Skin tones are hard. Like, you would never figure out the color zones of the face on your own because they are so subtle, but the human eye still just has this amazing ability to figure out when its painted wrong so you can't just fill it with a peach color and be done. Its like often even a percentage point or less of these blues from the veins, reds from the capilaries, yellow from the bones, but we notice it when its gone.
You wouldnt be able to make skin tones accurate. "White" skin consist of yellow, white, Reds and grays and you dont have just one color anywhere on your body
ik skin translucent but damn idk ab all that. our skin would be pure red from the muscles if that was the case like wtf does this comment mean? i agree with the other dude, it’s impossible bc each skin-cell damn near a diff shade and we have an infinite amount of those till we die so
@@renaigh Your the only one stating that ok, because we don’t need to state it we know it, stop making ppl seem racist or judgmental toward blacks or and other race like the second comment says (White) so chill before you try to accuse someone of what they know. They don’t mean it in a racist way your just the racial one who took it like that.
@@Deehydrate Correct, as a makeup artist I was also taught that skin color (specifically what is deemed White) has all the colors you said plus greens and blues
Jazza trying to color match his skin tone to paint is literally me eye balling all the foundation options in the drugstore. Freaking out on a time constraint and knowing it isn't going to be anywhere near accurate lol
That last palette is all we had for our first project in the art course. We only had the primary colours and white and we had to paint a whole portrait mixing every single one of ours colours by hand. It was agony but taught us to colour match very well.
I've never learned color theory in my life but can still color match a lot of stuff pretty good. Some ppl just have an eye for it, and u can probably just train ur eyes aswell
But understanding the theory behind the color makes it so much more interesting and easier to make choices in color. A single course or book, (see David Hornung books. A great way to learn color theory. ) can fast track you to so much understanding. I know so much more about color because I could springboard from my theory course. I really encourage it. And the exercises are delightful in Hornung’s books!
Hol up... How do you manage to never learn any colour theory? Like isn't at the very least subtractive colour theory taught since like daycares and kindergartens? I mean i would get not learning additive RGB colour theory, since it's not as commonly used for normal people, but it's hard to imagine someone wouldn't know at the very least basic RYB or CMY.... Or like seen a colour wheel or smth.
The action music at the end killed me😂 If you do more I think it would be a great idea to bring up a comparison of the two colours on the screen, like a split screen of the hexes!
the more colour matching vids u watch, the more u start to see the subtle differences in colour. It's definitely something you get better at with practice
It’s crazy how many colours are in each other honestly you must need a really good eye to see them all! Great Video jazza im gonna Go practice doing this myself now :)
I work in paint manufacturing and the colors that are the biggest pain to match are whites. They're extremely annoying to match because there are way more colors in it than you'd expect and every color add moves the color more than you think it will.
I gotta be honest as someone who has been watching for years, its almost superhuman the way you pick up different art styles and techniques and tricks you've never done before the video they are posted in. How can you do every art???
Colourmatching is a very good skill to have for painting. That way one can mix and use the colours you intend in your art. The colour wheel, practice and study are very helpful. Really train your eye to notice subtle colours and colour temperature. Warm vs cool; this is only true when compared to another colour. One’s own visual limitations effect this. Someone with any amount of colourblindness for example simply can’t do this. So no pressure but it’s really a very helpful to be able to get very close colour matches as an artist, painter/illustrator. Digitally you can ‘cheat’ and colourpick. Even so this helps train your eye! Fun video thanks.
I'm convinced I could do this if I had the oil paint to waste Edit: I'm an acrylic artist and I've been trying to match my skintone for years. I'm going to try it again.
Actually it's possible to create your skintones with the primary colors blue, red, yellow and white less blue - for reddish skin more red and for more yellow-like skin yellow to get equal neutral tones same amount of yellow and red If you got a brownish color add white to get the skincolor you want to have
@@dievicii This is fine, but if you REALLY want to match colors like a pro, you should do it based off HSV or Hue, Saturation and Value. Once you know the hue of the color, you only then need to either darken, lighten and or desaturate it. If you're lighter skin, you only need to know that skin's hue is roughly in the orange category. From there, you just need to desaturate and lighten that orange to match a light skin color, and if you're darker skin, darken and desaturate it appropriately. Now of course, you need to get the orange first and knowledge of CMYK color mixing will help you. Red yellow blue is very outdated and limited in it's color mixing, but yes, it's enough to get skin tones. It's just not a good primary color set.
