Yeah, I always put all the art videos I watch into playlists. I have one main list that’s just all the art videos I’ve felt were worth saving in general, and then sub-playlists for each topic, like perspective, light and shadow, anatomy, etc.
Awesome tutorial. One of the best lessons I ever learned in painting was that 99% of the work when it comes to rendering ANYTHING is to just stop and think about what you’re actually rendering. What kind of material it is, how does light react to that material, etc. this video encapsulates that message perfectly I think. One thing I noticed, but correct me if I’m wrong. When you copy-pasted the spheres to get the “reflection” of the adjacent spheres, shouldn’t they have been flipped? Especially on the reflection of the ball with the red stripe, it seems most obvious because I think the red stripe would go the opposite direction in the reflection. The others aren’t quite as noticeable so it probably doesn’t matter much lol. Either way, fantastic video! Thank you for working on it, it’s going to help a lot of people.
I don't know what to say, mind-blowing, to see so much knowledge becoming something realistic, saving the video to go back some other time. Thank you, Tyler!
Very good video! An idea for another vid (if this has not already been done) : reflections on different types of water would be very interesting, I think (lake, puddles, sea, etc).
Your explain Fresnel correctly, but when you pasted the left "matte" sphere unto the reflective sphere you did not mirror (flip) the image. Also you erased the reflection, stating Fresnel again. Fresnel would cause you not to erase because the angle in inference is become more and more away from the frontal plane of the eye's FOV. Love the overall vibe,but some the tutorial is jumbling the rules a bit in terms of reflection of scene objects and Fresnel dynamics.
@@TylerEdlin84 Yeah, sorry for being rude. It's just frustrating to see sound mixing get messed up so often when it's so important. We're all here for your commentary, so having other noises get in the way is a large detraction.
@@TylerEdlin84 Nah man don’t turn down the music. It’s super relaxing and adds to the commentary, not distracting from it. It creates a great atmosphere
I dunno about you, my brethren, but I need these videos in a playlist that I can binge. There's a lot to learn here
Yeah, I always put all the art videos I watch into playlists. I have one main list that’s just all the art videos I’ve felt were worth saving in general, and then sub-playlists for each topic, like perspective, light and shadow, anatomy, etc.
Awesome tutorial. One of the best lessons I ever learned in painting was that 99% of the work when it comes to rendering ANYTHING is to just stop and think about what you’re actually rendering. What kind of material it is, how does light react to that material, etc. this video encapsulates that message perfectly I think.
One thing I noticed, but correct me if I’m wrong. When you copy-pasted the spheres to get the “reflection” of the adjacent spheres, shouldn’t they have been flipped? Especially on the reflection of the ball with the red stripe, it seems most obvious because I think the red stripe would go the opposite direction in the reflection. The others aren’t quite as noticeable so it probably doesn’t matter much lol.
Either way, fantastic video! Thank you for working on it, it’s going to help a lot of people.
Clothing would be awesome.
Also maybe some episode of enfiro, taking some insight on clouds / trees / rocks
You had such Fridays? where have i been sleeping!?!!?!?
WOW, clear shading process! I love it! Please do more! :D
this is where I will be spending my Fridays, thanks!
I don't know what to say, mind-blowing, to see so much knowledge becoming something realistic, saving the video to go back some other time. Thank you, Tyler!
The way you're explaining is a treat! Thank you for providing these resources as well as the feedback in the mentorship
Tyler is amassing an army of Tylers! I feel like we have to keep a close eye on this situation. (¬_¬)
This new series is great! Thank you! ❤
This is very cool! Thanks Tyler!
Thanks Tyler!! If you ever do more examples of the weirder materials that'd be awesome... Glass, fire, water..
I love watching material studies, it's so addictive :D
Thank you for this video, please make more for us.
Really cool tuttorial!
This was really awesome session and I loved every second of it I wanna do some texture studies so bad now thank you so much Tyler & Tlyer 🙏
AWESOME!!! There's SO MUCH to sink the teeth into
literally amazing content.
I hope I can start helping artists in the future too. :)
Thank you for the deep lighting class. Have a great weekend guys!
I'm working on rocks and ground (dirt, gravel, sand) so the next video should be helpful. Thanks.
Very good video! An idea for another vid (if this has not already been done) : reflections on different types of water would be very interesting, I think (lake, puddles, sea, etc).
Water studies are also on my list.
Your explain Fresnel correctly, but when you pasted the left "matte" sphere unto the reflective sphere you did not mirror (flip) the image. Also you erased the reflection, stating Fresnel again. Fresnel would cause you not to erase because the angle in inference is become more and more away from the frontal plane of the eye's FOV. Love the overall vibe,but some the tutorial is jumbling the rules a bit in terms of reflection of scene objects and Fresnel dynamics.
Up
Don't you think the reflections should be flipped horizontally?
The lightest dark is darker than the darkest light.
wtf is this statement
@@TheAngelArrow are u okay? his statement is totally right and you should always remember it
@@TheAngelArrow It means the lightest part of the dark parts AKA shadow side is darker than the darkest part of the light or non-shadow side
@@TheAngelArrowwtf is this comment
Deep
Thank you :)!!!
THANK YOU!!!!!
Gold
Water next please or a transparent material
Where can I find the SR_metal brush?
Letssss goooo
Turn down the music, it's almost as loud as the commentary.
We will take your feedback into consideration. Having some manners wouldn’t hurt.
@@TylerEdlin84 Yeah, sorry for being rude. It's just frustrating to see sound mixing get messed up so often when it's so important.
We're all here for your commentary, so having other noises get in the way is a large detraction.
@@TylerEdlin84 Nah man don’t turn down the music. It’s super relaxing and adds to the commentary, not distracting from it. It creates a great atmosphere