I want to congratulate the video creator on the excellent use of Photoshop layers, many of them, to create a very easy to follow explanation of something that's not that easy to understand. Well done !!
I am a beginner and a drawing enthusiast. Reached your channel via youtube recommendations and found your explanations the best so far. Would like to subscribe for a course if you may have on any platform. Many thanks!
Urgent N E W S : PLEASE NOTE BREAK THE S I L E N C E : NEWS: Open Your Eyes, or close them, and keep them closed. URGENT : L I S T E N : U M E K U N G O K ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-talQsJYYU5Q.html NFAC4LIFE
Can someone tell me, at 16:35 what are the other 2 lines along the ground for, other than the ones coming from the lighting base to the edges of the ground circle and the line through the middle of the circle? And why is the point of the shadow of the cone connecting to the bottom one of these lines instead of the one going through the center of the circle? In any case, great video, by far the most helpful I have found to date on perspective.
Just Photoshop, I draw a line by holding down shift the dragging the brush tool. Then I copy that line 9 times. Next, I merge all those layers and duplicate them. I then free-transform the second set of lines 90 degrees and merge again. Then I free-transform the grid I made into perspective by right-clicking while free-transforming. I hope that makes sense.
Thank you for this video Justin!! I had a book that I was reading through that explained the same concepts but watching someone also do it in demonstration makes things even more clear :)
Not if you're into illustration, if you can't understand what's happening on the physical sense of the universe then your drawing will look just as random: you're shooting without aiming, how is that gonna convey your message to your targeted audience ?
@@osefosef123 That depends on your own personal style and approach. Some artists are far more technical than others, but it doesn't necessarily make their art "better". It's subjective, and technical accuracy is just one aspect of art. Art, including illustration, doesn't have to be technically perfect to appeal to people. If you want to create highly technical art then kudos to you. If you'd rather focus on other aspects of art then that's fine too. I find highly technical art amazing and impressive but most of my favourite art isn't particularly technical, in terms of realism. Some illustrators use 3D software to figure out lighting, perspective and other things.
2:15 lmaaaooo what arrre you talking about?? the closest the lines are just affects the type of convergence. like different angle lenses. that shit is so wrong lmfaaooo how do you even think things going further away from you look more skewed perspective would even actually tell you the opposite happens.