@@dievicii screenshotting this and the person that replied to u. Tbh I kinda forgot I wanted to try matching my skintone again but now I have some advice to follow
This makes me think of that body painting show where they also did camouflage where the goal was to blend the model in with a background and some of the contestants were so good at color matching (with body paint!!) that it was super hard to see the model. I wonder if Jazza will ever do body painting but because of all the nudity when taking advantage of a bigger canvas instead of let's say just the face or the hands it would probably not do well on youtube because these US-based websites have a very prude view at what's appropriate.
I think there's ways they could cover the "naughty" bits. With a male model they just need a pair of skin toned underpants, and for a female they could add a bandeu.
Technically, you should have measured your skin tone once before and once after mixing. When you got excited more blood rushed in and it’s possible you had the right color before your skin got darker.
This video brought back memories of my old job where I was responsible for staining unfinished hardwood flooring transition pieces to match pre-existing hardwood floor. Often times would be trying to match three different colors. The color inside the grain, the color around the edges of the grain, and the color on the raised bits. It depends whether or not the wood was sanded. If you don’t sand the wood before staining you’re going to have three different colors but if you sand it then the pores will be open and you will only have two. The hardest color to match would be Armstrong floorings Oceanside gray on solid oak. That could take hours of your life trying to get it right. You walk up to it and you feel like it’s going to be easy. It is not! It is so not easy that Armstrong can’t even get their own color right. Armstrong has two factories that produce this color. One for solid hardwood and the other for engineered hardwood. The colors are completely different! It was such an Underappreciated art form. If I did a good job then nobody would notice because they would assume that everything came from the manufacturer. Very satisfying when I got it right. My favorite thing was to match the vinyl plank flooring that had the fake weathered print on it. You do that by mixing white paint into your stain but not mixing it well so that you have a lot of color variation.
I currently do something very similar for work, and am one of maybe 3 people in the city who can do them, it's really a lost art manually doing precise stain matches
@@ogs5276 I fantasized about trying to do it as a side hustle but the problem is getting established. These days only rich people get hardwood transition pieces. Metal is so much cheaper. I don’t even know how I would find the customers because it’s such a rare thing to need to replace flooring. I can’t really think of any other times when you would need to match a stain to a pre-existing color. Most people have wood shoe molding but it’s so much easier to match the paint color of the wall than the stain color of the floor that there isn’t much point. Also if you simply paint it you can get away with using a cheap wood. Only a rich person would fork out the money to have oak or maple or hickory shoe molding when it does so little for the overall affect of the room. I think you can buy primed white shoe molding for like two dollars a linear foot. Stained hardwood? You’re probably looking at eight to $15 a linear foot. If you’re going to fork out that much money you do it with a trusted business not someone doing a Side hustle. My absolute favorite thing to stain is Maple. I love the two toned maple affect. It almost looks like the wood is glowing.
Jazza always brings so much informative and entertaining, learning, full of Creativity and imagination content. And whether also the trending and non trending topics. Which I love the way he openly shows his first tries in any new category. ❤️
To be honest Jazza kinda shot himself in the foot with the second palette, he's missing alizarin crimson (think like... rich cool red: strawberries, jolly ranchers...) and ultramarine blue (inside of a pool but make it really dark) in there. Which, from a pigment perspective, makes it essentially impossible to mix certain colors. Having only cobalt blue on there means that any color you mix with it will automatically be cloudy, for example. Very impressive work considering he's not a traditional painter! Y'all never disappoint, Jazza & co :)
Omg impressive!!! I’d like to see you attempt it with polymer clay as it works on CMY colour mixing and you often have to experiment to see what bases are under different versions of colours: watch out for sunshine yellow, it won’t mix the way you’d expect!
I work at the paint desk at a HomeDepot, this is literally my job! Matching colours to people’s old paint, cabinets, and my favourite… tiny tiny TINY pieces of chipped off drywall lol I do thankfully have a spectrometer so the computer gives me a starting point, but after that it’s the same process of “hmm, little more red oxide maybe?” then dispense, mix, swatch, dry, repeat. Minimum time is about 15minutes, but I’ve had some really tricky ones that have taken HOURS
This was super fun 😆🙌 I found myself yelling at my phone screen “come on man, you can do it! Add more of blank blank!!” 😂 love the crew interaction as well.
