Thanks for sharing and showing your drawings. Really helps a lot.
@jrobinsonart
4 ай бұрын
My pleasure 😊
@LisaRSArt
4 ай бұрын
Agree 💯👏👏😊. Subscribed 👍
@jrobinsonart
4 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@DuaneVanSchoonhoven
4 ай бұрын
~ Great advice, thank you! ~
@jrobinsonart
4 ай бұрын
You're so welcome!
@jaimejaime1178
4 ай бұрын
Hi J Robinson. Jim from Madrid, Spain (a fellow artist and a New Yorker expat living abroad). Just found you in KZitem! I'm a wildlife and nature artist, though lately I've started to do some more Urban Sketching "on-the-go" and I completely agree with you... looseness should be used when it's needed. For example... When out in nature sketching with Ink & Watercolor, if I see a bird on a tree I need to be quick & try to get the "essence" of the bird, while still remembering it's colours, figure, etc, so I can keep finishing the sketch in case it decides to fly away suddenly. When I'm urban sketching is the same thing... cars, buses, people... everybody's on-the-go, moving all over the place... now, in this case (Urban Sketching) it's more difficult due to the amount of subjects and movement, so you need to learn (I'm still learning!) on how to decide what's "in" and what's "out" in the sketch to achieve the composition you want... When colouring afterwards... you don't have to be realistic to what you see either... You can, Like one if my favourite Sketchers (Swanson), where she spends a lot if time doing her sketch but it comes out beautiful... or Ian Flenning that decides on a composition, work a quicker and uses color to enforce the message and the scene... So yeah! Learning how to be tight or loose when needed is a necessary skill and one that needs a lot if practice to master. Good luck with the channel and I just subscribed to watch more. Cheers from Sunny Spain! 😁👍😎✌
@jaimejaime1178
4 ай бұрын
Sorry... my dumbphone sometimes plays tricks on me while writing... I meant to say "Brenda Swenson" and "Ian Fennelly"... Cheers! 😁👍
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