@@tahseim-kaifolkes1445 Hi, We all draw at different speeds so I'd recommend watching each exercise and then pausing the video to do it in your own time. You can also slow down the video speed using the settings button but you might want to turn the sound down because it will sound funny!
Finally, actually helpful advice for complete beginners. Thank you! Everyone assumes you been to artschool or have some drawing experience. And i did not draw anything since school, and never was good at it.
Thanks for your comment! Really glad it was helpful! You might like the videos in this playlist of my practical exercises and tutorials: th-cam.com/play/PL-i_GDP6hCKmm4oCA6Sq6FFe3ShqeUk5v.html&si=AQ-723XYZup7AK1y Try not to worry about whether you are good at it or not, it takes a while to develop drawing coordination but hopefully you can have fun practicing!
Thanks, I shall use this course as reference material when I get an artistic block...And that happens pretty regularly, as I'm only starting this journey..Thanks again, this is a great way of getting back to basics!
Thanks very much for your support! Artists block is pretty normal but the important thing is to just do something, anything - these exercises are great for that because there is no pressure for them to be perfect but it’s still practice and improvement! Thanks again ☺️
Hi! I just discovered this tutorial today while exploring TH-cam. I just want to say this is the type of approach I need in a beginning drawing class. I took an in person beginning drawing class over five years ago & the approach was very difficult to comprehend. Plus, I do not fair well in beginning hands-on classes that have more than ten students. So, thanks for this video-that was not only personal- but made it easier for me to comprehend the concept of beginning drawing.🙂
So glad you found it useful! Yes there are lots of different approaches to teaching drawing and what suits some may not suit others. I’ve found that some people love learning the technical aspects like perspective and other people prefer working on practical projects. Neither is right or wrong, you’ve just got to find the style of learning that works best for you and the one you enjoy! Thanks very much for watching :)
Hi, I'm so glad that I've come across your platform and looking forward to trying your exercises. I've always loved to doodle and have drawn a few things but I would love to be able to move more freely in my endeavours in this enjoyable activity. I'll definitely be following your channel. I'm 63 and believe one is never too old to learn. Thanks
Thanks to YTs algorithm, your channel was recommended to me. I‘ve been trying to get back into drawing, it’s been a long time. Back to the basics is perfect. Your calm voice and explanations/exercises are great, thank you. I left a subscription.
Thanks so much! Glad to hear you are getting back into drawing, take your time and put a small amount of time aside for practicing drawing each week. It all adds up! Thanks for watching 😊
Thank you for sharing such beginner friendly exercises. Many just dive into straight drawing figurines/object which is demotivating how to even reach there. Grateful for sharing such exercises !
I've struggled with circular motions all my live, this is helping me a lot to get a better idea on how to handle these shapes. Thanks so much for this video, really useful tips.
This is a great tutorial! Such a nice variety, very well explained, and bonus, you are a lefty as am I! These exercises should help me to steady my hand, arm, and shoulder.
I love this. Thank you. I have been so stuck, just not knowing how to start a new piece (I’m all self taught) but just watching a quick run through of this, I can’t wait to just sit down and have fun fussing with these exercises, without the stress of what it would look like. I think I’ve forgotten how to do that. Thanks much. :)
Aw I’m so glad to hear that! I hope you can keep up the flow of ideas after doing some of these…maybe just keep you hand going and see what happens! Thanks for watching and for your lovely comment ☺️
Good question. It really depends on how challenging you find them. It's going to take time to develop coordination so rather than repeating the same exercise over and over, I'd go through the video and if there are particular exercises you identify as tricky for you then add that to your drawing practice as a warm up. Eg. do those exercises for 5-10 minutes before you start working on something a bit longer like drawing an object (or taking one of my free learn to draw lessons!) Keep up the warm ups for a few weeks/months as you draw other stuff and you should see a big improvement. It's a bit like doing weights or stretches, its takes repetition over time :)
I have been drawing for a long time but I knew there was something wrong with creating lines as I sketched. I am hoping that this exercise can help me. It is really fun. Thank you for sharing this tutorial! :D
Ellipses are very hard for me. I tried using a template to draw some perfect ones and then practiced following that outline freehand and it seems to help...
