i dont think theres anything wrong with attempting to study someone work and failing at it, its really helps us understand what messing and then trying to improve it each time
Hello DFMC, as I type this I have not slept in 24 hours, but even my frazzled brain can realise that this video is brilliant. Its very true that many youtube videos are probably tailored to the much larger beginner audience by focusing on very well known terms like anatomy, perspective, and colour theory, and more complicated (and less obvious!) concepts such as unity and rhythm get completely ignored on the platform. AS SUCH, I WANNA THANK YOU. Because the way you phrased the final section on unity, saying that we may understand the individual concepts yet put insufficient effort into using them cohesively, sparked a deep understanding in me. It has made me aware of a problem I didn't even know exists Please keep making these kinds of videos :)
Thank you. Comments like this motivate me to make more videos. I made this video bcos Ive been taking art seriously since 2019 and in my fourth year(2023), I could draw anatomy really well and had an understanding on color theory(not an expert). But my drawings always lack something. I even tried to draw background, Still it looks lacking. as my eyes become more developed and I studied pro illustrators, then I realized the top tier pros, their artworks have this invisible shapes like the triangle. Negative space is the correct term for this I think. Then their colors, lighting technique, expressions, poses really contribute to the piece. They are not random and I have not seen a single youtube video that talks about it. Yesterday I watched a lighting tutorial video and the dude explained the science of light and shadow for about a minute then after explaining he painted the light without even telling why put the light in part of that face? All we see in lighting tutorial videos is the light source is here so the shadows should be here blah blah. They are always concerned with realism and science but if you look at artworks of mai yoneyama, saclia, ask. The light and shadow always has a purpose. They prioritize artistic decisions over realism. The light is either to capture attention or evokes emotions. Always purposeful. But never a single video pointing this out has been made. Thats why for my next video I will study and show how to apply light like the pro artists. Good night, rest well
idk about the "completely ignored" part because i do remember someone mentioning tempo (rhythm) in art. probably "Sinix design" but my brain might me mixing memories.
this is such a helpful video for me, I don’t want to sound insensitive but art to me, I’ve always found it so annoying, or overwhelming, with my friends who loves art as well, I got jealous so easily, always making art a competition. But now I see art as a whole other thing, I thought art is something you’re supposed to be good at and if you’re not good you can’t impress anyone, but I found out, art itself can have millions of different meanings and examples, okay sorry about the yapping, but this video just helped me, very much, of understanding art even further, I realized that art isn’t always about trying hard and trying to make it look good then you burn out, from this video, I see a lot of things, like simplicity or understanding. Not only that! You made it super efficient and professional the way you summarized it and everything!! ❤
Your comment is really inspiring, but reading the first part with that profile photo it seems like a villain's monologue when they have a flashback sorry 😭
Sometimes I compare myself so much and always think I'll never reach the level of other artists, but this made me realize how much they have practiced and learned to do such things. I have so much to learn and study, and I indeed didn't know about rhythm, all I hear about is anatomy, color theory and composition. 😭 But as a beginner, I do aspire to finally feel comfortable and satisfied with my art, and studying these artists always gives me some new knowledge :3
comparison is the thief of joy. enjoy what you do and enjoy the little improvements you make! it was a lot for me, but i made goals for myself and im grateful for it. you can do it!
This video was so jam packed with gems of knowledge! Your study at the end looked really nice too! I look forward to seeing how your original work progresses!
This was a really solid video, but I think understanding Composition might be the biggest takeaway from this video, since you could lump in things like "Rhythm" and "Unity" into Composition as well. As for contrast, the biggest thing just might be Values and Gradation. I honestly think that just a video dedicated to those two topics (Composition and Values) would be a huge help to your viewers.