The reason they start with bright colors is they are mixing neutrals from those brights, they are mixing the neutral with the undertones they see (because red and green make a different tone of black than orange and blue.) At the end, they did not provide him a proper CYM palette to mix a black - the red was scarlet rather than magenta. However, he should have mixed an orange to combine with the blue to mix as close to black as possible. He could have gotten closer.
That was actually both super fun and super educational for me. I do not have even a faint grasp on colour theory and am less than a beginner to training your eye to see what's actually there instead of what you expect. It was fascinating to see a pro like Jazza do this exercise! and the challenge side of it was of course pure fun :D
Wow I didn't realize that my ability to color match to a tee was a superpower 😅 I thought all artists could do it (though I am female, and we are scientifically proven to see colors more accurately)
My mom freaked out when she came in my house because my entire house was a duplicate of my grandma's house and I didn't realize I did that. Apparently I can match color perfectly years after seeing it. I can do the same with face recognition too. I don't even realize why I'm coloring things that way until someone showed me a picture of my grandma's house then I realized what I did. My mom freaked out over it way too much. She said I was going to give her a heart attack.
A few years ago I had to make a water colour match with wall paper (it was some kind of pale olive-seafoam green hue). I thought it would be a fairly easy project. But it took me nearly an hour to get it right!
i realized how much i loved color matching working at the paint department in a hardware store. this is my favorite video so far!! from how long i did it i guessed every color that would be going in lol
Hey Jazza! I have been following your videos for a whhiillle now and you and your team have made the great decision to follow your own joy and I love it :)
This was an incredibly fun video and educational too. It's fun to learn what colors to mix together to create other colors and this was a fun way to go about exploring that. Well done Jazza! I love your over the top videos, but sometimes simple is just as effective!
He's not wasting it! He's learning about art, and having fun while doing it. Personally, that's about the best possible outcome for using a tube of paint. Just because it didn't go onto a canvas doesn't mean it's wasted.
@@phoenixclifford5763 It's because he used so much and there were a bunch of huge piles of paint on some of the palettes that he never even touched. I am going to tell myself he is keeping them in the freezer to use later though.
The editing in this video had me in stitches. I literally have a headache from laughing. The camera man hiding under the table, the plane crash when jazza asked for noises (definitely not what he meant) and his "intense" music on loop. It's just so ridiculous that it was funny
That TT page blew my tiny mind when I first seen it! But right enough, imagine having to touch up a classic painting on a ceiling or something?! You’d need to be good at this for something as critical as that! Critical? Is that the right word? 🤷♀️ I’m using it anyway! 🤦♀️😂
Try matching just using CMYK. I did it as a scanner operator in the printing industry for about 25 years. The customers didn't believe us when we said that their Ferrari Red was unachievable unless they used a fifth color. Only 62% of the visible spectrum can be reproduced using four-color process.
I need to try this at home, it looks like fun. I like to think I’m pretty good with color. My mother is a printing press operator and she’s really good at it. She can tell what amounts of which colors go into an ink completely by eye.
The eyes of mantis shrimp has 16 color-receptive cones and can detect ten times more color than a human, and therefore probably sees more colors than any other animal on the planet 🤯
Hey jazza, I would absolutely love to see a video every now and then to kick it back to the old days but with a modern spark to it. If you could make some more tutorial videos but for the new stuff like editing softwares, digital art, vr art and animation, all things that you have been able to master in the past couple of years but it’s now you teaching us how to master it ourselves. I think it could help a lot of aspiring artists and it can mirror the roots of the channel and give the new viewer a taste of what it was like before.
As someone who's been holding out on oil colors cause I can't afford them, once more watching the video is just as much of a challenge. "It's for content creation, he IS actually using them for something" helps as a mantra to make it more bearable.
I did something very like this not long ago where I had to freshen up a white wooden decoration. You'd think you'd just paint it white, but then the parts that didn't need paint would look very not white. When mixing the color it was a lot further from white then I would have thought.