They are tricky. The key at the moment is to not worry about them being perfect (if we want them perfect we can just use a compass!) but to focus on practicing the movement for creating ellipses. I do have another video here on TH-cam about how to draw circles: th-cam.com/video/GqdDL6li4SQ/w-d-xo.html The most valuable method to practice is the rhythmic circles method, it will take time to develop the coordination but its worth it!
Hi 😊 How often and how long do you recommend that we practice? I am a beginner in drawing 😊 I really like your videoes and so good that you speek slowly and understandably 🌞
It depends on how much time you have but the main thing is to make it consistent. eg. every week. Try to find a time that you will always be able to sit down and do 30-60 minutes of drawing. Do some exercises to start and then follow tutorials or have a go drawing on your own. Thats just for starters to help develop the habit, then you can add more time and more days a week if you can! A few videos to check out if you havent already: Four Practice Habits: th-cam.com/video/TjszHs_AkKs/w-d-xo.html Learn To Draw Free Course (30-40 mins each lesson): th-cam.com/play/PL-i_GDP6hCKlsQCrB7SW0qKyXBNMocDar.html Thanks for watching and all the best!
Completely new to drawing but something that i have noticed through this intro is that i can draw circles backwards way better than the direction i normally draw.
Yes, hand is resting on the paper for support, but moving with the line. Think of it as sliding your hand across the paper. 9:54 in this video th-cam.com/video/ing1x95WZ_I/w-d-xo.htmlsi=6JE2KZ-RLPiFNwJ_ talks a bit more about it :)
Thanks Geraldine, I dont have a specific video for drawing a chimney but you might find my videos on one point perspective and two point perspective (coming out soon) useful :)
@@ThePencilRoomOnline Yes we did! I am teaching my friend to draw and when I find a good video that teaches basics and movement I send them to her! She loved it.😁🖊🖋
I love you teaching style, it's very clear and relaxing....very easy to follow. I felt like I was in a profesional art class.Thank you so much. I noticed a big improvement in my ease of flow when sketching. ❤
Yes eventually with practice it should become easier and feel natural to draw from the shoulder moving the whole arm. This gives you freedom of movement. Sometimes drawing only from the wrist is necessary, doing the flicks etc. But ideally you’ll get to a point where you feel comfortable with both ways and can use them when they suit the best! Thanks for watching and keep practicing :)
Hello. I like both your drawing techniques and your delivery. Are your latest classes for Beginners on Udemy or Skillshare? Thank you P.S. What type pencil are you using?
Hi! Thanks for your kind comment. Yes, Learn To Draw course is available on Udemy, or plenty of drawing tutorials on Skillshare, link in the video description above. Im using a Staadtler Wopex pencil, its nice and smooth and its a 2B, not too light not too dark :)
This is a good video to start with! Its a good idea to practice the exercises for a few weeks to get used to the movements and develop coordination. Then when you feel ready you might like to have a go at my video called Drawing Tutorial For Beginners: Sketching and Shading. There will also be some simple drawing tutorials for faces coming up in the next few months. Thanks for watching!
Here’s an interesting observation about your drawing of pinwheels @3:50 . You draw the first pinwheel in your natural direction, adding each blade in a counter clockwise direction. Then you begin the second pinwheel. When you add the second blade, it’s in a clockwise direction. But the third and remaining blades are back to being added in the counter clockwise direction. The third pinwheel in your natural direction also has all the blades added in a counterclockwise direction. Now you switch to drawing pinwheels in the opposite direction. The first pinwheel, you again add each blade in a counter-clockwise direction. But the second pinwheel, you add all the blades in a clockwise direction!!! You then draw many more pinwheels , all having their blades added in the counterclockwise direction. Clearly, you favor the counter-clockwise direction since you drew every pinwheel but one in the counter-clockwise direction! On some level, you intuited that the exercise should include the clockwise direction since you did draw one pinwheel like this. Did you notice it yourself when you drew it? The first warm-up exercise of drawing circles included drawing circles both in our natural direction as well as our opposite direction to challenge our brains and muscles. In similar way, the pinwheels should include this challenge/exercise as well. Subconsciously, you drew all but one pinwheel in the counterclockwise direction. Others will do the same. It would be good for the exercise to include the challenge to add the blades in the clockwise direction as well. First, draw the pinwheel in your natural direction, adding the blades in the counterclockwise direction. Next, draw the pinwheel still in your natural direction, but switch to adding each blade in the clockwise direction. Next, draw the pinwheel in the opposite direction, blades added counterclockwise. And finally draw the pinwheel in the opposite direction, blades added clockwise. 😉👍
Sure you do! Old barns are a great subject and its never too late to start drawing. You might like to have a go at my video on one point perspective. I'll have another one on 1 pt perspective coming out next month where we draw an old building - not a barn but it will give you an idea of how to get the correct angles and shapes. And then start collecting photos of old barns you want to practice drawing!
