynn724 жыл бұрын
I've been on a break from digital art since 2010. Been trying to get back into it lately since I tried out blender recently. Amazingly my zbrush license is still valid! Gotta love lifetime licenses.
@GRizzle2064 жыл бұрын
I've been on a break since 2016 and I still can't discipline myself to get back into it. But yeah gotta love perpetual licenses. Major props to Zbrush for being one of the few doing it
@boyasin61434 жыл бұрын
My whole life is stressful even when i'm relax.
@t.pakulski17744 жыл бұрын
try meditation and ASMR therapy, it does help.
@jwwwun4 жыл бұрын
The trick is to be so stressed out that it becomes your default state of mind.
@jpm14 жыл бұрын
running is good. especially in forest. also as said in that vid relaxing is important. making 12 hours a day is nothing, if you can't get inspiration. a 10 hours day, with a 2 hours nice photo shooting can be much more productive than a 12 hours work. this is the whole problem of the world actually. people don't know how to relax. they run like dumb after money. and most of the time fail in finding happiness
@bikotheanimator61694 жыл бұрын
I have been taking a break from animation because I can't find a job anywhere. I wasted years going to school for this. Received my bachelor's in December 2018, did an amazing Summer internship in 2019, and now I have no job and not making any money doing coronavirus apocalypse tribulation. I am very disappointed in this life. I have accomplished nothing.
@zena22394 жыл бұрын
Not your fault life is trash, also not your fault some chinesian dude ate a bat.
@Santanazation4 жыл бұрын
Getting the job it´s always harder..it´s even harder when the country we live in, doesn´t have Industries with 3D jobs or concept artists... Btw you have really nice animation skills try doing some freelancing!
@princealmighty53914 жыл бұрын
Dude you got a summer internship 3/4 of the world struggle hard enough to get an internship Dont put yourself down my love you are special you accomplished getting a bachelor degree and internship you will get there Try networking and writing articles in medium about animation and upload youtube videos study marketing and you already have your skills market them and network your way to the job Never ever ever say you have accomplished nothing judging by what you wrote you accomplished what 3/4 of the world havent And you should be damn proud of that accomplishment
@flyingcat91254 жыл бұрын
i did the same as you wasted time getting an animation degree and have no job, the difference is I pretty much gave up on Animation and started sculpting on Zbrush
@sunshinejulie56874 жыл бұрын
Wow, that's not true. A ton of people wish they were where you are at including me. And try freelancing. It's the only way to go! 👍
@TempestMaximus4 жыл бұрын
Actually when I was young I took a break from art for 3 years and I've gotten better. True story. Taking a Break is mandatory as well as you use your imagination.
@JH-pe3ro4 жыл бұрын
I'm 35 and I've dabbled in all sorts of artistic mediums at this point, to varying degrees - drawing, music, writing, game design, improv acting, and yes, a little bit of 3D - which has given me some perspective on what exactly it "means" to study art. The fact of the matter is, there aren't enough hours in the day to study all of those things and get great at all of them equally. So, do I treat putting down one and picking up another as a "break?" Sort of! When my energies in one start running low the others tend to bubble up. And there's a pattern to it, which is that my interest holds for about as long as needed to study a particular _part_ of the medium. If I feel stuck and spinning in circles, it's because I'm focusing my attention on something that isn't the bottleneck, like trying to study anatomy to correct my figure drawing when I need to be studying proportion. If I break to study other things, it usually happens that the thing I was trying to learn before eventually comes up again and locks into place - for example, studying typography made me really understand that proportion was what I was missing in my figure drawings, and then after spending some time developing ways of fixing it, all the anatomy knowledge just flowed out, even though I had hardly sketched anything in years. I get rusty in the specifics, but that's countered by knowing what I'm going for and how to get there. And this continues on into any larger project too: If I say, for example, "I'm making a video game", I have to know what the game is studying, or else I can't clearly see the scope of the work and reason logically about what needs to be learned to make it. There are fundamental principles in visual art, in music theory, and any medium with developed techniques, and so large projects, often being technical exercises, need a phase where the principles themselves are developed and refined. Over time I learned to actively seek those out, which made the learning go a lot faster. So in my opinion, when pressure to take a break builds up and you can't trace it back to any particular cause, that probably means not "time to sleep in and watch TV shows for the next week", but that it's time to switch to a different course of study for a little while, something that you can't even say "I'm doing this because this is related to my work" about. What will probably happen is that you see a relationship later, but you needed to willingly immerse yourself in both subjects for a little while to see it.