Hey Jazza I love your art work each video gives me inspiration to make pieces, a challenge I thought would be cool is you trying to sculpt with kneaded erasers, just a random challenge I’d love for you to try and see if you can make something with the medium
That was fun to watch. Love to see your excitement. It makes your videos more interesting. Your art is interesting but I just love your personality. 😁👋🧡
My little hack for doing a warm/red toned blue is using violet instead of red. Same goes for a cooler red. Violet is already red and blue, so it just adds a minuscule amount without accidentally going overboard.
Skin tones are hard. Like, you would never figure out the color zones of the face on your own because they are so subtle, but the human eye still just has this amazing ability to figure out when its painted wrong so you can't just fill it with a peach color and be done. Its like often even a percentage point or less of these blues from the veins, reds from the capilaries, yellow from the bones, but we notice it when its gone.
You wouldnt be able to make skin tones accurate. "White" skin consist of yellow, white, Reds and grays and you dont have just one color anywhere on your body
ik skin translucent but damn idk ab all that. our skin would be pure red from the muscles if that was the case like wtf does this comment mean? i agree with the other dude, it’s impossible bc each skin-cell damn near a diff shade and we have an infinite amount of those till we die so
Not everyone is peach coloured and not all peaches are the same colour.
@@renaigh Your the only one stating that ok, because we don’t need to state it we know it, stop making ppl seem racist or judgmental toward blacks or and other race like the second comment says (White) so chill before you try to accuse someone of what they know. They don’t mean it in a racist way your just the racial one who took it like that.
@@Deehydrate Correct, as a makeup artist I was also taught that skin color (specifically what is deemed White) has all the colors you said plus greens and blues
So it's like having a perfect pitch but with your eyes.
honestly that’s a great way to explain it!
Yep
Now what do we call it? Perfect eye? Perfect match? Perfect hue?
@@flowerdolphin5648 perfect hue is 👌
🤣🤣👏👏👏👏👏
Jazza trying to color match his skin tone to paint is literally me eye balling all the foundation options in the drugstore. Freaking out on a time constraint and knowing it isn't going to be anywhere near accurate lol
LOL
And the music so funny
That last palette is all we had for our first project in the art course. We only had the primary colours and white and we had to paint a whole portrait mixing every single one of ours colours by hand. It was agony but taught us to colour match very well.
5:24
I love Garrath realizing Jazza's talking to the front camera and tries to hide LMFAOO-
🤣😂🤣
Omg I can’t believe more people aren’t talking about it. 😂🤣 that was hilarious 😂 I loved it. 😂
@@kaywatts8128 Yeah that what I was thinking.
It's funny how he shakes his head
Ong
as someone who never learned color theory, this is my nightmare while doing art
Learn color theory. It’s a great tool and can be a cool party trick.
I've never learned color theory in my life but can still color match a lot of stuff pretty good. Some ppl just have an eye for it, and u can probably just train ur eyes aswell
But understanding the theory behind the color makes it so much more interesting and easier to make choices in color. A single course or book, (see David Hornung books. A great way to learn color theory. ) can fast track you to so much understanding. I know so much more about color because I could springboard from my theory course. I really encourage it. And the exercises are delightful in Hornung’s books!
@@I_am_not_a_rob0t This. The artist's name is Mark Carder if it helps to find his video. It helped me make sense of complimentary colors.
Hol up... How do you manage to never learn any colour theory? Like isn't at the very least subtractive colour theory taught since like daycares and kindergartens? I mean i would get not learning additive RGB colour theory, since it's not as commonly used for normal people, but it's hard to imagine someone wouldn't know at the very least basic RYB or CMY.... Or like seen a colour wheel or smth.
The fact that he got 80 above on the first try is very impressive!
It is
He got 90 above
Idea: Make hard caramel sculptures. No matter how it turns out, it'll be delicious.
I think they still need to mentally recover from the chocolate sculpture
Caramel tastes like sh!t though
@@YllidTheLoonyDog dude that's your opinion not everyone's
@@ezzeldinmohd6740 What I said said is no different than when Andrew it would taste good
Yes do that
The action music at the end killed me😂 If you do more I think it would be a great idea to bring up a comparison of the two colours on the screen, like a split screen of the hexes!