@@ThePencilRoomOnline Thank you for the encouragement. I'm buying the start kit you suggested in another video and if I succeed drawing something to receive an "it's OK!" I'll feel rewarded.
@@RubinGnoni Best of luck! Just make sure you allow yourself time to practice and improve, much like learning a musical instrument. Tutorials are the best way to get some guidance on what/how to practice. "Its ok" is very different for each person and the best way to judge your drawing is to look for progress over time...a long time...I'd suggest six months or so!
Hi, if you are just doing these once then a sketchbook is fine - it’s good to try them on paper you normally draw on. But if you are working on coordination regularly and doing them as warm ups every time you sit down to practice then you may not want to be filling up a whole sketchbook which is what I was referring to. You can also just draw over top of the ones you have already done the next time you practice them :) All that being said, point taken, it would’ve been better to mention it at the start!
Lucky! There are gifted people in all creative pursuits for sure and starting young makes learning so much easier. I started learning piano as an adult so for me the struggle is a good comparison for learning to draw. Its possible to learn to draw as an adult, it just takes time and practice and an interest in drawing!
Depends on what you mean by doodle. Any type of learn to draw practice will develop hand eye coordination which will give you more control with whatever you are drawing. If there is a particular style you want to draw in, its good to find videos on that specific style and practice those too.
@@ThePencilRoomOnline thank you so much for the advice. My psychiatrist is wanting me to get my thoughts and pictures onto paper and I really want to try my hand at drawing and not just at coloring
@@kristinacuster5571 In that case I wouldn't confuse learning to draw with what you are working on with your psychiatrist. You can do both just not mixed together! In my experience with art therapy, it's beneficial to go with the flow and draw from a place of intuition. There's no judgement about whether it is good or bad, or even if it looks like something, it's about expression. Learning to draw is a very different mode of thinking and is more about learning observation skills. I would hate for that to interfere with the benefits of art therapy - instead just let the doodling come in whatever way it does naturally to express your thoughts, it doesn't matter what it looks like. However if art therapy has gotten you interested in taking drawing further thats great. You might like this video to start with as it has a kind of a doodling project at the end: th-cam.com/video/hOpmISBWw5s/w-d-xo.html But my advice is to keep the two ways of drawing separate - one for intuitive expression and one for learning observation skills.
Get your pencil out! Start with the basics and test your dexterity.
you are going too fast with the drawing
please go slower
i am not a fast drawer
@@tahseim-kaifolkes1445 Hi, We all draw at different speeds so I'd recommend watching each exercise and then pausing the video to do it in your own time. You can also slow down the video speed using the settings button but you might want to turn the sound down because it will sound funny!
ok thanks
@@ThePencilRoomOnline
Finally, actually helpful advice for complete beginners. Thank you! Everyone assumes you been to artschool or have some drawing experience. And i did not draw anything since school, and never was good at it.
Thanks for your comment! Really glad it was helpful! You might like the videos in this playlist of my practical exercises and tutorials: th-cam.com/play/PL-i_GDP6hCKmm4oCA6Sq6FFe3ShqeUk5v.html&si=AQ-723XYZup7AK1y
Try not to worry about whether you are good at it or not, it takes a while to develop drawing coordination but hopefully you can have fun practicing!
