I don't know if you've ever doubted the TH-cam channel, but if so, I want to tell you how important you are, how much you help others. I'm an independent and self-taught artist, from a very small town in the interior of Brazil. You really help me learn and feel better about my art (especially now that I'm depressed). So I just have to THANK YOU. Stay strong! ❤
Wow thank you! I needed that today 😊🤘🏼 I’m so glad you like the videos. I hope your days start to feel lighter and brighter. I started painting to help with my anxiety and bad days. Art is a wonderful thing to latch onto in those moments. Cheers!
This video being free, and shorter than all the art schooling I’ve done. You have a way of explaining things that are to the point and without wasting words. Thank you
All this she is saying is actually some of the first things you learn when you want to start drawing and studying the theory of realism on an academic level. For the artists who want to learn it before ruining many paintings, it’s better to start drawing and study the theory about shadows, mid tones highlights etc. . I am a tattoo artist and painter but started drawing before I went into those 2 businesses and the improvement is going really fast, compared to those who don’t even know how to draw properly, especially in realism which is the most difficult part even in the tattoo industry.
I love seeing another artist with a process similar to my own! It seems almost all artists I come across sharing their process online work mostly one small section at a time. I'm also one who bounces all over the canvas the whole time I'm working! I have to work on the painting as a whole - focusing on one section at a time doesn't make any sense to me until I'm in the very final detailing stages 😂
I just have to say - showing us your hand and that yellow pad against your neck was a WOW moment for me! I kinda felt like crying, because I guess I'd never realized how intense it was before! Game changer, thank you so much.
I have a vague recollection of James Gurney's book stating something along the lines of white light having the full spectrum of colour, so shadows will look more saturated in comparison. But it's very relative and takes a quite a bit of practice to get a good feel on how large the differences in saturation are when it comes to different materials. Rendering skin is a very different beast compared to rendering metal, since both the value and saturation scale gets wider the more reflective the surface is.
I watched a video of yours about a week ago. In that video you talked about saturated shadows. I immediately applied that to a portrait that felt dead to me. It helped a lot! Excellent teaching and instruction. Thanks!
TH-cam algorithm must be broken. otherwise I would have seen this video amd this channel long time ago. Your videos are layered with so many different important areas just like the colors on your paintings. Please keep posting and thank you!
Like that you said lines don't exist unless it's a stylistic choice. Yes many painters include line in portraits. One is not better than the other, just a choice. Thanks.
Hi Miriam. Yet another high-end video. 🤙I have said it in a previous comment, I have ditched other artists (with 500k,1m + subs) and have rested on your channel. Your way of explaining the process of painting (especially showing us the tools you use, while actually using them in the video) is magic. Please keep up the great work👍
I'm so happy you've been posting so consistently! It's been motivating me to paint more. I usually get bummed at how my painting looks at Stage 0 that I abandon it and don't push it further. So it's nice to see your process :)
I’ve been wanting to paint recently (colored pencils are my main medium) so I’ve been intimidated to just start since I’m beginner level. I instantly subscribed because you explained everything so well & i feel motivated to just start painting. I had NO idea about saturated shadows & thats seriously going to help me a lot, thank you for this video!!
Omg I needed this so badly. I’ve been struggling with a painting and this video was exactly what I needed to complete it. Was having artist block because it’s been a while and I’m kind of rusty. Thank you for posting this!!
I am trying to forget everything that was taught in art school! I swear it ruined me. I was pretty naive about what would happen there, at PAFA. I would learn to paint in a very very very academic way. And I did not excel at it. But I do consider myself a portrait artist. The work of Alice Neel is the ultimate in portraiture to me, and some others. I love the way she leaves the viewer knowing that she understands the form she’s making but she leaves it enough to make the work interesting, mysterious and exciting. She doesn’t try to get it “right”. She was a master. I hope to just improve and improve year after year. That’s my plan. I find videos like yours very helpful in that I get to see a different approach to the portrait. Thank you for taking the time to make them.
Thank you for making a video that I don't fall asleep watching. Your voice is beautiful, your painting is beautiful and this has come at just the right time as I transition from drawing to painting. Subscribed!
this is form! this is what i was missing! this video is what i needed! tysm i finally have a good understanding of form and how i can implement it into my potraits❤❤
Awesome stuff! Thinking in terms of form instead of symbol is such a hard lesson to learn as a beginner but you make it look easy. Very informative video!