@assafcohen65534 жыл бұрын
You have no idea how suiting this video is for me at this moment! I am too kinda was taking a break and now its so hard to get back to!
@bigboomer10134 жыл бұрын
This makes so much sense. Its basically like having a routine. As someone who loves modelling and sculpting and getting far too focused on it and ignoring my health like sleeping or taking a break to the point I have to take a long one and then loosing motivation and such (ADD is hell for this), this advice will probably help me a lot. My life kinda revolves around routines but only if it has to do with doing chores or something. This could also probably help a lot for people on the spectrum like me who get burnouts. Now all I have to do is set a timer or someone to coach me lol. Because once I'm focused on my beloved work, I won't stop for anything unless I get bored of it.
@Rollacoastertycoon Жыл бұрын
Everybody has add
@gemmamrull3144 жыл бұрын
So true! One can never have it all! And planning very conciously is the only way to take control of the dilemma!
@lostcrusader80534 жыл бұрын
6:25 THIS!!! F**KING THIS!! I was confused why my line strokes were not the same when I stopped drawing from yesterday or when I stopped from last 3 days. I thought I was the only one that has this but hearing you say “easing in” and comparing it to heavy weights pretty much answers my personal problem.
@alaala39413 жыл бұрын
I’m a beginner and to be honest this is the best channel on youtube so far. I appreciate your work and thank you so much
@specialist_from_19804 жыл бұрын
Thanx. Your videos are always very motivating.
@leonardogonzalez65314 жыл бұрын
You make it look so easy! I wish I was at your level. You are an amazing artist!
@Jay-iy2ud4 жыл бұрын
I think we have the same routine, even the relaxing before bed I find it helps rather than going straight to bed after any 3D work or drawing, and wow how awesome is your chun li sculpt!
@halfbakedchannel60654 жыл бұрын
I just stop drawing when it's a "bad day" or stop having fun in general. Having a secondary thing to play around in like a music program or modelling. Awesome model by the way, it's almost inspiring me to download blender
@Hankyuo4 жыл бұрын
I feel like this is very personal so the advice in this video can't be applied to everyone. For me if I tell my self thatg I have to get to work at a very specific date I tend to stress about it or at least not fully enjoy my rest, what works for me is to have a mental idea of how I need to feel to get back work. So when I take a longer break, every morning I ask myself "Am I at the point where I can healthily work again?" but also make sure I don't answer "no" only out of laziness. If I do find myself being relaxed enough to work again but not doing it because lazy I give myself a point in time where I have to start no matter what (+ a list of things to do). I agree about the part saying you should start work back progressively tho
@shyamarama4 жыл бұрын
1:35 True. Consistency through balance. Easy to forget after too much time off. Thanks
@BurakkuHishou4 жыл бұрын
I want to thank you. I've spent too long wanting to be a 3D modeler and even understanding basics to where i have created several meshes, but spending too long away from it. I'll eventually get the motivation to get into it again and then after a day or two lose all steam and not touch it for a couple months. I think my problem was poor planning but also unsatisfied with how my skill level was developing and just putting it to the side, and wanting to put that dissatisfaction out my mind. I think my other biggest problem was i was wanting to do too much at once, from sculpting, to retopology, to texturing, rigging, and animation, when i should be focusing on one thing at a time. I want to thank you for helping me realize this.
@jspt2564 жыл бұрын
I think this applies to any passionate endeavour. Good video.
@StellaLovesMusic253 жыл бұрын
Art is something we do in spare time. Art should be an enjoyable activity. If you have to work for commission it becomes stressful and you give it up eventually or just stop loving it. Some people need longer breaks. After all if we neglect our soul by starving it for few extra dollars, what have we accomplished? We begin to feel and look like the characters that we make.
@Yudit19994 жыл бұрын
Great talk and awesome sculpt as always man! 🔥🔥🔥
@yansculpts4 жыл бұрын
Thanks xD
@Cerberean6613 жыл бұрын
Chun Li looks like a Disney Princess here. Love it!
@TheCreativeModellerHO3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much!