@@ThePencilRoomOnline Thanks, i will check those out.
Thanks, I shall use this course as reference material when I get an artistic block...And that happens pretty regularly, as I'm only starting this journey..Thanks again, this is a great way of getting back to basics!
Thanks very much for your support! Artists block is pretty normal but the important thing is to just do something, anything - these exercises are great for that because there is no pressure for them to be perfect but it’s still practice and improvement! Thanks again ☺️
Hi! I just discovered this tutorial today while exploring TH-cam. I just want to say this is the type of approach I need in a beginning drawing class. I took an in person beginning drawing class over five years ago & the approach was very difficult to comprehend. Plus, I do not fair well in beginning hands-on classes that have more than ten students. So, thanks for this video-that was not only personal- but made it easier for me to comprehend the concept of beginning drawing.🙂
So glad you found it useful! Yes there are lots of different approaches to teaching drawing and what suits some may not suit others. I’ve found that some people love learning the technical aspects like perspective and other people prefer working on practical projects. Neither is right or wrong, you’ve just got to find the style of learning that works best for you and the one you enjoy! Thanks very much for watching :)
Wow... this is really helpful please keep on uploading, wanna learn and want to be an art teacher ❤
After searching hundreds of videos, I’m glad I found yours. Thank you for helping teach an old dog something new!
Thanks for your lovely comment! More videos to come, hope you find them useful!
Thank you for showing us how to draw and warm up practice. I appreciate it.
Glad it was helpful!
Hi, I'm so glad that I've come across your platform and looking forward to trying your exercises. I've always loved to doodle and have drawn a few things but I would love to be able to move more freely in my endeavours in this enjoyable activity. I'll definitely be following your channel. I'm 63 and believe one is never too old to learn. Thanks
Never too late to learn! Thanks for following!
Thanks to YTs algorithm, your channel was recommended to me. I‘ve been trying to get back into drawing, it’s been a long time. Back to the basics is perfect. Your calm voice and explanations/exercises are great, thank you. I left a subscription.
Thanks so much! Glad to hear you are getting back into drawing, take your time and put a small amount of time aside for practicing drawing each week. It all adds up! Thanks for watching 😊
Thank you for sharing such beginner friendly exercises. Many just dive into straight drawing figurines/object which is demotivating how to even reach there. Grateful for sharing such exercises !
Thanks for watching!
This is lovely and a great reminder to practice. Many thanks.
You’re welcome ☺️ thanks for watching
I've struggled with circular motions all my live, this is helping me a lot to get a better idea on how to handle these shapes. Thanks so much for this video, really useful tips.
Thanks for watching! Glad it helps :)
These warmups are helpful, many thanks!
Great Teacher
Thank you
Easy drawing PRACTICE
👍LIKE
I am learning fashion drawing and is different than other drawing. I always like how fashion looks in drawings...I love your exercises too.
These are very useful! Great in practicing the different grips.
oh gosh i couldn’t draw circles like u did in the first part, and now i can! it helped a lot thank you ❤!
Yayyy sometimes it just takes a bit of practice time to loosen up and stop thinking too hard 🙂
This is a great tutorial! Such a nice variety, very well explained, and bonus, you are a lefty as am I! These exercises should help me to steady my hand, arm, and shoulder.
Thank you. That was helpful.
I never learned these techniques in art school. I wish I had. Thanks!
I love this. Thank you. I have been so stuck, just not knowing how to start a new piece (I’m all self taught) but just watching a quick run through of this, I can’t wait to just sit down and have fun fussing with these exercises, without the stress of what it would look like. I think I’ve forgotten how to do that. Thanks much. :)
Aw I’m so glad to hear that! I hope you can keep up the flow of ideas after doing some of these…maybe just keep you hand going and see what happens! Thanks for watching and for your lovely comment ☺️
These exercises were a lot of fun and helpful. Thanks so much for sharing your knowledge. 🙂
You're welcome, thanks for your kind comment ☺
Hey. Like the way you do your videos. Starting with lines is there a general idea how long should practise one exercise before moving to another?