Smoothing out the lines versus attempting to be more like John Singer Sargent is my current struggle. At 10:53, you started getting "chunky." At around 11:45, you started adding hard edges and smoothing, and adding more. This "painterly" creative idea of when to leave bush stroke edges and when to smooth is daunting for me.
Wow, such a great video again! Even if I don’t paint oil, I find these extremely useful for all medium. And I think you inspire me to try acrylics again.
I've been slaving over a very ambitious portrait painting that wasn't resolving itself, this might be the answer I need. Thank you so much, explained it effortlessly & beautiful painting!
Thanks so much Miriam! I’ve watched many teaching videos (even from high end schools) and I’ve got to tell you , you are becoming my favorite teacher! Simple and clear explanation with great examples alongside, I really appreciate your teaching! You have certainly inspired me and given me some solid skills to improve with! Thank you!! Amazing work too 😄!!
I am so impressed with not only the art in this but the way you teach and show things is extremely helpful. Thank you so much. I'm happy to have clicked and now I'm subbed.
I love this video. Funny that i stumbled upon it just today after i started my first canvas ever with a similar portrait (same perspective and the head has no hair yet). This helps! I tend to overblend my hard shadows, i dont know why. Looking forward to warming up my shadows also, i chose cool ones until now because i do that in makeup, but skin is a canvas that carries warmth within itself. Thank youuuuu
I am so glad I found you because I have problem and it's not uncommon and it's like I don't know how far to go and I don't know when to stop and you're kind of my life ring on a rope and you reel me in when I get hot and bothered and sweating and I'm not sure where to go and before I ruin an oil painting have to wipe it down I just have to look and there you are thank you
Great video, pointing out specific mistakes and showing how to fix them is a great way to learn and make progress quickly 👍😊 Also yours insights about light, colors and creativity in general were very useful.
Hi Miriam, these videos you've been putting up are incredible, thank you! I was a longtime fan on Instagram and now I'm learning a ton from watching you. Can I ask one question about this video: you highlighted the importance of painting soft edges, especially around the features of the face. How do you do that, technically speaking? Do you paint a color and then drag a dry brush across the adjoining colors? Or paint one color into the next? Thanks so much!
@@nicolab1708 you had us! But at least it’s not red: www.google.com/gasearch?q=purple%20vs%20burgundy&tbm=&source=sh/x/gs/m2/5#vhid=cqNWOH1W8WKprM&vssid=l
Hi Miriam, how do you avoid muddying your painting when you go back in to darken shadows? I'm told to work dark to light to avoid this, but I see you often go back to darken already painted areas when needed. Do you wait until it's dry?
Thanks so much! The color picker tool I showed in the video is just the native one in the photoshop app. While I'm painting, I use a different color picker tool part of an app called Pixelmator. I believe its a one time purchase of $5 but in my opinion has been WELL worth the price. Ive used it for every painting the past two years :) Hope that helps!
Thanks so much! I really appreciate it. I do have a patreon if you’re interested 😊 the videos are the same but I do q&a videos over there as well. The $5 a month cost on Patreon goes directly towards making these videos. Cheers! www.patreon.com/miriamhoffmann
Are you painting from a model, or a photograph or prior knowledge of how shading works? I have a couple paintings that were begun in class with a model and would like to finish them, but with nothing to work from I am afraid of spoiling what I was able to capture during the sitting. Curious if you have any suggestions in this regard. That transformation was amazing!
I don't know if you've ever doubted the TH-cam channel, but if so, I want to tell you how important you are, how much you help others. I'm an independent and self-taught artist, from a very small town in the interior of Brazil. You really help me learn and feel better about my art (especially now that I'm depressed). So I just have to THANK YOU. Stay strong! ❤
Wow thank you! I needed that today 😊🤘🏼 I’m so glad you like the videos. I hope your days start to feel lighter and brighter. I started painting to help with my anxiety and bad days. Art is a wonderful thing to latch onto in those moments. Cheers!
This video being free, and shorter than all the art schooling I’ve done. You have a way of explaining things that are to the point and without wasting words. Thank you
All this she is saying is actually some of the first things you learn when you want to start drawing and studying the theory of realism on an academic level. For the artists who want to learn it before ruining many paintings, it’s better to start drawing and study the theory about shadows, mid tones highlights etc. .
I am a tattoo artist and painter but started drawing before I went into those 2 businesses and the improvement is going really fast, compared to those who don’t even know how to draw properly, especially in realism which is the most difficult part even in the tattoo industry.
