Ian, in my humble opinion...I do believe that this lesson session is the most important video an artist can watch. This lesson is more valuable than gold. Thank you for reminding me of my edges, which I did not realize I have been somewhat ignoring...an easy habit to fall into I suppose. You're the best!
I reacted exactly the same way. I realized that I was so caught up on contrast to bring an object into focus, that the painting would be too busy to have a focal POINT!
Ian, how you are able to erase details from your mind’s eye as you paint is amazing to me. They just simply distract me so much when I am trying to paint. Figuring out what to leave out is a real learning curve for me. Thanks for your guidance.
Leave out anything plastic or stuff that belongs in a trash bin. I did a painting from a photo recently of a young woman but left out the plastic water bottle she was holding for example.
Hi Martha, the most fundamental things really is seeing in terms of design. Not subject matter. I know I"ve said this before. But it is really a right brain approach instead of a left brain. The left brain just looks at an image and catalogues all the pieces in it. There is not synthesis of the what is the big idea. It really is a question of practicing and crafting designs, rather than getting buried in a painting and having too many things to think about all at once. I making a video now that is sort of an over view video on composition so everyone can see the overarching idea of the weekly videos and then I hope each week the new video will fit mentally into the whole. But I'll talk about this idea.
Another master painting. Every week your videos jolt me back to the track of good painting. You show it is worth striving to paint elegant and simple pictures that pack a punch.
I really found it interesting how you went right in and painted the under painting of the boxes in a brighter blue then I would have tried. Also the mans coat with a brighter green. Then you went over it and toned it down leaving hints of the colour underneath. Brave of you I thought. 😊 Thanks for that! The lost and found edge is so important. I think it was the French impressionists who said - ‘If you can’t see the lost and found edges in nature, you are not looking hard enough! 😊🌼
This by far has become my favorite painting… You always do an excellent job of explaining not so obvious techniques, and simplifying the process. Such simple shapes yet so much detail in the face…. I struggle with the detail. Thank you for the lesson.
I love this lesson. I went back and watched the one from last year as well. I really wish when I was in art school that more instructors would have spent time teaching us principles like this--analyzing paintings of masters and bringing that to life with a demonstration really teaches one to think before they put marks down one their own surfaces. I really enjoy seeing what you decide to remove from your sources as you paint as well. I really need to work on simplifying the unnecessary clutter and being more decisive up front. Thank you for the time and effort you put in each week--each lesson is practical and makes me really think as I am working in my own studio. I think this is one of my favorite paintings of yours I have seen so far. I am currently reading your books now, so I look forward to your live question and answer day. Best Wishes!
@@IanRobertsMasteringComposition I really think planning is key. I have always had a reference to work from but I just did not take the time to do drawings first. My drawings and paintings where two separate things. Since I started watching your videos, I have started doing drawings first, which has been so helpful. Now I am working on letting things go and not over detailing.
‘ Trust the viewer to fill in an edge’ , I hope I remember this lesson. It takes confidence to point the viewer to a certain place in a picture , if as a painter your not confident that place is painted well. Seeing you do it, and explain the process of seeing, is helpful. Thanks for the lesson Ian.
Wonderful painting and the explanation on edges is so helpful. It is an aspect which I tend to forget a little during painting, so this was a very useful reminder.
The video was very helpful, as always! I'm trying so hard to stop getting caught up on the details and overworking my painting until there's too many places to focus on. Your videos are the best lessons for that.
It's incredibly generous of you to offer such high level content in such detail for free! I've been reading your book on Creative Authenticity and going through all your videos here on TH-cam. You've been both inspiring and informative for me and my creative process. I cannot thank you enough Ian!
I got back into drawing again recently after burnout and depression after a couple of years, and your videos have been wonderful, inspiring and extremely helpful and to the point for me. They have been helping me see more like a painter and they have especially been helping me with values and composition, two of my weakest points. I have been aware of how edges work before this, but your video made things even clearer. I can't wait to work on my next painting. Thank you
I've been drawing/painting animals mostly, but i do enjoy your vids and have been making my way through them while I work. You just know when you have a good sketch but your lessons help me realize whtas working and whats not
This is so eye-opening - thank you Ian! I have studied with quite a few oil painters -- quite good ones, in fact, -- but not one has ever explained the importance of edges making certain elements recede into the background. I can't thank you enough for your generosity in sharing this information.
A great example of art. The photograph shows reality and the painting the spirit behind it. The painting is so much greater than the photograph. Brilliant. Enjoyed this one a lot
Excellent little demo / instructional video I watch so many videos where the 'instructor' shows them making a nice painting- but who cares? Often they don't even show the reference well. So what has the viewer learnt? Something about colour maybe, some brush work. I this, you have shown how you have interpreted a subject- what your decisions were, the process of taking an image & converting it into a personalised piece of art- THAT is what people need to see! Thanks you again!