Good question. It really depends on how challenging you find them. It's going to take time to develop coordination so rather than repeating the same exercise over and over, I'd go through the video and if there are particular exercises you identify as tricky for you then add that to your drawing practice as a warm up. Eg. do those exercises for 5-10 minutes before you start working on something a bit longer like drawing an object (or taking one of my free learn to draw lessons!)
Keep up the warm ups for a few weeks/months as you draw other stuff and you should see a big improvement. It's a bit like doing weights or stretches, its takes repetition over time :)
I'm scared this video on Pinterest and I plan on doing these exercises tomorrow. Thank you so much❤
I guess you saved the video and are not scared of the video 😅 Hope you enjoy it 💚
Excellent exercises. Thank you.
Thanks for watching 🙂
Very useful and wonderful exercises
BROOO THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! YOU'R THE BEST!!!!!! I LEARNED EVERYTNice tutorialNG I NEEDED TO KNOW THAN YOU VERY
Highly useful video for learners of the upcoming artists big thanks to you mam
Excellent. Thank you so much for such simple instructions and easy exercises.
I have been drawing for a long time but I knew there was something wrong with creating lines as I sketched. I am hoping that this exercise can help me. It is really fun. Thank you for sharing this tutorial! :D
You're welcome :) Thanks for watching and best of luck!
Great exercises! So very helpful. Thank you!
I'm so happy I found a video that is not fast pace. Definitely subscribing.
excellent tutorial
Very helpful, thank you.
Thank You. Practicing 😺
This was excellent! Thank you!
Very helpful video. Thank you so much!❤
Thank you . Very interesting.From France .
Thanks for watching! Greetings from New Zealand 😊
Thank you!
Superb and very useful.
Ellipses are very hard for me. I tried using a template to draw some perfect ones and then practiced following that outline freehand and it seems to help...
They are tricky. The key at the moment is to not worry about them being perfect (if we want them perfect we can just use a compass!) but to focus on practicing the movement for creating ellipses. I do have another video here on TH-cam about how to draw circles: th-cam.com/video/GqdDL6li4SQ/w-d-xo.html
The most valuable method to practice is the rhythmic circles method, it will take time to develop the coordination but its worth it!
Thank you.
🌹🌹🌹🌹
This is wonderful, thank you so much. I just shared this video on Pinterest. I hope it helps your Channel.❤
Thank you! 😊
thanks a lot!
Thank you.
You're welcome, and thanks for watching!
Thanks loads❤❤❤
You are amazing l am taking interest in drawing .Very well explained
Brilliant 🌻
Amazing video❤
Nice I save it so I could practice later.
Great video super useful 👌
Glad it was helpful!
Amazing! Thank you!
Hi 😊 How often and how long do you recommend that we practice? I am a beginner in drawing 😊 I really like your videoes and so good that you speek slowly and understandably 🌞
Practice as often as you can, until drawing becomes second nature, like riding a bike.
It depends on how much time you have but the main thing is to make it consistent. eg. every week. Try to find a time that you will always be able to sit down and do 30-60 minutes of drawing. Do some exercises to start and then follow tutorials or have a go drawing on your own. Thats just for starters to help develop the habit, then you can add more time and more days a week if you can!
A few videos to check out if you havent already:
Four Practice Habits: th-cam.com/video/TjszHs_AkKs/w-d-xo.html
Learn To Draw Free Course (30-40 mins each lesson): th-cam.com/play/PL-i_GDP6hCKlsQCrB7SW0qKyXBNMocDar.html
Thanks for watching and all the best!
@@ThePencilRoomOnline Thank you so much 🌞
very useful thank u 👍
I love this!!
Good job
Love this! Subscribed!
Completely new to drawing but something that i have noticed through this intro is that i can draw circles backwards way better than the direction i normally draw.
There is usually one direction that feels easier! thats a good discovery to make 🙂
Is your hand actually resting on the paper, or are you keeping it mostly above the paper while you draw?
Yes, hand is resting on the paper for support, but moving with the line. Think of it as sliding your hand across the paper.