I love seeing another artist with a process similar to my own! It seems almost all artists I come across sharing their process online work mostly one small section at a time. I'm also one who bounces all over the canvas the whole time I'm working! I have to work on the painting as a whole - focusing on one section at a time doesn't make any sense to me until I'm in the very final detailing stages 😂
Not only you’re a great painter you’re also a great teacher! It’s incredible how you make everything so easy to understand. Thank you!
Wow, thank you! I really appreciate the kind words. Glad you enjoyed the video!
I just have to say - showing us your hand and that yellow pad against your neck was a WOW moment for me! I kinda felt like crying, because I guess I'd never realized how intense it was before! Game changer, thank you so much.
Makes me want to dig up my old art and paint over it....
Haha I do that all the time!
Thank you! Especially helpful for us self taught artists. You demonstrated what I’ve been trying to understand perfectly!
So glad you found it helpful!!
Thanks for breaking down the steps to achieve more life like portraits.
No problem!! Thanks for watching!
This video has been so incredibly helpful! Thank you!
Im so glad it was helpful! Cheers!
I have a vague recollection of James Gurney's book stating something along the lines of white light having the full spectrum of colour, so shadows will look more saturated in comparison. But it's very relative and takes a quite a bit of practice to get a good feel on how large the differences in saturation are when it comes to different materials. Rendering skin is a very different beast compared to rendering metal, since both the value and saturation scale gets wider the more reflective the surface is.
I watched a video of yours about a week ago. In that video you talked about saturated shadows. I immediately applied that to a portrait that felt dead to me. It helped a lot! Excellent teaching and instruction. Thanks!
I’m so glad it helped!!! Thanks for sharing. You’ve made my day!
TH-cam algorithm must be broken. otherwise I would have seen this video amd this channel long time ago. Your videos are layered with so many different important areas just like the colors on your paintings. Please keep posting and thank you!
That was awesome, putting your hand under your neck, that was very understandable . Thank you.
It took me about 12 years to stop making mistakes like these, but it was surprisingly easy. I just had to stop painting.
Like that you said lines don't exist unless it's a stylistic choice. Yes many painters include line in portraits. One is not better than the other, just a choice. Thanks.
Wonderful tutorial, Miriam!!!!
Thank you so much! Glad you enjoyed it!
Hi Miriam. Yet another high-end video. 🤙I have said it in a previous comment, I have ditched other artists (with 500k,1m + subs) and have rested on your channel.
Your way of explaining the process of painting (especially showing us the tools you use, while actually using them in the video) is magic.
Please keep up the great work👍
Wow, thank you! I really appreciate that feedback! Thanks for watching!
Exactly! I hope she becomes one of the biggest here. The quality is outstanding!
Nobody can be such a good teacher and so beautiful, you must obviously be an AI
I'm so happy you've been posting so consistently! It's been motivating me to paint more. I usually get bummed at how my painting looks at Stage 0 that I abandon it and don't push it further. So it's nice to see your process :)
Thank you! Yes don’t get discouraged at stage 0!!! Push forward!! If you ever have any questions just let me know!
I just love the way you teach . It's such s joy listening and watching you discuss painting. Thank you
I’ve been wanting to paint recently (colored pencils are my main medium) so I’ve been intimidated to just start since I’m beginner level. I instantly subscribed because you explained everything so well & i feel motivated to just start painting. I had NO idea about saturated shadows & thats seriously going to help me a lot, thank you for this video!!
So glad you found it helpful!!
We're moving onto a portraiture unit in my art class, so this came at a perfect time!!
Awesome!! Cheers 🥰
We will keep liking and commenting so TH-cam takes notice and you get the distribution you deserve! Keep at it!
You’ve made my day! Thanks for watching!
Omg I needed this so badly. I’ve been struggling with a painting and this video was exactly what I needed to complete it. Was having artist block because it’s been a while and I’m kind of rusty. Thank you for posting this!!
I am trying to forget everything that was taught in art school! I swear it ruined me. I was pretty naive about what would happen there, at PAFA. I would learn to paint in a very very very academic way. And I did not excel at it. But I do consider myself a portrait artist. The work of Alice Neel is the ultimate in portraiture to me, and some others. I love the way she leaves the viewer knowing that she understands the form she’s making but she leaves it enough to make the work interesting, mysterious and exciting. She doesn’t try to get it “right”. She was a master. I hope to just improve and improve year after year. That’s my plan. I find videos like yours very helpful in that I get to see a different approach to the portrait. Thank you for taking the time to make them.