First and being late
true action music!!!
the more colour matching vids u watch, the more u start to see the subtle differences in colour. It's definitely something you get better at with practice
It’s crazy how many colours are in each other honestly you must need a really good eye to see them all!
Great Video jazza im gonna Go practice doing this myself now :)
That’s crazy my name is Liam and I’m also trans!
I am the most famous man on YouTub! This is not bragging! This is the truth! The truth will set you free, dear luam
If you had the 3rd Heightening from Brandon Sanderson's Warbreaker then color recognition would be a walk in the park
I found an app the other day with this premise. It's a very simple one, but fairly relaxing.
@@Michelle-DiPalo what app?
I work in paint manufacturing and the colors that are the biggest pain to match are whites. They're extremely annoying to match because there are way more colors in it than you'd expect and every color add moves the color more than you think it will.
That makes a lot of sense
5:24 love the thought that he might have stayed under the table for a few minutes lol
Yea
I gotta be honest as someone who has been watching for years, its almost superhuman the way you pick up different art styles and techniques and tricks you've never done before the video they are posted in. How can you do every art???
Colourmatching is a very good skill to have for painting. That way one can mix and use the colours you intend in your art. The colour wheel, practice and study are very helpful. Really train your eye to notice subtle colours and colour temperature. Warm vs cool; this is only true when compared to another colour.
One’s own visual limitations effect this. Someone with any amount of colourblindness for example simply can’t do this.
So no pressure but it’s really a very helpful to be able to get very close colour matches as an artist, painter/illustrator.
Digitally you can ‘cheat’ and colourpick. Even so this helps train your eye!
Fun video thanks.
I'm convinced I could do this if I had the oil paint to waste
Edit: I'm an acrylic artist and I've been trying to match my skintone for years. I'm going to try it again.
Actually it's possible to create your skintones with the primary colors blue, red, yellow and white
less blue - for reddish skin more red and for more yellow-like skin yellow
to get equal neutral tones same amount of yellow and red
If you got a brownish color add white to get the skincolor you want to have
@@dievicii This is fine, but if you REALLY want to match colors like a pro, you should do it based off HSV or Hue, Saturation and Value. Once you know the hue of the color, you only then need to either darken, lighten and or desaturate it.
If you're lighter skin, you only need to know that skin's hue is roughly in the orange category. From there, you just need to desaturate and lighten that orange to match a light skin color, and if you're darker skin, darken and desaturate it appropriately.
Now of course, you need to get the orange first and knowledge of CMYK color mixing will help you. Red yellow blue is very outdated and limited in it's color mixing, but yes, it's enough to get skin tones. It's just not a good primary color set.
@@dievicii screenshotting this and the person that replied to u. Tbh I kinda forgot I wanted to try matching my skintone again but now I have some advice to follow
I love these color matching videos, I am so happy that you finally did it
Wdym "finally did it"? He's done it before
"can we get some explosions and people cheering?"
Editor: * crashes a plane into Jzza's face *
😂😆😂😂
whos jzza
jzza
Color matching is a mix of total satisfaction and insanity I love it
This makes me think of that body painting show where they also did camouflage where the goal was to blend the model in with a background and some of the contestants were so good at color matching (with body paint!!) that it was super hard to see the model.
I wonder if Jazza will ever do body painting but because of all the nudity when taking advantage of a bigger canvas instead of let's say just the face or the hands it would probably not do well on youtube because these US-based websites have a very prude view at what's appropriate.
I think there's ways they could cover the "naughty" bits. With a male model they just need a pair of skin toned underpants, and for a female they could add a bandeu.
I remember that show!! Skin wars right?!
Technically, you should have measured your skin tone once before and once after mixing.
When you got excited more blood rushed in and it’s possible you had the right color before your skin got darker.
This video brought back memories of my old job where I was responsible for staining unfinished hardwood flooring transition pieces to match pre-existing hardwood floor. Often times would be trying to match three different colors. The color inside the grain, the color around the edges of the grain, and the color on the raised bits. It depends whether or not the wood was sanded. If you don’t sand the wood before staining you’re going to have three different colors but if you sand it then the pores will be open and you will only have two.