You can take almost any beginner to intermediate piece of art, and make it look MUCH more professional with good cropping. Cropping is sorely under-spoken about, and it’s the one thing in my experience that is not only extremely quick to do, but can take a piece to the next level instantaneously. People don’t wanna crop because they feel like they need to be able to show EVERYTHING. But theirs no point in showing ALL of it if the most interesting parts get missed entirely cause the framing is discrediting your hard work. What I’ve learned is that’s it’s what you omit from the frame that really makes the piece. The negative space that’s created between the subject and the frame and all the interesting shapes that are created can make a piece sing, and really strengthen the narrative. The good news about cropping is you can just do it at any point in the process too. It’s not something you have to nail down in the beginning. What often happens with beginners is you’ll have small characters awkwardly standing in HUGE empty spaces, or the beginner doesn’t know how to arrange elements, so not important elements end up attracting a lot of attention unintentionally, or everything will have equal priority in how their framed, so nothing stands out. All of these things are often symptomatic of poor framing. Good cropping doesn’t just happen around the frame either, you can create a frame with in the frame too by arranging elements within the scene to act as a sort of “window” for which we are viewing the scene through. Cropping will also allow you to hone in on what’s *important* about a piece, which allows you to finish it quicker from my experience. I recommend just going through artist works (including pro artists works) and see if you can discover better crops that frame the idea better, just for learning purposes.
@@DFMC_Art Yaya, this is also- I believe- where people go wrong with *foreshortening* . They're too afraid to *overlap* and cover things up, but if you wanna push depth, you gotta do just that. It's a game of knowing what to show and what to "cover up/overlap". How you overlap things then becomes itself a tool for framing.
Rhythm - usd to help make the piece flow in a direction and allows the viewers eyes to follow the piece around to a certain focal point Contrast - used to help the viewers eyes be drawn to a certain point in the piece at first glance eg. shadow and light(focal point has bright light reserved for few areas), size of shapes , depth of field (blurred edges), detail contrast (focal point has more or less details compared to other areas) Composition - eg. triangle, rule of thirds Unity - what brings a piece together to make the viewer feel a certain emotion (lighting, expression, color palette) (Just for my own reference)
So many gems from your insights! Thank you! It really shows how masterful artists combine elements with intent, which is why I really love the aspects of unity you showed in their works. Had to really pause and jot notes in this video, keep up the great work!
Now I understand why my arts so boring and suck. Well I started to draw seriously for not long time ago, so now I'm learning gesture (surprisingly) and perspective, line art isn't that hard and color theory 😠. The best I can now is draw a good proportion and anatomy character on the white background 😐, cuz I'm suck at perspective, but also never know about such thing as composition in drawing art.
This is a really nice video for new intermediates! I've outgrown all of the advice, but I still admire your presentation, sourcing of the artists, and cohesion. I do wanna give a quick correction! In your bit discussing contrast, you mention the red being an example of saturation vs desaturation. However, saturation is defined as the distance of a colour from white. Therefore, the red does not stand out because it is saturated (it's actually a similar value to that of the cast shadow on the face from the hat), but because it's the only bit of colour in a black and white image lol. The most saturated pieces end up being the black bow, hat and earrings that excellently frame the subject by basically creating a box around the lighter-coloured face. Marco Bucci has a really good video explaining the relationship of hue and tones that can help so much more with picking colours and identifying issues. (Also, there's just some things the human eye is naturally drawn to more, including faces.) As for the rule of thirds, the grid is morphed to fit the canvas. Its purpose is to create 9 equal rectangular divisions -the points of intersection serving as comfortable resting places for the eye and therefore guides to the focal points. Nevertheless, keep learning and having fun!!
For me even tho, I am not good of an artist or even able to call myself an artist at all. I wanted to say that after learning anatomy, when you draw you should focus on logic itself, perspectives and learn 3D space. That is just me
I can't draw a straight line. Not a painter very much. But I'm subscribed and bell ringed your channel anyway. As a 3d technial artist I started watching your videos after "Rendering" video. When I first saw that video I asked myself "Rendering?" "Octane?" "Redshift" "Such nodes?" "Much shaders?" "Wow" but then when I clicked on the "rendering" video I got confused :D what rendering even was that?!?!?! :D And kept watching your videos since. I think these videos somehow improve my work as well :D
In painting, “render” means the steps after the sketch, such as adding light and shadow. However, lately, anime artists have associated “render” with a specific art style that doesn’t involve lineart.
what seems like "pros" often forget: art isn't messured by how others think about it. that's money directed thinking and not art direcred thinking. i didn't look the video (sorry) because i don't want help in art related stuff, creation in itself is an experience, an experience that mostly get's lost with any help you take. it might take longer to reach an acceptable level but the way to get there, with all the good and bad sides, is at least to me an experience that i don't want to miss at all and that i will miss for sure with any help get from the so called pros... if you want to go though as fast as possible, that sure would be the way, but something gained without much of your own effort, will never be hold as closely as something you gained through all it has to offer, may it be good and bad sometimes, but after all, your way is your own choice but i take my leave now, good luck working on your stuff, i hope you reach your goal.