@xpdatabase11974 жыл бұрын
You are very right about when taking big breaks it can be really hard to get back into it, most of your skills will go rusty and you get out of your workflow so things will take you longer and most likely will look more messy than before. Off course that rust will go away just gotta give it some time, its important not to give up when you see bad results after a huge break. But the most important thing is when you stop doing art you will built more of an addiction to games, movies, KZbin, etc, that will make getting back into art really hard, as you can be doing that thing that takes no effort and gives you joy. The thing is avoiding it will only build that stress, just do it. Things that take effort give you way more joy, and also makes you feel accomplished. :)
@sakurahertz4 жыл бұрын
3:52 Honestly I find that checking analytics (especially outside of "work hours") can be very dangereous. It can quickly become obsessive and start to be very detrimental to mental health. It is one thing to actually study your performance and see where you can improve, see what's working and what's not. But when you start checking just for the sake of it, just to see how much your numbers are growing and get that small dopamine high, you know something's wrong. I started noticing this tendency as soon as I started getting some real growth. Checking analytics can quickly get "addictive".
@Floatharr4 жыл бұрын
I've practiced my art for 6 years without missing a day, I'm on day 2240 right now. The key for me is to have a few totally different disciplines like 2D painting, drawing, 3D hard surface, and sculpting among others to jump between, as well as streaming my progress. Making it a point to never skip a day helped me figure out ways to keep going in a sustainable way.
@DonWippo14 жыл бұрын
That sounds Amazing. Any tips on how to add a Discipline? I want to learn drawing, playing an instrument (Keyboard for now, Saxophone once I feel good enough with the Keyboard) and learn japanese. Someday I also want to learn Programming. While right now I am mostly doing 3D Modelling and Animation (slacking off too much though).
@jdsculpts4 жыл бұрын
@@DonWippo1 if you are a reader and havent read it yet, might as well get this one. "atomic habits" by james clear. its not for everyone but i think the concept behind it could help to find your own way
@Floatharr4 жыл бұрын
@@DonWippo1 Doing things that are related makes it easier to switch. All visual things are closely related, drawing has a lot in common with 3D, same task, different tools (create images). The skills all benefit each other. Drawing, playing an instrument, and learning a language have nearly nothing in common, so it may be difficult to sustain it, and very draining. As for how to actually do it... just pick a day, think of a simple schedule, and stick to it. :)
@DonWippo14 жыл бұрын
Both of you thanks for your Advise. I am not much of a reader, but that Book recommendation still sounds reasonable, so I might try it. One of the Problems for me to pick up / practice drawing is actually because it is related. I can't stop thinking "this would be so easier in 3D, you suck". So I thought it might be good for me to practice an artistic skill that is not visual.
@jeinkyo4 жыл бұрын
yup, just what i need. ty
@sirR34FX4 жыл бұрын
I'm on a break/hiatus right now. Thanks for uploading this and sharing your thoughts with us.
@kitsaws2134 жыл бұрын
The blue and red rim lights see EPIC!
@Mintdebiepie4 жыл бұрын
I was off my game for almost 8 years.... mostly depression but I got help and I’m back to drawing and painting 🖼 again.
@kerosene54614 жыл бұрын
So proud of you👏🏾 life can be such a struggle and at times we feel like what we're doing isn't even contributing to anything. Things like work, family struggles, depression, sickness drain the hell out of us. I haven't drawn since quarantine started and this video makes me feel like a loser😹 Im going to discipline myself from now on. God bless❤
@AlliumCepa244 жыл бұрын
Oh yah i can relate. I got into a problem and took a break for 3 months and its really hard to pick up my brush again. 😩
@burakoruk39794 жыл бұрын
We missed you Yan! Great video btw
@motekart11644 жыл бұрын
i always love your work dude thankyou !! 🔥💯
@nguyenbaquan31044 жыл бұрын
I really really love your art style. I'm gonna practice day by day to get that level. Thanks a lot for motivate me.
@DonWippo14 жыл бұрын
First of all Nice Modell of Chun Li! I think you are really making Progress and we can see it with each new Video you upload. Second, I am glad to see you doing retopo to clean up your sculpts too. I always thought I just kinda suck at Sculpting in a clean manner, but seeing this calms my mind a little, but still gives me clues what other areas I am currently lacking and some Inspiration to tackle those. Third, have you experimented with using or planning to use Non-Photorealistic-Rendering Techniques like Cel Shading or Outlines? I think those might be a good fit for your Style and I'd be thrilled to see what you can achieve in the creative wilderness that is NPR. Lastly to the actual Topic of the Video. Thanks for tackling it. I always feel that either taking the break or getting back from it is the most difficult thing in the world, so hearing your thoughts on the topic is really nice. Though I don't think I am the guy to actually stick to a plan. Good thing I got like minded people who will tell me, when I get to cozy in my Lazyness.