Wow this helped a lot! I’m doing a pro trait of myself and it has been stressing me out just because of how flat is was. Thank you so much 🥹🥹🥹
You’re so welcome! Thanks for watching!
Lovely! Cant wait to start with oils and binge watch your tutorials lol
Let me know how it goes! 🥰🥰
As an artist and a teacher … I loved this vid. You have a new subscriber.
You are SUCH a good teacher, explaining things in a way I've never heard before - and it's so helpful! Thank you!!!
I am just getting into painting and this video explains so many things vividly clearly and digestively, thank you so much.
Helpful video 😮After correction end product is good.
What a gem of a channel! Thank you so much for the video!
Thank YOU for watching! 🤘🏼🥰
thank you, it was very helpful. finally the portraits i paint will stop scaring me!😄
Thank you for making a video that I don't fall asleep watching. Your voice is beautiful, your painting is beautiful and this has come at just the right time as I transition from drawing to painting. Subscribed!
Reflective light section blew me away 😊 thank you ❤
Wow
The painting kept changing 👏🏽👏🏽
I hope I get to this level of skill someday
u have such a great way of explaining things, and ur mannerisms and delivery is so captivating! I wish u were my personal art teacher (or fun aunt)
You are the best teacher I have ever met, this is rare honestly......thank you for sharing.
I just want to say thank you. The saturation in the shadow tip changed my work significantly. Much appreciated!
Extremely helpful advice!
This was incredibly helpful! Thank you so much for sharing your knowledge. Love your art!!🌼
Thank you so much!!
this is form!
this is what i was missing!
this video is what i needed!
tysm i finally have a good understanding of form and how i can implement it into my potraits❤❤
Glad it helped! 🥰🥰🤘🏼
Awesome stuff! Thinking in terms of form instead of symbol is such a hard lesson to learn as a beginner but you make it look easy. Very informative video!
Thanks so much!
This is impressively informative, even for digital artists.
a vast improvement and some wonderful advice i'll take with me into my own painting. thanks
You’re so welcome!
This was actually so helpful and well put. Thanks!!
So glad to hear that! Thanks for watching!
Smoothing out the lines versus attempting to be more like John Singer Sargent is my current struggle. At 10:53, you started getting "chunky." At around 11:45, you started adding hard edges and smoothing, and adding more. This "painterly" creative idea of when to leave bush stroke edges and when to smooth is daunting for me.
Wow, such a great video again! Even if I don’t paint oil, I find these extremely useful for all medium. And I think you inspire me to try acrylics again.
You are so welcome! Cheers!
I've been slaving over a very ambitious portrait painting that wasn't resolving itself, this might be the answer I need. Thank you so much, explained it effortlessly & beautiful painting!
Thank you! So glad you found it helpful!
that was an amazing transformation
Best video I have watched on paining tips, this helped so much! Already seeing an improvement thank you! ☺️
Thanks so much Miriam! I’ve watched many teaching videos (even from high end schools) and I’ve got to tell you , you are becoming my favorite teacher! Simple and clear explanation with great examples alongside, I really appreciate your teaching! You have certainly inspired me and given me some solid skills to improve with! Thank you!! Amazing work too 😄!!
Thanks so much! That means a lot to me!
I am so impressed with not only the art in this but the way you teach and show things is extremely helpful. Thank you so much. I'm happy to have clicked and now I'm subbed.
Thanks so much! So glad you connect with it!
Great video, I really enjoyed it. Thank you for posting.
Glad you enjoyed it!
I love this video. Funny that i stumbled upon it just today after i started my first canvas ever with a similar portrait (same perspective and the head has no hair yet). This helps! I tend to overblend my hard shadows, i dont know why. Looking forward to warming up my shadows also, i chose cool ones until now because i do that in makeup, but skin is a canvas that carries warmth within itself. Thank youuuuu
Great teaching!!!
My God, this was spectacular. Thank you for sharing!!
I am so glad I found you because I have problem and it's not uncommon and it's like I don't know how far to go and I don't know when to stop and you're kind of my life ring on a rope and you reel me in when I get hot and bothered and sweating and I'm not sure where to go and before I ruin an oil painting have to wipe it down I just have to look and there you are thank you
Loved this breakdown process. I just subscribed and am looking forward to your back catalog and future videos. 😊
Yay! Thank you! Welcome!
Thank you so very much. You have shared some big and helpful ideas!!!