I think I get it, but with the way my brain works I don’t see composition shapes Always feels randomly placed to me? I struggle to understand how to use those. Who knows if I ever will with my mental disabilities Any tips from fellow mentally disabled people who found their own way of looking at something?
this video is helllllaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa transformative Bless you! you are so good at giving example and breaking things down. I hope u do well in ur art journey too
@@Misakisaysfreepalastine I understand it might feel wrong but it can only improve the more you draw. Even starting with random lines or false lines, I've been told art is also all about feelings and not just 'visually correct'
@Harumasa_Asaba You are right, but I don't want to make mistakes all the time when I don't know where they are because I don't follow a specific way yk. This is what I mean. But thank you :))
@@DFMC_Art honestly, nobody's gonna judge, we're here for the art and the way you sound doesn't matter!! please don't feel nervous about using your voice cause i'm sure it'll turn out fine
The goal of the video is to help you recognize these subtle, invisible elements of composition because once you notice them, it means you're capable of using them too.
@@DFMC_Art so that means this video is NOT for those beginners to watch. This is for those at least in intermediate lvl. I mean, let's say, you can notice them but you don't have the appropriate skill lvl, then you're basically still can't make them 😂. Good observation tho. it might can work for me, imma try it 👍
Now that you are aware of them, it can be a good objective for your next art. Ofc it wont look as good as the pros but it is still better than a meaningless plain background that we are so used to
Yes. But also no. I mean, yes you're right, but I also love pieces that apparently have no rhythm, sooo.... And sometimes I like them more than those who have rhythm. I LOVE messy, raw art
Which artist would you like me to study next? ❤
make a study on QUASARCAKE pls 👀
96 please (96yottea)
Pluvieux grandis!
*pluvium
maybe emilyamiao? she's an incredible artist imo, she made a comic called catechism and it is criminally underrated
Negative Space is underrated.
real, not enough people talk about it
yeah negative space is integral to good composition. if you dont utilise it well the piece falls apart
I'm so glad I'm not alone in this!! :D
not so much underrated but not understood enough
Finally, a perfect video for people who aren't beginners. Amazing work making this! Will def be rewatching multiple times!
This video is specifically aimed towards beginners, made by a beginner.
Composition is something people rarely notice but truly adds so much when done right
I think I'll die an art peasant. They are way above my league 😭
Believe in yourself my friend!
i dont think theres anything wrong with attempting to study someone work and failing at it, its really helps us understand what messing and then trying to improve it each time
Hello DFMC, as I type this I have not slept in 24 hours, but even my frazzled brain can realise that this video is brilliant. Its very true that many youtube videos are probably tailored to the much larger beginner audience by focusing on very well known terms like anatomy, perspective, and colour theory, and more complicated (and less obvious!) concepts such as unity and rhythm get completely ignored on the platform. AS SUCH, I WANNA THANK YOU. Because the way you phrased the final section on unity, saying that we may understand the individual concepts yet put insufficient effort into using them cohesively, sparked a deep understanding in me. It has made me aware of a problem I didn't even know exists
Please keep making these kinds of videos :)
Thank you. Comments like this motivate me to make more videos. I made this video bcos Ive been taking art seriously since 2019 and in my fourth year(2023), I could draw anatomy really well and had an understanding on color theory(not an expert). But my drawings always lack something. I even tried to draw background, Still it looks lacking. as my eyes become more developed and I studied pro illustrators, then I realized the top tier pros, their artworks have this invisible shapes like the triangle. Negative space is the correct term for this I think. Then their colors, lighting technique, expressions, poses really contribute to the piece. They are not random and I have not seen a single youtube video that talks about it. Yesterday I watched a lighting tutorial video and the dude explained the science of light and shadow for about a minute then after explaining he painted the light without even telling why put the light in part of that face? All we see in lighting tutorial videos is the light source is here so the shadows should be here blah blah. They are always concerned with realism and science but if you look at artworks of mai yoneyama, saclia, ask. The light and shadow always has a purpose. They prioritize artistic decisions over realism. The light is either to capture attention or evokes emotions. Always purposeful. But never a single video pointing this out has been made. Thats why for my next video I will study and show how to apply light like the pro artists. Good night, rest well
idk about the "completely ignored" part because i do remember someone mentioning tempo (rhythm) in art.