9:54 in this video th-cam.com/video/ing1x95WZ_I/w-d-xo.htmlsi=6JE2KZ-RLPiFNwJ_ talks a bit more about it :)
This is a great help. Thank you so much ❤️
You're welcome, thanks for watching :)
I like your skills, you are getting good at it...
Really helpful 👍
One question : are you left-handed? I'm a left handed beginner
Glad it was helpful. Yes I am left handed - I just realised the flipped image in the thumbnail makes me look righthanded! :D
So helpful! I'm learning to draw & this was fun!
Glad it was helpful! 😊
Fantastic tips - thank you!
Thanks for watching!
Nice 👍👍👍
You are brilliant can you please show how to draw a chimney thank you n keep up the great work
Thanks Geraldine, I dont have a specific video for drawing a chimney but you might find my videos on one point perspective and two point perspective (coming out soon) useful :)
Perfect! Thank you! I am sharing this with my friend also! 🖋🖊😁
Thankyou! I hope you both enjoy it :)
@@ThePencilRoomOnline Yes we did! I am teaching my friend to draw and when I find a good video that teaches basics and movement I send them to her! She loved it.😁🖊🖋
I love you teaching style, it's very clear and relaxing....very easy to follow. I felt like I was in a profesional art class.Thank you so much. I noticed a big improvement in my ease of flow when sketching. ❤
Thank you, that’s lovely to hear :) And I’m glad it helps loosen things up!
Excellent explanations 😊
Thank you! 😃
Started exercises today. Should we get to a point where we are able to use our shoulder and wrist? Eventually I found myself doing so.
Yes eventually with practice it should become easier and feel natural to draw from the shoulder moving the whole arm. This gives you freedom of movement. Sometimes drawing only from the wrist is necessary, doing the flicks etc. But ideally you’ll get to a point where you feel comfortable with both ways and can use them when they suit the best! Thanks for watching and keep practicing :)
Great work💕💕💕
Big thumbs from a mad friend💐
As a beginner i find it helpful
You are excellent teacher!!!🥰
Thank you! 😃
Very talented
Hello. I like both your drawing techniques and your delivery. Are your latest classes for Beginners on Udemy or Skillshare?
Thank you
P.S. What type pencil are you using?
Hi! Thanks for your kind comment. Yes, Learn To Draw course is available on Udemy, or plenty of drawing tutorials on Skillshare, link in the video description above. Im using a Staadtler Wopex pencil, its nice and smooth and its a 2B, not too light not too dark :)
This is my first time to practice drawing, and I had fun. Waiting for more vdeos that teach for beginners
This is a good video to start with! Its a good idea to practice the exercises for a few weeks to get used to the movements and develop coordination. Then when you feel ready you might like to have a go at my video called Drawing Tutorial For Beginners: Sketching and Shading. There will also be some simple drawing tutorials for faces coming up in the next few months. Thanks for watching!
thanks dear😘😘😘😍❤❤❤i am very happy because i learn .
Me and my friend decided to start a comic, but she only really does pixel art. I'm really excited to learn how to draw!
awesome
Thanks ❤,learn the basic shape will draw anything
Extremely nice
Here’s an interesting observation about your drawing of pinwheels @3:50 . You draw the first pinwheel in your natural direction, adding each blade in a counter clockwise direction. Then you begin the second pinwheel. When you add the second blade, it’s in a clockwise direction. But the third and remaining blades are back to being added in the counter clockwise direction. The third pinwheel in your natural direction also has all the blades added in a counterclockwise direction.
Now you switch to drawing pinwheels in the opposite direction. The first pinwheel, you again add each blade in a counter-clockwise direction. But the second pinwheel, you add all the blades in a clockwise direction!!! You then draw many more pinwheels , all having their blades added in the counterclockwise direction. Clearly, you favor the counter-clockwise direction since you drew every pinwheel but one in the counter-clockwise direction! On some level, you intuited that the exercise should include the clockwise direction since you did draw one pinwheel like this. Did you notice it yourself when you drew it?
