The drawing turned out great. If it was a piece of art that I was going to display in my home I would leave the post it note in one of the squares. Something about that splash of green felt right to me while you were drawing it and it feels like it is unfinished. I would leave the other blank boxes.
I remember when he did this video. I even bought post it’s and was gonna try it. I did it a bit, but I have a bad habit of starting and never getting around to finishing my abstract stuff. If there’s not something I REALLY like about it, I’ll easily abandon a couple hours worth of drawing.
Peter Draws was narrating in one of his videos as he is doing an "automatic drawing", he was saying that as he drew, he might think of each shape as a building or street. I wonder what you might be thinking of as you're drawing this. It's like vegetation and vines; is this your inspiration as your drawing?
That's really interesting. I haven't seen that stream. Buildings and streets are a great idea to have so that you construct forms and relations in your mind. I am a bit more chaotic when I draw and think in sound effects, stretching, creaking, cracking, blasting etc, but also I try to consider the relation between the shapes I'm drawing
@@solgunn1994 I could be wrong, but it's my belief that no two styles are the same. Hopefully, mu tutorial will help you make certain decisions when drawing from imagination. Even if lots of people's artwork started to look similar to mine, the little choices you make will separate it from my work. Plus, it would be up to me to develop beyond what I have shared in the tutorial. I'm looking forward to making one, but this week's videos have already been filmed and I'm editing them ready to upload later today. I'll try to put something together for next week. Thank you for the comments. I hope you'll let me know if the tutorial is helpful or not so that I can communicate better with you and others about these types of things.
I don't see the point of buying rapidographs, I actually have an untouched set just sat there on the side, isograph as far as I'm aware are actually better quality and don't require disposable cartridges, you just refill when needed with the ink bottle.
Rapidographs are the BEST OF THEM ALL as far as technical drawings and writing goes. It's the Number 1 pen used by Architects. I've used them four decades for my calligraphy and lettering and just every day journaling...I Your the first person in my new group of friends who "Tangle"! I bought my 7 pen kit 30 years ago for $ 40. That was in 1984. That same kit is $115! And they are still as good now as back then. I take meticulous care of them. Sure they're a Lil bit "high maintenance" but they are Wirth worth every minute of cleaning.
@@colin781 I made a video fairly recently where I used rotring pens again. Two out of four were clogged up and didn't work. I should have a maintenance routine, but I don't. After a few months, sometimes a year, I'll get out my set of rotring pens and hope for the best. If I find out how to clean them then I'll make a video about it. Don't throw them away. I'm sure there's a way to restore them. Sorry I can't be more helpful, but as soon as I know more I'll let you know
Put away the eraser, just draw to fill the page, see where it goes intuitively. Maybe you don't like it in the end, but you will have learned something about what feels comfortable for you. And no one can kill your creativity but you...
Hm, I've been giving this some thought. To me if you want to improve at drawing then you need to learn to make good decisions. It doesn't matter if the lines are squiggly and the measurements are a little off if you make choices in order to balance out the drawing. If you're drawing with pens, try to use different widths of nibs. So start with thin wispy lines and finish with some bold heavy lines. If you're using pencils then go from hard pencils hb, are hard and make light marks and then finish the drawing off with soft pencils like a 6b or 8b which will be dark (but don't press too hard with either because the marks will become shiny). After trying this if you really want to see an improvement, learn the fundamentals (perspective, proportion and texture). The last thing that will really make you improve fast is to use these tips and try to do a drawing every day for a month. It might sound easy, but it can be tricky. If you do that then I'm confident that your drawing will improve. I hope that helps. Thanks for your comment
You may have taken inspiration from Peter. But your finished product is far more detailed and refined. I think Peter has reached his level of TH-cam success because he has figured out how to be himself and entertaining in his own quirky way.
The drawing turned out really cool!
Hey thanks Peter!
lets gooo the Peterverse!!
Came for PeterDraws. Stayed for the VERY cool art!
Thank you!
beautiful ❤
What a unique idea for starting a drawing. I do enjoy Peter Draws.
Thanks for watching.
Peter is going to feature on the channel in person soon, so keep a look out for that!
Thank you for sharing! Fabulous drawing and video!
Thank you very much! I appreciate that
Love this! But, far from gory 'insides', I see vegetables, roots, growy things - but I'm a gardener, so maybe that explains it 😊
I love that! Growy things it is! Thanks
The drawing turned out great. If it was a piece of art that I was going to display in my home I would leave the post it note in one of the squares. Something about that splash of green felt right to me while you were drawing it and it feels like it is unfinished. I would leave the other blank boxes.
Thank you!
Yeah, I should get it framed with the post it note!
I remember when he did this video. I even bought post it’s and was gonna try it. I did it a bit, but I have a bad habit of starting and never getting around to finishing my abstract stuff. If there’s not something I REALLY like about it, I’ll easily abandon a couple hours worth of drawing.
Yeah, I know the feeling, but it's never too late to pick it back up again!
For me, it's not about "what's wrong?" but "what's left?" to a satisfactory sense of completion. 😎🙃
That's a great distinction. You know, that's what I will be asking myself from now on!
Very creative, excellent work my friend
Thank you very much!
cool channel.....i got the bell!