Wow.....Thank you! Taht was down-to-earth helpful. 🤩
Wow thank you so much for explaining this. I just subscribed to your channel so happy that I found this video ❤
Great content, Miriam! Thanks from Spain.New subscriber😊
Great video, pointing out specific mistakes and showing how to fix them is a great way to learn and make progress quickly 👍😊
Also yours insights about light, colors and creativity in general were very useful.
Glad it was helpful! And thank you for the wonderful feedback!
Thank you so much. That was such an awakening. ❤
What an amazing video! You totally nailed it, Miriam! Very grateful for the time you spent producing this video to share.
Thank you this video has truly changed my life ✨!
very good sharing thanks. if in doubt burnt sienna the shadows and add some green to light halftones
Thank you for this. Not sure why green.. because it is the opposite of warm red?
Lovely!
Thank you!
Hi Miriam, these videos you've been putting up are incredible, thank you! I was a longtime fan on Instagram and now I'm learning a ton from watching you. Can I ask one question about this video: you highlighted the importance of painting soft edges, especially around the features of the face. How do you do that, technically speaking? Do you paint a color and then drag a dry brush across the adjoining colors? Or paint one color into the next? Thanks so much!
Thanks...this is really helpful...appreciate the sharing...excellent
Love the video, thank you.
So glad you liked it!!
This was a very informative video! Thank you so much
you're a great teacher
That is the best compliment! Thank you!
@@Miriamhoffmann most welcome
Thank you very much for the amazing tips. Love your work
Thank you
You’re welcome! Thanks for watching!
wow first time thanks to the algorithm and thanks to you too great video !
Glad you liked it! Thanks for watching!
The best painting teacher on TH-cam. You single? ❤
Mind Blowing ❤
Thank you! Much needed
I just saw your video on tiktok!
🤘🏼🤘🏼🤘🏼🤘🏼😊😊
You’re really good! Great teacher and great artist!
Thank you!! I truly appreciate that !
Wasn't expecting much, but this was a great video, actually useful easy to apply concepts. Love it
So glad you liked it! Thanks for watching!
This is a great video!! Bravo, I’m a subscriber. 🎉
Well explained! That sweater though, you almost had me doubt my sense of colour - it doesn’t look red to me 😊.
haha i guess more of a burgundy color :) Youre right!
Burgundy, that’s it! Sorry for being such a hue geek. Keep it up!
It purple! The purplest purrple that ever purpled. 😅💜
@@nicolab1708 you had us! But at least it’s not red: www.google.com/gasearch?q=purple%20vs%20burgundy&tbm=&source=sh/x/gs/m2/5#vhid=cqNWOH1W8WKprM&vssid=l
Hi Miriam, how do you avoid muddying your painting when you go back in to darken shadows? I'm told to work dark to light to avoid this, but I see you often go back to darken already painted areas when needed. Do you wait until it's dry?
this is amazing, thank you !
Excellent video, just subbed. In terms of the color picker tool/ color sphere shadow…what tech are you using for that?
Thanks so much! The color picker tool I showed in the video is just the native one in the photoshop app. While I'm painting, I use a different color picker tool part of an app called Pixelmator. I believe its a one time purchase of $5 but in my opinion has been WELL worth the price. Ive used it for every painting the past two years :) Hope that helps!
Thank you! i love you
I really love your videos, youre becoming one of my favorite art channels, if you have a patreon I'd definitely support it!
Thanks so much! I really appreciate it. I do have a patreon if you’re interested 😊 the videos are the same but I do q&a videos over there as well. The $5 a month cost on Patreon goes directly towards making these videos. Cheers! www.patreon.com/miriamhoffmann
@@Miriamhoffmann Thanks for the reply haha! I subscribed to your patreon 😁
You rock! Thanks for the support!
Awesome
Amazing info! Thank you!
So glad you found it helpful! Thanks for watching!
Are you painting from a model, or a photograph or prior knowledge of how shading works? I have a couple paintings that were begun in class with a model and would like to finish them, but with nothing to work from I am afraid of spoiling what I was able to capture during the sitting. Curious if you have any suggestions in this regard. That transformation was amazing!
are you waiting for each stage to dry before continuing? so glad i found your yt
@11:48 Red?!? RED?!? Stop messing with me! ....
Subscribed.
Haha. Sometimes I get flustered when I talk 🤦♀️🤦♀️🙈
great video.. thank you
Thanks for watching!
Why is this one video better than my art school?
Wonderful video! May I ask what medium is this?
Thank you! I’m using oil in this video but the principles apply to acrylic as well 😊
this is great , did you use a photo reference ?
ty this really helped :)