@@oxigenarian9763 Your comment reinforces my idea of making a video where I explain something about my work. I really like that you connect with this way of presenting the human being without idealization, sometimes almost as an existential concern. At the moment you can see a lot of text on my blog.
@@tintachina The idealization of nudes is one reason I dislike classic posed portraits. Real people don't look so perfect! IMO, if an artist wants to capture feminine beauty, the artist must first accurately capture her emotions. This gives context to her physical beauty instead of turning her into an object. I like to comment on relationship channels that no amount of makeup can compete with the beauty of a genuine smile. This is because the real source of feminine beauty comes from within her, not her outside. :)
I see him holding this glasses and evrery time the glasses tilt a little bit i cringe beacause i worrie that he accidentally might drop all the ink on his beautiful painting..
Amigo soy un admirador suyo de aqui de California. me podria decir que clase de papel utiliza? y como se llama el lapiz o instrumento que utiliza para su sketch inicial? se podria hacer con watercolor paper? Muy amable y muy imprecionante su trabajo. muchas gracias por compartir su arte.
Omar Romero Es papel de acuarela, de grano fino pero buen gramaje: ambas cosas necesarias, para que se deslice el instrumento de dibujar, para que no se doble demasiado al mojar. El instrumento, como he comentado unas cuantas veces en este foro, es un simple palo afilado, un trozo de rama seca, o un trozo de madera... se moja en tinta y si ya funciona, adelante. La gracia de la técnica es que es algo irregular, a veces sale demasiada tinta, a veces demasado seco... en parte impone su propia personalidad al trabajo. Gracias por su comentario.
... Is a easy reason: because I've painted Salas a lot of times and I wanted to paint a new image never painted before, with new problems...so, a real situation...
That is a very good Landscape Drawing and your doing it outside. I do lots of pen and ink and indian ink and I use radiograph pens aswell. Very well done
Hi, there ara a lot of tools to drawing with indian ink... I use a stick of wood -simply! You can read more details in the answers to dreyphoto etc. Regards!
hey, nice video. Can you please tell me what tool are you using to create this drawing, I've recently purchased india ink and have no idea what tool to use? Thanks
In this case, it is charcoal pencil. You can see in 1:12.Can't be possible delete the sketch: you have to get right to the first. The charcoal always leaves stains on the paper...
@dreyphoto The stick is a piece of wood, anything dry wooden stick is good for. A piece of dry branch of tree... you have to sharpen with a knife or so... a toothpick is good to draw. I dip it in ink! What's the better stick? There is not two sticks same shape... even, when you sharpen it, it changes! This is the charm of this technique. You have to try by yourself