probably "Sinix design" but my brain might me mixing memories.
this is such a helpful video for me, I don’t want to sound insensitive but art to me, I’ve always found it so annoying, or overwhelming, with my friends who loves art as well, I got jealous so easily, always making art a competition. But now I see art as a whole other thing, I thought art is something you’re supposed to be good at and if you’re not good you can’t impress anyone, but I found out, art itself can have millions of different meanings and examples, okay sorry about the yapping, but this video just helped me, very much, of understanding art even further, I realized that art isn’t always about trying hard and trying to make it look good then you burn out, from this video, I see a lot of things, like simplicity or understanding. Not only that! You made it super efficient and professional the way you summarized it and everything!! ❤
Thanks. totally normal. I feel the same way
Your comment is really inspiring, but reading the first part with that profile photo it seems like a villain's monologue when they have a flashback sorry 😭
Sometimes I compare myself so much and always think I'll never reach the level of other artists, but this made me realize how much they have practiced and learned to do such things. I have so much to learn and study, and I indeed didn't know about rhythm, all I hear about is anatomy, color theory and composition. 😭
But as a beginner, I do aspire to finally feel comfortable and satisfied with my art, and studying these artists always gives me some new knowledge :3
these are part of compositions, but the invisible ones or the not so obvious at first glance
comparison is the thief of joy. enjoy what you do and enjoy the little improvements you make! it was a lot for me, but i made goals for myself and im grateful for it. you can do it!
@@chubza1166 Thank you sm 🙏 and this is true, comparing makes me feel so low...
the amount of information in this video is insane, im shocked at how you even found the ratios of the pink and blue.
This video was so jam packed with gems of knowledge! Your study at the end looked really nice too! I look forward to seeing how your original work progresses!
🙏 thank you!
This was a really solid video, but I think understanding Composition might be the biggest takeaway from this video, since you could lump in things like "Rhythm" and "Unity" into Composition as well. As for contrast, the biggest thing just might be Values and Gradation. I honestly think that just a video dedicated to those two topics (Composition and Values) would be a huge help to your viewers.
Thanks 🙏 . Yes I plan to make those within this month
You can take almost any beginner to intermediate piece of art, and make it look MUCH more professional with good cropping. Cropping is sorely under-spoken about, and it’s the one thing in my experience that is not only extremely quick to do, but can take a piece to the next level instantaneously. People don’t wanna crop because they feel like they need to be able to show EVERYTHING. But theirs no point in showing ALL of it if the most interesting parts get missed entirely cause the framing is discrediting your hard work. What I’ve learned is that’s it’s what you omit from the frame that really makes the piece. The negative space that’s created between the subject and the frame and all the interesting shapes that are created can make a piece sing, and really strengthen the narrative. The good news about cropping is you can just do it at any point in the process too. It’s not something you have to nail down in the beginning. What often happens with beginners is you’ll have small characters awkwardly standing in HUGE empty spaces, or the beginner doesn’t know how to arrange elements, so not important elements end up attracting a lot of attention unintentionally, or everything will have equal priority in how their framed, so nothing stands out. All of these things are often symptomatic of poor framing. Good cropping doesn’t just happen around the frame either, you can create a frame with in the frame too by arranging elements within the scene to act as a sort of “window” for which we are viewing the scene through. Cropping will also allow you to hone in on what’s *important* about a piece, which allows you to finish it quicker from my experience. I recommend just going through artist works (including pro artists works) and see if you can discover better crops that frame the idea better, just for learning purposes.
🙏thank you. I might look into framing since this isnt the first time it has been recommended.
@@DFMC_Art Yaya, this is also- I believe- where people go wrong with *foreshortening* . They're too afraid to *overlap* and cover things up, but if you wanna push depth, you gotta do just that. It's a game of knowing what to show and what to "cover up/overlap". How you overlap things then becomes itself a tool for framing.
2:07 Arcaea mentioned!! I also am a huge fan of this artist, Saclia, their artworks are mesmerizing
Rhythm - usd to help make the piece flow in a direction and allows the viewers eyes to follow the piece around to a certain focal point
Contrast - used to help the viewers eyes be drawn to a certain point in the piece at first glance eg. shadow and light(focal point has bright light reserved for few areas), size of shapes , depth of field (blurred edges), detail contrast (focal point has more or less details compared to other areas)
Composition - eg. triangle, rule of thirds
Unity - what brings a piece together to make the viewer feel a certain emotion (lighting, expression, color palette)
(Just for my own reference)
So many gems from your insights! Thank you! It really shows how masterful artists combine elements with intent, which is why I really love the aspects of unity you showed in their works. Had to really pause and jot notes in this video, keep up the great work!
thank you!
