indeed. 59 sec short = 10 minutes of internalizing, moving through processing… then birthing understanding of concept. Almost like brain chip knowledge download
@@broadwayzjm5257 Good question - the answer probes much deeper into nature's color theory. I have a whole class on it called 'The Color Survival Guide' - but as for my youtube videos, this one gets into it a bit: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-gwLQ0cDb4cE.html
One minute of Marco Bucci feels like an entire semester of art classes. Art colleges need to step up their curriculum or Marco needs to be paid way more than what he currently gets.
i was remind of a few sayings: "in learning you will teach, in teaching you will learn" as well as "if you cant explain it simply, you don't understand it well enough". Marco truly understands a lot and are really capable of making it simple for us....or are we just blindly simping now lmao but thanks a lot Marco! Been enjoying painting more and more thanks to you :D
I've been an artist since I was small. I've always struggled to grasp the concept of lights and you just explained it to me perfectly in like a minute. You're so awesome thank you
As somebody who paints models, I never understood how people paint skin tones in a way that stays true to the skin tones while also showing reflective light. Just incredible
I feel like I should add that reflected light usually works better in areas that would normally be shadow. Direct light often overpowers any type of bounce light color (in most cases, though sometimes subtle hue shifting is needed to compensate in extreme cases)
Marco, for so long i've considered mysef selftaught because I woul learn from random places, but you really are the one who taught me how to paint. Thank you for your videos and for democratizing knowledge. You're amazing mate
THIS is the kind of content I like to see on RU-vid shorts! Not just that clickbait copycats stuff. This is incredibly valuable, and interesting! Thank you 😊
In 2020, I was learning how to digital paint and I found many channels that helped me this was one of them.I actually tried to implement something like this from your videos in my self portrait painting In 2021 and placed on YT. Right now, I took a huge break from digital painting and will start back in 2024. All the digital painting lessons I learned from actually doing are still with me. It makes me rewatch the content and actually understand whats going on now.
Another thing I learned at art uni. You can paint things „sharp” for cold colors and for warm colors paint things more blurry. With this technique and what’s said in the video you can really make your art pop up! Or if you make drawing in black and white this is very helpful for showing different light, texture etc.
Sorry i am late, but i think he means that you mix the colors in different proportions to get the color range. Aka if the left is 100 percent red and right side is 100 percent blue, the second one counting from the left is something like 90percent red and 10 percent blue and then the one after that is 80 20 and so on. There is software which helps you mix colors to get the mix. I mean blue is 00:00:255 and red is 255:000:000 in rgb 8 bit color depth. So if you want the color 10 percent blue and 90 percent red for example you would do 0.1*(00:00:255)+0.9*(255:00:00) = 230:00:26 (approx).
I'm also a late but another way to transition those colours is to use a colour wheel (cool to warm colours and vice versa). Just adjust the hue/ saturation and etc. to match ur base colour and move along the colour wheel till ur desired colour. Hope this helps!! ^w^
Quite amazing how the effect is even more dramatic on a white background. Makes me wonder, do you have any videos with a rule-of-thumb for deciding a color's saturation? Thanks!
You’ve explained something I’ve been trying to understand for years so well in a few seconds Edit: what I do want to know is how do you know what colors fill in the transitions?
Man you are so good explaining always. I love your art channel. I think from the voice to the explanations and the whole art process it's awesome the cleareness of your job.
This has opened my eyes and helped a TON, thank you so much for sharing!! Your concise explanation has encouraged me to try working on even more colorful art!
Holy crap! This is legitemately great content imo AND it is on yt shorts? This is the eighth wonder of the world! I gotta say that you have elite skills with the art!
This is just what i needed to hear. Being mostly self taught I sometimes paint things and think "that's not quite right". I believe this may be one issue and will help me out tremendously. Thanks for that
Want to drop my thanks for your tutorials which have greatly improved my colours. I may not be where I want to be as of yet but ever since I found your channel this year, I've seen so much improvement in my work, it's astounding. Thank you for all that you do, all the best wishes from Nepal!!
You're truely a legend I thought about that before but the idea was vague and incomplete. You succeeded to put it into words and a clear explanation and in a few seconds
Heavily considering showing this to an indecisive customer (Family paints house interiors). Past 2 weeks she has had us running around getting paints that make the house uniform in color regardless of light 😑 sunlight, daylight, dusk, reflections off tile, marble, cabinets… I even took my jacket off between conversations and when she walked back in she asked herself aloud why the color keeps changing. 🤨🤦♂️
@@capuchinosofia4771 it is. Just got done with a room and she walks in and says,” this is the grey I wanted”… it’s a rainy day outside and the color I put on the walls is titanium white lol.
Bruh, this blew my mind because it actually makes sense . Why cant they teach this to students at school? I feel like i wasted so many years learning things that have no application when i could have learned this instead
keeping the two palettes separate is such a simple (and in hindsight, obvious) tip, yet so helpful! i often end up with my colors looking muddy when i try to actually take into account light and reflected light, so this was really helpful
Information like this pairs very well with some art history. Using this to contextualize in class can really help you clue into the intentions of the artist, especially when studying the impressionist era when things are more suggested and not so obvious. Very interesting 👍