I have been delinquent in posting the past few days. I have no good explanation for this other than general laziness, so on with the lessons!
Having completed the Intro to Digital Painting 101 on https://www.ctrlpaint.com/getting-started I moved onto the series of videos on traditional drawing, in which Matt Kohr explains the tools to be used (mainly HB pencils and a combo of vinyl and kneaded erasers) and a few basics. The confusion came when he started referencing things in videos that I had clearly not seen. This made me check the user comments and for some reason, the videos are posted out of order. It wasn’t a huge thing, but it did not instill confidence in the rest of the material. I watched the following:
- Welcome to Traditional Drawing
- Ctrl+Paint Unplugged Road-Map
- Unplugged: Pencils and Erasers
- The Pencil
- Visual Measuring
For those playing drawing along at home, the correct order as noted by a user, seems to be:
- Welcome to Traditional Drawing
- Crtl+Paint Unplugged road Map
- The Pencil
- Visual Measuring
- Unplugged: Pencils and erasers
The first actual exercise is to draw soft, loopy ovals in pencil, to help train the use of shoulder movement and get away from the tight grip used when writing–and rarely for drawing.
After the confusion of these mis-sorted videos, I went over to https://drawabox.com/ and started their lessons. They take a different approach, swapping in ultrafine markers for pencils, with the notion that this is easier because it lessens the urge to fix mistakes (no erasing) and just focus on the exercises, and the pen produces a single thickness of line that requires no pressure (one of the things they emphasize is to not mix different pen sizes). With pencils, the pressure will affect the stroke, as will the tilt of the pencil. Pens keep things simple and presumably easier for the beginner.
I have completed:
Lesson 0: Getting Started, an explanation of the lessons and tools needed, along with an overview of the non-technical skills that will be needed and refined through the lessons (patience, spatial awareness, etc).
I have read through but not yet finished:
Lesson 1: Lines, Ellipses and Boxes. This includes the first actual drawing bits (homework, as the site calls it), requiring a total of five pages for the three subjects. Repetition is a key component here–getting better by doing.
I have not yet taken pen or pencil to paper, because I am pondering the following:
- Try doing both sets of lessons together (potentially confusing/overwhelming)
- Do one set of lessons first, then the other
- Stick to one set of lessons, then only do the other if I feel it’s needed
I don’t want to turn this into an excuse for not diving in, so I will likely start doing both and see how it goes. It’s easy enough to drop one and go back later.
Up next: Actual drawing! (?)