The first warm-up exercise of drawing circles included drawing circles both in our natural direction as well as our opposite direction to challenge our brains and muscles. In similar way, the pinwheels should include this challenge/exercise as well. Subconsciously, you drew all but one pinwheel in the counterclockwise direction. Others will do the same. It would be good for the exercise to include the challenge to add the blades in the clockwise direction as well. First, draw the pinwheel in your natural direction, adding the blades in the counterclockwise direction. Next, draw the pinwheel still in your natural direction, but switch to adding each blade in the clockwise direction. Next, draw the pinwheel in the opposite direction, blades added counterclockwise. And finally draw the pinwheel in the opposite direction, blades added clockwise. 😉👍
Yes it’s good to practice both directions to help improve overall coordination 🙂
Awesome
im glad i found your channel thank youu
I’m 73. Do I have any chance to draw simple things like old barns?
Sure you do! Old barns are a great subject and its never too late to start drawing. You might like to have a go at my video on one point perspective. I'll have another one on 1 pt perspective coming out next month where we draw an old building - not a barn but it will give you an idea of how to get the correct angles and shapes. And then start collecting photos of old barns you want to practice drawing!
@@ThePencilRoomOnline Thank you for the encouragement. I'm buying the start kit you suggested in another video and if I succeed drawing something to receive an "it's OK!" I'll feel rewarded.
@@RubinGnoni Best of luck! Just make sure you allow yourself time to practice and improve, much like learning a musical instrument. Tutorials are the best way to get some guidance on what/how to practice. "Its ok" is very different for each person and the best way to judge your drawing is to look for progress over time...a long time...I'd suggest six months or so!
Love it, but I would have appreciated mentioning using ordinary paper before I did two of these on better paper, thank you?
Hi, if you are just doing these once then a sketchbook is fine - it’s good to try them on paper you normally draw on. But if you are working on coordination regularly and doing them as warm ups every time you sit down to practice then you may not want to be filling up a whole sketchbook which is what I was referring to. You can also just draw over top of the ones you have already done the next time you practice them :) All that being said, point taken, it would’ve been better to mention it at the start!
thank u.
10:55
Amazing 👍👏
Very useful tutorial..
Been playing piano by ear since I was three.
Drawing seems so elusive to me.
Lucky! There are gifted people in all creative pursuits for sure and starting young makes learning so much easier. I started learning piano as an adult so for me the struggle is a good comparison for learning to draw. Its possible to learn to draw as an adult, it just takes time and practice and an interest in drawing!
Is learning how to draw first the best way to learn how to doodle
Depends on what you mean by doodle. Any type of learn to draw practice will develop hand eye coordination which will give you more control with whatever you are drawing. If there is a particular style you want to draw in, its good to find videos on that specific style and practice those too.
@@ThePencilRoomOnline thank you so much for the advice. My psychiatrist is wanting me to get my thoughts and pictures onto paper and I really want to try my hand at drawing and not just at coloring
@@kristinacuster5571 In that case I wouldn't confuse learning to draw with what you are working on with your psychiatrist. You can do both just not mixed together! In my experience with art therapy, it's beneficial to go with the flow and draw from a place of intuition. There's no judgement about whether it is good or bad, or even if it looks like something, it's about expression.
Learning to draw is a very different mode of thinking and is more about learning observation skills. I would hate for that to interfere with the benefits of art therapy - instead just let the doodling come in whatever way it does naturally to express your thoughts, it doesn't matter what it looks like.
However if art therapy has gotten you interested in taking drawing further thats great. You might like this video to start with as it has a kind of a doodling project at the end: th-cam.com/video/hOpmISBWw5s/w-d-xo.html
But my advice is to keep the two ways of drawing separate - one for intuitive expression and one for learning observation skills.
🥰🥰🥰👍👍
شوكران ماشاء الله وراعك مين العين الحسود يارب الرحمن الرحيم ياوجه الخير حفيضك الله
Danke
why do you not use a coloured on Heary HB pencil so we can view clearly?
Who is watching this video in college in ccc lecture
Also me
I love my pencils, love my sketchbooks, but I never dared to draw.,Now let me start with you. :)
I'm a real beginner but I practice drawing once a week!
Excellent 😇