Now I understand why my arts so boring and suck. Well I started to draw seriously for not long time ago, so now I'm learning gesture (surprisingly) and perspective, line art isn't that hard and color theory 😠. The best I can now is draw a good proportion and anatomy character on the white background 😐, cuz I'm suck at perspective, but also never know about such thing as composition in drawing art.
This is a really nice video for new intermediates! I've outgrown all of the advice, but I still admire your presentation, sourcing of the artists, and cohesion.
I do wanna give a quick correction! In your bit discussing contrast, you mention the red being an example of saturation vs desaturation. However, saturation is defined as the distance of a colour from white. Therefore, the red does not stand out because it is saturated (it's actually a similar value to that of the cast shadow on the face from the hat), but because it's the only bit of colour in a black and white image lol. The most saturated pieces end up being the black bow, hat and earrings that excellently frame the subject by basically creating a box around the lighter-coloured face.
Marco Bucci has a really good video explaining the relationship of hue and tones that can help so much more with picking colours and identifying issues.
(Also, there's just some things the human eye is naturally drawn to more, including faces.)
As for the rule of thirds, the grid is morphed to fit the canvas. Its purpose is to create 9 equal rectangular divisions -the points of intersection serving as comfortable resting places for the eye and therefore guides to the focal points.
Nevertheless, keep learning and having fun!!
I really gotta understand how art works and not just go "Ay that looks good, aight im done."
Amazing tips btw
thank you so much for this... i was feeling like i wasnt improving, now this helped me so much!!
For me even tho, I am not good of an artist or even able to call myself an artist at all. I wanted to say that after learning anatomy, when you draw you should focus on logic itself, perspectives and learn 3D space. That is just me
Fantastic video! I feel like i haven't learned something from youtubers in quite a while, but this video is diferent, i feel all hyped up to draw now!
This helps so so much, as a beginner artist I’m so glad that you made this video ❤ thank you!
You are a genius for noticing these things!!! Thank you for sharing them with us!
Such a helpful video! Thanks!
Thank you for this! Very useful and educative
composition has always been a huge problem for me.
its the reason i have had art block for so long... still do.
try thumbnail sketch exercise .The one without pressure on having to finish an artwork who knows maybe it can warm you up.
Miss your voice, still, keep up the good work!🙌
Thank you. I'm planning to use my real voice in the next video!
Now that’s life changing
I love these tipsss
1:04 this part reminds me of visual art class from high school omg
I can't draw a straight line. Not a painter very much. But I'm subscribed and bell ringed your channel anyway. As a 3d technial artist I started watching your videos after "Rendering" video. When I first saw that video I asked myself "Rendering?" "Octane?" "Redshift" "Such nodes?" "Much shaders?" "Wow" but then when I clicked on the "rendering" video I got confused :D what rendering even was that?!?!?! :D And kept watching your videos since. I think these videos somehow improve my work as well :D
In painting, “render” means the steps after the sketch, such as adding light and shadow. However, lately, anime artists have associated “render” with a specific art style that doesn’t involve lineart.
Actually helpful, thanks!
seeing Saclia here made me really happy
knowing I'm not the only fan of Saclia here makes me happy too. she is very underrated
ok so it’s composition
even tho im still 10 yo i would still study drawing im still bad at putting shading or anatomi
I thought the cover was of that one pjsk card set 😭 anyways, thank you very much for the tutorial!! :)
Thanks your video has been really helpful to me 🤗♥️
Nice!🎉😊
Give a tutorial on how to do lighting
Next video. I promise. I will do 1 illustration with different types of lighting
This video is so awesome
Great tips✨
I often watch your videos when i get Art block
thanks
Useful tips
Time to practice
''*art peasants*'' hits hard
what seems like "pros" often forget:
art isn't messured by how others think about it.
that's money directed thinking and not art direcred thinking.
i didn't look the video (sorry) because i don't want help in art related stuff, creation in itself is an experience, an experience that mostly get's lost with any help you take.
it might take longer to reach an acceptable level but the way to get there, with all the good and bad sides, is at least to me an experience that i don't want to miss at all and that i will miss for sure with any help get from the so called pros...
if you want to go though as fast as possible, that sure would be the way, but something gained without much of your own effort, will never be hold as closely as something you gained through all it has to offer, may it be good and bad sometimes, but after all, your way is your own choice but i take my leave now, good luck working on your stuff, i hope you reach your goal.