The hardest color to match would be Armstrong floorings Oceanside gray on solid oak. That could take hours of your life trying to get it right. You walk up to it and you feel like it’s going to be easy. It is not! It is so not easy that Armstrong can’t even get their own color right. Armstrong has two factories that produce this color. One for solid hardwood and the other for engineered hardwood. The colors are completely different!
It was such an Underappreciated art form. If I did a good job then nobody would notice because they would assume that everything came from the manufacturer. Very satisfying when I got it right. My favorite thing was to match the vinyl plank flooring that had the fake weathered print on it. You do that by mixing white paint into your stain but not mixing it well so that you have a lot of color variation.
Reply to me because I am too tired to read it now
@@Harsh_Singh1111 try now
I currently do something very similar for work, and am one of maybe 3 people in the city who can do them, it's really a lost art manually doing precise stain matches
@@ogs5276 thx 🙃
@@ogs5276 I fantasized about trying to do it as a side hustle but the problem is getting established. These days only rich people get hardwood transition pieces. Metal is so much cheaper. I don’t even know how I would find the customers because it’s such a rare thing to need to replace flooring. I can’t really think of any other times when you would need to match a stain to a pre-existing color. Most people have wood shoe molding but it’s so much easier to match the paint color of the wall than the stain color of the floor that there isn’t much point. Also if you simply paint it you can get away with using a cheap wood. Only a rich person would fork out the money to have oak or maple or hickory shoe molding when it does so little for the overall affect of the room. I think you can buy primed white shoe molding for like two dollars a linear foot. Stained hardwood? You’re probably looking at eight to $15 a linear foot. If you’re going to fork out that much money you do it with a trusted business not someone doing a Side hustle.
My absolute favorite thing to stain is Maple. I love the two toned maple affect. It almost looks like the wood is glowing.
Jazza always brings so much informative and entertaining, learning, full of Creativity and imagination content. And whether also the trending and non trending topics. Which I love the way he openly shows his first tries in any new category. ❤️
It's actually a great exercise for beginners having trouble matching colors in reference painting....
To be honest Jazza kinda shot himself in the foot with the second palette, he's missing alizarin crimson (think like... rich cool red: strawberries, jolly ranchers...) and ultramarine blue (inside of a pool but make it really dark) in there. Which, from a pigment perspective, makes it essentially impossible to mix certain colors. Having only cobalt blue on there means that any color you mix with it will automatically be cloudy, for example. Very impressive work considering he's not a traditional painter! Y'all never disappoint, Jazza & co :)
6:28
Now THIS, is entertainment.
Omg impressive!!! I’d like to see you attempt it with polymer clay as it works on CMY colour mixing and you often have to experiment to see what bases are under different versions of colours: watch out for sunshine yellow, it won’t mix the way you’d expect!
I work at the paint desk at a HomeDepot, this is literally my job! Matching colours to people’s old paint, cabinets, and my favourite… tiny tiny TINY pieces of chipped off drywall lol
I do thankfully have a spectrometer so the computer gives me a starting point, but after that it’s the same process of “hmm, little more red oxide maybe?” then dispense, mix, swatch, dry, repeat. Minimum time is about 15minutes, but I’ve had some really tricky ones that have taken HOURS
Wow, you're awesome. I've never had home Depot do more than use the machine and then hand you whatever it dispenses. No tweaking it...
I haven't seen this sort of thing before, but it's so much fun to watch! Thanks for another great video :)
These moments are golden😭🤣
2:00
6:15
8:24
5:24
These time stamps are basically perfect. Just these 4
The second banana Moment excitement is just 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Really love these challenges.. definitely one for you to do again. Maybe with pick or point to items whilst blindfolded first though lol.
That was so fun to watch. I don't care what "THEY," say; you are a Master Artist! ...and that camera guy being left in was a charm.
This was equal parts stressful and satisfying to watch! Would love to see you color match more!!
This was super fun 😆🙌 I found myself yelling at my phone screen “come on man, you can do it! Add more of blank blank!!” 😂 love the crew interaction as well.
8:47 mans censored himself with a fricking bannana 😂
8:42 BANANA REDEMPTION!!! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣 I don't think I've seen Jazza this hyped before.