@fredmarquis11054 жыл бұрын
Great video man Keep Rockin !
@penpcm4 жыл бұрын
Yo, Chun Li is wearing a blue underwear, she is like Superman wearing a red underwear over his stocking.
@dnbuzumaki794 жыл бұрын
My favorite fighting game character, epic sculpture
@thattokyolifethoeatandlive54384 жыл бұрын
personal experience is the complete opposite. If I take small breaks here and there I just can't get into the rythm of working efficiently. On the other hand, I feel taking a long break (several months) allows me to get energy and motivation back up. This is a very subjective subject.
@tuktuk69194 жыл бұрын
I do the same> I find myself taking a 3 month break after working non stop for 9 months. I enjoy that break and I often find myself craving to get back to my art. I wait for the craving ;) I'm also amazed out how much faster I can crate I find my skills get better after a long break. without sketching or warm ups. It becomes a real joy again to do my art. I had a teacher who would do a 50/50 work 1 hour take 1 hour off.work 6 months take 6 months etc.
@sonnysoncere2 жыл бұрын
you are amazing bro. love your work
@jeffersonwilliam36083 жыл бұрын
Ohh man, ansome job...congratulations 👏 👏
@vikingsen20243 жыл бұрын
I saw Chun-Lee..then i Sub! Nice work Bro😎👍 Keep'em coming..
@steprockmedia3 жыл бұрын
I have written several novels and plan to finish a trilogy. It's been a long time since working on it and last time I opened my draft, I literally felt a bit of panic instead of joy.
@juanj.martinezd.56804 жыл бұрын
I'm a guitarist and I also draw, I've been thinking for my entire life that taking a break would fuck up my abilities as an artist, I needed this
@deandreconners44154 жыл бұрын
Wow this super neat good job looking for next video stay safe buddy
@TheCrazyStudent3 жыл бұрын
That’s some insane 3D sculpting skills!
@CasteloOfficial4 жыл бұрын
You're amazing talented! Thanks for share your experience!
@mr.handsome24553 жыл бұрын
IDK how youtube knew and recommed me this vid but I was thinking of quiting blender thanks Yan you changed my mind
@PartisanJim4 жыл бұрын
awesome! cool sculpt and colors, love your workflow!
@youneskasdi3 жыл бұрын
Overworking yourself daily is what lead to this feeling in the first place, i have a rule that i should add a half hour max past the point where I'm actually feeling tired of work per day, it doesn't matter whether i finish what i was doing or not keeping my mental health and preventing burnouts outweighs the rest
@MichelliFR4 жыл бұрын
This is great! Thank you.
@kouotsu4 жыл бұрын
I'm definitely deep into this, like 10 years of not working on art regularly outside of work. Don't even know what I would draw if I sat down and tried anymore. Working on fixing it tho
@chriisduran4 жыл бұрын
Brutal bro, you are brutal!
@JustADioWhosAHeroForFun4 жыл бұрын
I prefer the model you made than the one in Marvel vs Capcom: Infinite
@JstormZx3 жыл бұрын
I almost cried when I saw that Chun Li honestly.
@Rocket13772 жыл бұрын
I don't like either of them. Her SFV model is far better.
@mechasentai4 жыл бұрын
Good advice. I have a highly compulsive personality. And even I've gone from excessive nonstop art making to complete nothing. And that's not good, obviously.
@celsofelix74934 жыл бұрын
Awesome work! hope one day i can achieve sculpting like that. Good content. The video motivated me to go back to the practicing after a week off. Thank you!
@dwayneneckles4 жыл бұрын
Wow I am sold. That was the most beautiful thing I ever seen. I thought that was z brush at first. No idea you can do that with blender
@lilianviste92974 жыл бұрын
Omg, I respect at the highest point yours arts skills
@PSG4life4 жыл бұрын
Amazing work Yan. Watching you from Canada
@HigherPowerStation8 ай бұрын
I love your work and tutorials. I wonder how you're able to put colors in the clothing while sculpting
@i-net1254 жыл бұрын
🔥🔥🔥🔥 Do hawks next!