Thanks. Goodluck to you too
5:37 I believe it's not cut grid, but the simplified golden ratio grid?
I think I get it, but with the way my brain works I don’t see composition shapes
Always feels randomly placed to me? I struggle to understand how to use those.
Who knows if I ever will with my mental disabilities
Any tips from fellow mentally disabled people who found their own way of looking at something?
Draw in thumbnail sketch first. See things in smaller picture
the amogus in the eye
Art principles are underrated. I mean it.
lovely video :D
So what beginners lack is essentially composition?
The invisible elements or the not so obvious ones
fami in the thumbnail, must click
Idk why but this reminds me of those ayanokoji guide videos...
What’s the song used? It’s so calming
this video is helllllaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa transformative Bless you!
you are so good at giving example and breaking things down. I hope u do well in ur art journey too
thank you. bless you too and in your art journey
This is exactly what my teacher teaches us omg
AND PERSPECTIVE TOO!!!!!
This is very cool but, how can I all this?
I need a way to practice it
draw lol
@Harumasa_Asaba idk
I don't think it's that easy
I can't hold my pencil and start doing all this in a randomly way
@@Misakisaysfreepalastine I understand it might feel wrong but it can only improve the more you draw. Even starting with random lines or false lines, I've been told art is also all about feelings and not just 'visually correct'
@Harumasa_Asaba
You are right, but I don't want to make mistakes all the time when I don't know where they are because I don't follow a specific way yk. This is what I mean. But thank you :))
can you use a better AI voice for your videos? this one is grating on the ears. I prefer your previous videos with what is presumably your real voice
Sorry yes I will use my real voice next time. I hate hearing myself on youtube tho
@@DFMC_Art honestly, nobody's gonna judge, we're here for the art and the way you sound doesn't matter!! please don't feel nervous about using your voice cause i'm sure it'll turn out fine
@@DFMC_Art your voice sounds better, just be a little louder/faster
It sounds fine lol
So now I know
But I can’t draw it
It is the first step…
it's skill, I'm missing skill
I’m traditional
is the voice ai
i clicked on your video because i saw fami
The point is... Just be a genius like them 😂
The goal of the video is to help you recognize these subtle, invisible elements of composition because once you notice them, it means you're capable of using them too.
@@DFMC_Art so that means this video is NOT for those beginners to watch. This is for those at least in intermediate lvl. I mean, let's say, you can notice them but you don't have the appropriate skill lvl, then you're basically still can't make them 😂. Good observation tho. it might can work for me, imma try it 👍
Now that you are aware of them, it can be a good objective for your next art. Ofc it wont look as good as the pros but it is still better than a meaningless plain background that we are so used to
U can overlay golden ratio over everything and u will see it. I doubt the artist use it.
Which one? The last one with golden ratio was my own art. i deliberately used it
thx gpt
Yes. But also no. I mean, yes you're right, but I also love pieces that apparently have no rhythm, sooo.... And sometimes I like them more than those who have rhythm. I LOVE messy, raw art
Good for you? You seem a bit ignorant and pretentious.
may I know the voice name?
Tamara
Hello I'm new to this channel
Hello!
Wouldn’t it be funny if I flipped your canvas.
It says “don’t” XD
@@DFMC_Art No one’s gonna notice if I do it once.
god i wanna learn smth and get good at it but im soo low iq
You spelled rhythm wrong btw, good video though
sorry bout that XD...thanks
1:13 rhythm*
Rhythm: ☕️
the amogus
I subscribed because your name is hilarious
Also interesting video
Thanks 🙏 and
Dora the explorer ahh vid
,, Us art PEASANTS" I laughed so freaking hard-
4:31 illuminati!!!!!!!!!!!!??????????????????
Don compare me I’m 12😢
some of these are basic but hard to understand
bro you do not know anatomoy you gotta humble yourself sorry
You failed to even spell the word anatomy dawg 😭, but you right
Doesn't mean they aren't right like wtf
as someone that doesnt use colors or draws anything in poses i dislike this video