8:42 got me lying on the floor laughing 😂
I’m here for this 💚
Lol nobody reply not even jazza
@@anshul9618yea it only has 12 likes lol
Ur the og colour matcher right
The reason they start with bright colors is they are mixing neutrals from those brights, they are mixing the neutral with the undertones they see (because red and green make a different tone of black than orange and blue.) At the end, they did not provide him a proper CYM palette to mix a black - the red was scarlet rather than magenta. However, he should have mixed an orange to combine with the blue to mix as close to black as possible. He could have gotten closer.
I can't even match my face with my bitmoji
Remember kids; to get the best colour match, always start with green
That was actually both super fun and super educational for me. I do not have even a faint grasp on colour theory and am less than a beginner to training your eye to see what's actually there instead of what you expect. It was fascinating to see a pro like Jazza do this exercise! and the challenge side of it was of course pure fun :D
*SHLooooooooP!* Matching codes is so fun and genius. You nailed it! 83!!!!!!
9:45 jazza is now a musician
And he has a band now
Wow I didn't realize that my ability to color match to a tee was a superpower 😅 I thought all artists could do it (though I am female, and we are scientifically proven to see colors more accurately)
Not this female. I can't tell the difference between anything
@@Skittl1321 lol this comment is gold
I have the same power. 😅 Glad to know there’s more people like me.
Lucky you. No envy.
Honestly you did a good job and it looked so fun! Makes me want to try myself!
I love these challenge videos you make, you really have to try your hardest with your best skill.
As frustrating as color matching can be sometimes, I love it!! It's so fun trying to match colors from an image to paint (if I'm recreating it)
My mom freaked out when she came in my house because my entire house was a duplicate of my grandma's house and I didn't realize I did that. Apparently I can match color perfectly years after seeing it. I can do the same with face recognition too. I don't even realize why I'm coloring things that way until someone showed me a picture of my grandma's house then I realized what I did. My mom freaked out over it way too much. She said I was going to give her a heart attack.
A few years ago I had to make a water colour match with wall paper (it was some kind of pale olive-seafoam green hue). I thought it would be a fairly easy project. But it took me nearly an hour to get it right!
The paint mixing guy in tik tok would suggest you start with green for everything. lol Glad that you matched the banana so well the second time.
i realized how much i loved color matching working at the paint department in a hardware store. this is my favorite video so far!! from how long i did it i guessed every color that would be going in lol
I like how jazza tries so hard just to match these colors.
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Hey Jazza! I have been following your videos for a whhiillle now and you and your team have made the great decision to follow your own joy and I love it :)
I want jazza to try mehendi. I am excited to see where would this go😅
This was an incredibly fun video and educational too. It's fun to learn what colors to mix together to create other colors and this was a fun way to go about exploring that. Well done Jazza! I love your over the top videos, but sometimes simple is just as effective!
Jazza: "A little bit of white"
Every painter watching this: "NO! Are you crazy!?"
Also the amount of paint being wasted makes me really sad
Can confirm
He's not wasting it! He's learning about art, and having fun while doing it. Personally, that's about the best possible outcome for using a tube of paint. Just because it didn't go onto a canvas doesn't mean it's wasted.
@@phoenixclifford5763 It's because he used so much and there were a bunch of huge piles of paint on some of the palettes that he never even touched. I am going to tell myself he is keeping them in the freezer to use later though.
Love the video! My job is color correcting paints and color matching, so it was fun watching someone else do it.
Looks like such a fun challenge I might try it myself 😊
The editing in this video had me in stitches. I literally have a headache from laughing. The camera man hiding under the table, the plane crash when jazza asked for noises (definitely not what he meant) and his "intense" music on loop. It's just so ridiculous that it was funny
never thought i'd ever say that i really enjoyed a grown man colour matching on youtube, but here i am.
You are funny and creative mixing the colors.
That TT page blew my tiny mind when I first seen it! But right enough, imagine having to touch up a classic painting on a ceiling or something?! You’d need to be good at this for something as critical as that! Critical? Is that the right word? 🤷♀️ I’m using it anyway! 🤦♀️😂
5:24:
Gareth:Wait I’m in the screen?!
Crawls under table😅
4:39 when he took the paper towel,I thought he was gonna color match the paper towel 😂
😂😂😂
Easy one of my favourite Dazza videos. Simple and funny, laughing my ass off. Love to see it.