@luis121544 жыл бұрын
great advice and amazing art. incredible job!
@880728leonjf4 жыл бұрын
I had to put the video in 0.25, incredible chunli art!
@lavalamp55004 жыл бұрын
Woah she looks so cooool 😲
@yixinwang39564 жыл бұрын
Thank you sir.
@JesusIsRealJ12474 жыл бұрын
As a senior developer w/ 14 yrs of experience. I took a spontaneous break for myself and didn't produce art for yes, 1 year. So IMHO, I strongly disagree. If you were born with "art" in your blood. You will have a knack for it, no matter the length of time from a break you take. Once you learn something, and produce more than a handful of art pieces, illustrations. The ability to do it, will always be there, and in fact. The newest of tools your software will have upgraded since your last use. Will be a compliment to your return, as most of it becomes more and more. Fewer clicks to do operations. With that said, sculpting a character, and other components are 2nd nature. Even after 1 year. This includes the roundabout pipeline in total from modeling, uv, and texturing. The greatest gift a LONG spontaneous break will give. Is the ability to step back and learn to be a self-honest artist. You will immediately after detaching see everything in a newer light. Your memories of competing for art competitions, and the portfolio garbage will clear out of your head. So when you return, you won't think as much about the work. Or the meaning that your ego has once fed you to not touch something any further to modify, because it seemed once daunting, is now a meaningless series of steps to a repetitive process of assembly. Thanks for the video, and the cool speed through of your work, great job! - But I strongly disagree with your initial pressing to the issue of taking a break with spontaneous lack of planning. Any break, is a great break. If what you do, is often, and repetitive. Believe me, it WILL open your eyes to your faults, and all that useless misapplied tutorial info, and other shenanigans will become more crystal clear as to what you have to do to improve. What I will suggest is; replace your artistic habits for a new hobby, so the job you have for art. Will be just a job, and less about the ego-technical-know-it-all-and-how type of artist that this industry/game education uselessly spits out over and over. When you do it, just do it. Because an "artist" at any company is as only as good as the company asks of them to be.
@Zamkuma3 жыл бұрын
This is very true...After having IB art for two years in highschool I got really unmotivated to drawing after I graduated. The class nearly forced me to produce art 24/7 which made drawing less fun and creative for me all together. 5 months after I graduate from high school, I don’t draw at all. 6 months after graduating I finally have the power to draw again, but I only draw for one day. Too long of a break is never good, I felt so much better not picking up a pencil that now when I do I still get that feeling that I’m forced to draw and I give up all together. I’m still working on breaking this habit.
@assafcohen65534 жыл бұрын
Yan do you think you will do in the near future a reaction video on your veiwers' scoulpts? I mean like advices on what are we doing wrong and what are we doing right
@okkyar5073 жыл бұрын
01:22 nice workflow
@LiherbertArtes4 жыл бұрын
Esse cara é o melhor véi!!
@Shka_maru4 жыл бұрын
I love your workflow. Would you mind spending a bit of time going over your fullbody blockout phase? How do you add objects without going into object mode, similar to how Zbrush you can insert meshes (many digital sculptors use that method to sculpt stylized characters)
@gentsu81124 жыл бұрын
i loved this video, thank you very much I learn a lot from your videos
@ico_sphere19564 жыл бұрын
Awesome advice 👏👏👏...... love your videos🔥
@clevertonlara30444 жыл бұрын
fantastic!
@gb68394 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for make me realize my mistake
@oggu63934 жыл бұрын
thank you for the video it helped out
@wh02424 жыл бұрын
Great advice and great work👍 Can you upload this as tutorial please😁
@jonathanamadorart4 жыл бұрын
Hey Yan! I've followed you for a while and I love your content. I was wondering, if you could make a video about how you go about sculpting the face (and possibly the rest of the body)? Cause you seem to have a very particular way of going about it, and I would love to learn more about that :) Thanks!
@mayronen96434 жыл бұрын
hey YanSculpts i wondered if you could do a video about your blockout process?