Ah, thank you so much!
Very nice! 👍🏼
Thanks!
It came out great! I should try this method!
Thanks! Absolutely you should try it for yourself. Let me know how it works out
Can’t wait to try… super job!!
Thank you! That's brilliant, I'm sure you'll love it!
Would love to see some close ups of your hatching. Love the drawing. It's beautiful
Thanks Dale, that's a really good idea. I'll put some in a video soon. Thank you for your comment
Interesting, thank you!
Amazing drawing!
Glad you enjoyed it.
Thanks
Looks good!💜
Thanks!
Whaoo magnifique
Thanks!
this is amazing! you are very very talented man!
Thanks! I'll be posting a video featuring PeterDraws soon
Absolutely insane 👍
Thanks!
Peter Draws was narrating in one of his videos as he is doing an "automatic drawing", he was saying that as he drew, he might think of each shape as a building or street. I wonder what you might be thinking of as you're drawing this. It's like vegetation and vines; is this your inspiration as your drawing?
That's really interesting. I haven't seen that stream. Buildings and streets are a great idea to have so that you construct forms and relations in your mind.
I am a bit more chaotic when I draw and think in sound effects, stretching, creaking, cracking, blasting etc, but also I try to consider the relation between the shapes I'm drawing
Great stuff!
Thanks!
Cant wait to find some tutorials.
Yeah, I haven't done that yet.
I'll give it some thought and see what I can do. Thanks for the suggestion
@@simonsez_artwork I suppose you feel that the risk is that tutorials will create 10's of thousands of artist creating the same style??
@@solgunn1994 I could be wrong, but it's my belief that no two styles are the same. Hopefully, mu tutorial will help you make certain decisions when drawing from imagination. Even if lots of people's artwork started to look similar to mine, the little choices you make will separate it from my work. Plus, it would be up to me to develop beyond what I have shared in the tutorial.
I'm looking forward to making one, but this week's videos have already been filmed and I'm editing them ready to upload later today. I'll try to put something together for next week.
Thank you for the comments. I hope you'll let me know if the tutorial is helpful or not so that I can communicate better with you and others about these types of things.
Draw random stuff then make it super realistic 😀
@@GreyishHouse hey, that's a great idea! Thanks
Nice x
Thanks Yu Lin x
great
Thanks!
👏👏👏
Thanks!
I don't see the point of buying rapidographs, I actually have an untouched set just sat there on the side, isograph as far as I'm aware are actually better quality and don't require disposable cartridges, you just refill when needed with the ink bottle.
Nice! Although, my rapidograph pens are refillable. I will need to buy myself a set of isographs in order to make a fair comparison
Rapidographs are the BEST OF THEM ALL as far as technical drawings and writing goes. It's the Number 1 pen used by Architects. I've used them four decades for my calligraphy and lettering and just every day journaling...I Your the first person in my new group of friends who "Tangle"! I bought my 7 pen kit 30 years ago for $ 40. That was in 1984. That same kit is $115! And they are still as good now as back then. I take meticulous care of them. Sure they're a Lil bit
"high maintenance" but they are Wirth worth every minute of cleaning.
Brilliant! I'm long overdue using mine again.
Thanks
@@simonsez_artwork you are most kindly welcome.
@@colin781 I made a video fairly recently where I used rotring pens again. Two out of four were clogged up and didn't work.
I should have a maintenance routine, but I don't. After a few months, sometimes a year, I'll get out my set of rotring pens and hope for the best.
If I find out how to clean them then I'll make a video about it. Don't throw them away. I'm sure there's a way to restore them. Sorry I can't be more helpful, but as soon as I know more I'll let you know
What does one do if they love to draw but can’t draw to save their life? Any suggestions?
Put away the eraser, just draw to fill the page, see where it goes intuitively. Maybe you don't like it in the end, but you will have learned something about what feels comfortable for you. And no one can kill your creativity but you...
Hm, I've been giving this some thought. To me if you want to improve at drawing then you need to learn to make good decisions. It doesn't matter if the lines are squiggly and the measurements are a little off if you make choices in order to balance out the drawing. If you're drawing with pens, try to use different widths of nibs. So start with thin wispy lines and finish with some bold heavy lines. If you're using pencils then go from hard pencils hb, are hard and make light marks and then finish the drawing off with soft pencils like a 6b or 8b which will be dark (but don't press too hard with either because the marks will become shiny).
After trying this if you really want to see an improvement, learn the fundamentals (perspective, proportion and texture). The last thing that will really make you improve fast is to use these tips and try to do a drawing every day for a month. It might sound easy, but it can be tricky. If you do that then I'm confident that your drawing will improve.
I hope that helps.
Thanks for your comment
Reminds me a bit of Ian Miller.
I wasn't aware of who that was until I read your comment! Thanks
👍👏
❤❤ Thank you 💞💕 beautiful
Thanks!
💚
You may have taken inspiration from Peter. But your finished product is far more detailed and refined. I think Peter has reached his level of TH-cam success because he has figured out how to be himself and entertaining in his own quirky way.
Ah thanks! Yeah, I'm not good at that side of things. He's so funny! Never fails to make me smile