This would be a breeze for someone with the 3rd Heightening from Brandon Sanderson's Warbreaker.
The jet and car crash in the edit had me laughing way to damn hard. Lmao 🤣 hilarious episode.
"That's basically 98% mtfkr
Try matching just using CMYK. I did it as a scanner operator in the printing industry for about 25 years. The customers didn't believe us when we said that their Ferrari Red was unachievable unless they used a fifth color. Only 62% of the visible spectrum can be reproduced using four-color process.
I need to try this at home, it looks like fun. I like to think I’m pretty good with color. My mother is a printing press operator and she’s really good at it. She can tell what amounts of which colors go into an ink completely by eye.
I’ve been obsessed with these videos and thinking I can do it looking at everyday objects now 😭😎
The loop of Jazza’s interpretation of intense music for the background has me cracking up
The eyes of mantis shrimp has 16 color-receptive cones and can detect ten times more color than a human, and therefore probably sees more colors than any other animal on the planet 🤯
Josiah your videos are really, really good, thanks so much for fun videos today
What app are you using to find the color?
Try color matching your face please! I’m a makeup artist who loves your channel and this is what I do for a living everyday 😄
As a colour blind person I don’t know how you do this
Bc he’s not colour blind (no hate) btw you have the same condition as my friends dad!
Hey jazza, I would absolutely love to see a video every now and then to kick it back to the old days but with a modern spark to it. If you could make some more tutorial videos but for the new stuff like editing softwares, digital art, vr art and animation, all things that you have been able to master in the past couple of years but it’s now you teaching us how to master it ourselves. I think it could help a lot of aspiring artists and it can mirror the roots of the channel and give the new viewer a taste of what it was like before.
My guy is happier with 83 then 95 😂
As someone who's been holding out on oil colors cause I can't afford them, once more watching the video is just as much of a challenge.
"It's for content creation, he IS actually using them for something" helps as a mantra to make it more bearable.
I did something very like this not long ago where I had to freshen up a white wooden decoration. You'd think you'd just paint it white, but then the parts that didn't need paint would look very not white. When mixing the color it was a lot further from white then I would have thought.
Loved the Explosions after the 96% score!! Almost made me spit out my drink!
Wasn't there a pen that changed to the colour you scanned an item with? That would be a fun video tbh
Oh yeah... forgot about that😅😅😅
It's a scam😐😐
@@itsmepandazzz7579 oh really? I have this memory of being fascinated by it so would be quite sad lol
@@mattle3 I was excited to but... The promo video was posted more than 10 years ago.
It ended up being a scam that stole lots of mone by progressively delaying release and never showing a real prototype just the promo video
@@brinashiloff3439 ah dang that's too bad.. hopefully someday it'll be a real thing
The camera man in the back always gets me😂😂😂
10:05 "nyeh nyeh nyeh nyeh nyeh...."
I love when you post it makes my morning better
6:36 😳😳😳😳😳🤨🤨🤨🤨🤨 I have no words.
"Banana Redemption" sounds like the latest in Jazza's ever expanding list of anime attacks.
What is that app he uses to colour mstch
Color match
wow there was just so much beautiful chaos in this video. I love it
FUN FACT:
Did you know that this guy ( 2:47 ) is actually colorblind but i dont remember what type it was
Hey Jazza I love your art work each video gives me inspiration to make pieces, a challenge I thought would be cool is you trying to sculpt with kneaded erasers, just a random challenge I’d love for you to try and see if you can make something with the medium
This video is crazy, please try this again! It’s so funny!!!
That was fun to watch. Love to see your excitement. It makes your videos more interesting. Your art is interesting but I just love your personality. 😁👋🧡
I watched this video twice. More of these, Jazza! Thoroughly enjoyed it
Jazza, you should try crochet. Like the mini amigurumi's. Their so cuteee.
Color matching is rather fun! In my art class we had to paint acrylic fruits. I made ab orange and gosh is it a world color
My little hack for doing a warm/red toned blue is using violet instead of red. Same goes for a cooler red. Violet is already red and blue, so it just adds a minuscule amount without accidentally going overboard.
I love your work I can't stop watching!!Keep up the great work.
My favorite thing was Gareth being on camera for a split second and dropping down behind the desk lol