@KishanKumar-wr2jv4 жыл бұрын
Good seeing you here 😊
@MT-ye3so4 жыл бұрын
Oh god thank you for this
@Ssj.Rose14 жыл бұрын
Can you make a kirito character from sword art online
@kirito-ip4qi4 жыл бұрын
Yes, I hope so
@SoulSolDieR7404 жыл бұрын
Kirito with Fatal Bullet outfit would be awesome
@Ssj.Rose14 жыл бұрын
Yes, you are right
@eugeobluerosesword13044 жыл бұрын
It would be very cool
@Ssj.Rose14 жыл бұрын
Yah 😁✌🏻
@amansinghchhonkar4 жыл бұрын
Please make Head sculpting Tutorial!!
@CGPacifica4 жыл бұрын
I wondered what happened to you. Are you just vertex painting the lips? I didn't see you do any retopology there. But you also got the lips to look glossy so I'm a little confused how you did that. Also what rig are you using? It looked so simple how you applied it, but then I guess you could have cut that out..? Thanks for your inspiring videos.
@gigamilk69814 жыл бұрын
For the rig, he's using a default blender addon called rigify. check out CGdive's youtube channel he's doing a full course on it
@CGPacifica4 жыл бұрын
I've tried the rigify rig and it always gives me errors. :(
@Warf6504 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much for the advice and I love your art style. I would love to see you do a Netero from Hunter x Hunter sometime.
@MrPinknumber4 жыл бұрын
This was helpful to me, thank you.
@jawaadn98694 жыл бұрын
Good job. You forgot to do her underpants 😅. It would be great if you did or have a tutorial in real-time. I like how you are just using shapes and then sculptuing those.
@Terer.3 жыл бұрын
Yan you Literally made chun li 100 times better than fortnite..love your work..
@cooloobahn1124 жыл бұрын
I will one day be at this level. Lots of cool techniques to learn, I'll be around. :)
@Rayu25Demon4 жыл бұрын
i think im going to quit every thing about 3d. pcs are over so priced to buy the double or more for ex (rtx 2060 cost here about 874.56 usd) in algeria. drawing tablet does not exist and there is no online store supports the delivery. thanks for encouraging me to learn but i will keep watching you for fun
@johnnylame33554 жыл бұрын
you don't need a good gpu for modelling or sculpting, only a decent processor and enough RAM, only for rendering.
@Rayu25Demon4 жыл бұрын
@@johnnylame3355 the problem i don't have decent PC.since 2018 I was planning to upgrade my old laptop with i7 4558u radeon hd 8500m but everything is overpriced, working with this laptop makes blender freezes and crashing all of the time i cant pay about 2000$ on 600$ pc
@oimobdesign86274 жыл бұрын
Same here in Brazil, my PC is from 2012 (was a good one). Now I can't run Unreal with more than 20 fps. Sculpting is ok.
@giovanniramirez774 жыл бұрын
I like the speed sculpt but I would like to see a full in-depth tutorial :)
@aicogames12334 жыл бұрын
make a video of which show you used make the characters and how to put it in VR mode
@anjalikashyap24524 жыл бұрын
I am not into sculptures. Yeah I draw mandalas, zentangles etc. I am not here for any of the above. I am here because of the artist. I found him today when I was looking for some inspirational art videos for improving my art. I like watching him while he talks. He reminds me of someone very close to me. And Yan if you are reading this I just wanna say you are very cute, inspiring. Keep doing what you do. And if possible do add a small window in the corner of the next video, where I can see you talking. And I am not insane so don't you worry 😅.
@milantiquestudios74604 жыл бұрын
If you don’t go back to your art after taking a break then you probably stop caring about your art a long time ago and were just running on fumes or momentum. If you aren’t enjoying your life then make a change and see how it goes. For most dedicated artists I’d imagine they are less bored with their art and more bored with the projects they have been working on as of late. Art is hard to have a job in since your heart needs to be in your work to get the most out of yourself. So work on what you want. And if your current art job is ruining art for you, then quit and find a new one. Maybe one not in the art field. The journey is the best part. The ending is just there to remind you of the journey.
@wojt3d4153 жыл бұрын
very nice very nice
@skelhain4 жыл бұрын
Is there any video where you go through the sculpting process in normal speed so one can see exactly how you use your stylus to create, attach and sculpt the bodyparts? For instance I'm trying to recreate your way of attaching the fingers but even on slowest playback speed it's hard to tell how it's done.