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  • Portrait painting in oil. Realistic oil portrait of man

    Posted by admin on January 21st, 2010 and filed under oil painting | 11 Comments »

    Portrait painting in oil on a canvas for nice men. http://art-portrets.ru/video-portret-maslom.html Realistic painting portrait in oil from photo drawn by artist Igor Kazarin on a canvas in the size of 40 sm on 50 see Time of execution of this portrait has borrowed 3 weeks. In this video stage-by-stage process of drawing of a portrait by oil, with high-speed drawing playback is shown. Realistic oil painting portrait has deserved great glory starting with depth of centuries.
    Presently oil painting portrait in style of realism loses the positions concerning other methods of drawing portraits, but nevertheless admirers of artist drawing pictures in oil on canvas in realistic style to become more and increasing every year and it is no surprising in fact for understanding such portraits are accessible to much.

    Duration : 0:9:44

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    oil painting techniques ~ portrait 1/3 (underpainting 1 – edge layer)

    Posted by admin on December 30th, 2009 and filed under oil painting | No Comments »

    this is the initial underpainting

    what your aiming to do here is define and fix edges and lines which could
    otherwise become lost in subsequent layers
    avoid creating edges you don’t want by blurring them out using painting Medium

    colors used:
    permanent rose
    cadmium yellow light
    french ultramarine
    titanium white

    brand:
    Griffin Alkyd fast drying oil color

    Mediums:
    Liquin

    wearing gloves
    Disposable gloves should be considered when working with oil paints. Many pigments & mediums are toxic and can be absorbed through the skin.

    part 2/3
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7MUEGpQY1rI&feature=related

    part 3/3
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYODbxECS7E&feature=response_watch

    website
    http://www.mniland.com

    Duration : 0:1:21

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    Speed Painting Photorealism… Again.

    Posted by admin on December 22nd, 2009 and filed under paintings | 25 Comments »

    Another digital painting done from scratch in photoshop using Wacom Intuos 3 tablet. Artwork is completely freehand drawn, with reference photo set off to the side for glancing at. No tracing… ;-)
    Actual time to do pic was about 3 and a half hours.

    UPDATE:

    For the people that think this is fake– simply do a little research. It’s as easy as clicking on my username to see the list of all of my other videos. There you will find an array of different subjects and different mediums… Including photo real techniques with real paint. It it’s a pretty reasonable conclusion that if I can do the things I do with real paint– why would I feel the need or insecurity to fake it with the “less impressive” digital mediums? Why waste my time?

    You could also consider the efforts it would take to fake such a thing- consider the layering of the shadows and gradients… Look at how carefully it is done in these vids. There is a visible build-up of LAYERS of tones shadows and colors. To fake something like that would take so much effort, why would a guy who can do all of the other OBVIOUS traditional medium paintings on the same channel waste his time?

    TO MANY PEOPLE ASK:
    Why “photorealism”?
    Why not just use a camera?

    The answer is simple. I’ve made the point many times in my replies, comments and descriptions. But I’ll make it clearer here for those who do not understand:

    It’s for practice. It is the same as a musician practicing scales, so that he can write better songs…Or even a musician who plays a song from another famous musician on a CD– also to make himself better… To inspire/aspire to become better at the craft/skill.

    It’s the same with the art. Sure I am just acting like a human camera and re-creating every detail and color I see– but that’s where the conditioning is. Same as that musician that is replicating the sounds of a scale or someone else’s song. (Why not just say to the musician, “why bother playing that song? Just put in the CD?” )

    The fact that it is all freehand and controlled by my judgement makes it so valuable to attempt…. I have to be able to see and recognize exact tones of color, and be able to recreate it with extreme accuracy from scratch. I must be able to recognize every detail and the consistency that makes that detail REAL. It strengthens my abilities to be able to create works of art that come from my imagination.

    Aside from practice, it is also a very commonly sought skill in the commercial trades to be able to mimic real-life with art. In addition to that, it does entertain the majority.

    So there you go.

    Duration : 0:3:26

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    Speed Painting Photo Realism

    Posted by admin on December 6th, 2009 and filed under paintings | 25 Comments »

    I did this as an excercise for the purpose of, quite simply, practice. It’s been a while since I attempted anything photo-real… It’s very good to do this kind of thing because it strengthens your freehand drawing abilities, as well as developing an eye for detail.

    Freehand drawn in photoshop cs2 (from a reference photo off to the side) with a wacom tablet.
    time-lapsed… real time was about 3 and a half hours.

    UPDATE:

    For the people that think this is fake– simply do a little research. It’s as easy as clicking on my username to see the list of all of my other videos. There you will find an array of different subjects and different mediums… Including photo real techniques with real paint. It it’s a pretty reasonable conclusion that if I can do the things I do with real paint– why would I feel the need or insecurity to fake it with the “less impressive” digital mediums? Why waste my time?

    You could also consider the efforts it would take to fake such a thing- consider the layering of the shadows and gradients… Look at how carefully it is done in these vids. There is a visible build-up of LAYERS of tones shadows and colors. To fake something like that would take so much effort, why would a guy who can do all of the other OBVIOUS traditional medium paintings on the same channel waste his time?

    TO MANY PEOPLE ASK:
    Why “photorealism”?
    Why not just use a camera?

    The answer is simple. I’ve made the point many times in my replies, comments and descriptions. But I’ll make it clearer here for those who do not understand:

    It’s for practice. It is the same as a musician practicing scales, so that he can write better songs…Or even a musician who plays a song from another famous musician on a CD– also to make himself better… To inspire/aspire to become better at the craft/skill.

    It’s the same with the art. Sure I am just acting like a human camera and re-creating every detail and color I see– but that’s where the conditioning is. Same as that musician that is replicating the sounds of a scale or someone else’s song. (Why not just say to the musician, “why bother playing that song? Just put in the CD?” )

    The fact that it is all freehand and controlled by my judgement makes it so valuable to attempt…. I have to be able to see and recognize exact tones of color, and be able to recreate it with extreme accuracy from scratch. I must be able to recognize every detail and the consistency that makes that detail REAL. It strengthens my abilities to be able to create works of art that come from my imagination.

    Aside from practice, it is also a very commonly sought skill in the commercial trades to be able to mimic real-life with art. In addition to that, it does entertain the majority.

    So there you go.

    Duration : 0:4:7

    Read the rest of this entry »

    Portrait Photography

    Posted by admin on October 13th, 2009 and filed under portraits | 20 Comments »

    Corporate photographer David Tejada photographs 9 executive head shots and environmental portraits

    Duration : 0:4:22

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    Episode 13 , Beautiful Photo Studio Portraits w/ One Light

    Posted by admin on September 25th, 2009 and filed under portraits | 25 Comments »

    Learn 3 different studio portrait lighting techniques using just one light. More info at prophotolife.com .

    Duration : 0:5:52

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