Thank you. This video was one that gave me some extremely helpful tips and information. I enjoy every one but sometimes you answer the questions I didn’t even know I was asking. 🙏
Wow. What a lesson! In just a few minutes I learned a valuable lesson. I never figured out why my eyes gravitated towards certain details in great art. Now I understand how that was an intentional decision by the artist. Thank you for sharing this.
So clever! I feel like you are an orchestra conductor, directing the viewer’s attention and holding it with just the right amount of intrigue. All visual, and playful. Very enjoyable!
absolutely wonderful, I can't get over how confident your brushwork and command of shapes are. Of all things, I was especially inspired by how (seemingly) effortlessly you carved the background.
I am so lucky to have your tuber in 2022. It is so instructive to me. My teachers never told me all these principles in painting. And it is amazingly wonderful to watch you complete every work. Thank you so much.
Wonderful reminder of a simple Idea...so important, so hard to achieve. You do it so well. I watched it twice and then wanted to jump right on a painting of a human. Thanks so much for the reminder to improve on my ability to lose edges....It's just so cool to watch you do it. Great video!!!!
I am on a painting course at Acton Scott Hall in the glorious Shropshire Hills, so very happy to come back to my room in a country pub, and watch this masterclass. We were schooled in line, shapes, tone and edges today - wonderfully reinforced in these few minutes.
Great, great lesson on edges! I'm using some of your video lessons to help ME be informed enough to teach an art class. I'm giving them all your video links so they can look for themselves. You really make the instruction easy to understand and inspiring enough to want to grab a paintbrush and get to it! Thanks!
Thank you for reminding us to review your previous videos, “How Edges Make or Break Your Painting” and “How Edges Drive Your Painting.” Both were great reviews, and complemented today’s video! This is a topic that I never tire of hearing and is worth often repeating! While the concept of hard and soft edges is easily understood, it is very challenging to implement. In my experience, I have a difficult time with achieving contrast, particularly with darks. I tend to blend my darks to mid-tones; everything seems to be too grey, with very little contrast…..everything appears to have a soft edge. I always start my paintings with establishing the darks. But once I start adding more color, I find I tend to soften the darks because they appear too severe or too much of a contrast. I feel like I have made a mistake and quickly try to ‘fix’ it rather than determining the next hue to add……considering warmer or cooler, darker or lighter, more saturation or less……and remembering to compare the relationships of color, value, and placement of the major mass shapes. I think the reason for this struggle is because I have not mastered color mixing to create the correct hue and intensity as well the value. I may get one correct, but never have I succeeded in all three. Hue, value and intensity in addition to the composition’s structure are so very critical to a successful painting……it is through these elements, including edges, that contrast is established and interest in the painting is achieved……directing the viewer to the focal point of the composition. This concept is so apparent when done correctly, as you have demonstrated with your painting…..your instruction and demonstrations are excellent……your sharing of this knowledge is so very much appreciated! I look forward to next Tuesday’s topic!
HI Ann Marie, you describe the problem very clearly. The issue is really having to think of so many things at the same time and they all need to gel together. It's like juggling. But you see the problem. I would suggest just paint in black in white for a while and figure out the design of the value masses. Then come back to color. Those two things, color AND design of values masses are two big pieces to be wrestling with at once. Hope that is helpful.
I love your comentary. You explain the reasons for your brushstrokes. "I'll soften that edge in a moment, I just want to keep the paint clean", this sort of explaination of your decisions is so, so useful. You make it look so easy. Another great lesson.Thanks for sharing.
Aha! I was never quite sure what it meant when you said you can tell the experience of a painter by the way the treat the edges. But aftr watching this I had an aha moment. I get it now!! Thanks!
Hey there Ian, I learn by doing, and your demonstration gave me the “aha moment” where I understand the blending of edges and pushing objects back (although still a part of the painting) to bring the viewers eye to where you want them to go. Thank you.
I love watercolor and right now I’m working on that thing of “focal point” and this lesson of yours was just absolutely fantastic!! I have learned a lot! Many thanks!!
Love your comment about not seeing comments or replies to comments on TH-cam. I had the same problem, I also have a problem when someone sends me a message on to my Facebook business page, when I see the notification in my feed, I click it and it takes me nowhere. Weeks later I get a text message on my phone, "well I tried contacting you through Facebook with no luck I'll try your cell." I've lost sells because of this so it can be very frustrating... Love the way you approach your lessons on TH-cam!!
This by far is one of the most insightful videos I have seen on edges......It really keeps your focal point in the spotlight. Thanks for sharing this!!!!!
I've been watching your videos quite a bit. I'm not an oil painter myself, more of a drawer who occasionally dabbles with watercolours, but I love how you manage to break down scenes to their simplest forms and craft them into something that is very expressive and presentative of the reference. That is something I've been trying to achieve myself, as I've always felt I get trapped with details when less would often be more.
Amazing job, Ian! I wonder if you could speak to "keeping the values close", like the range for doing this and when you would want to do that. I'm thinking you did that for the background shape. I appreciate so much this lesson on edges - I feel like I'm just learning to appreciate their value in painting. Thank you so much for sharing you immense knowledge with us.
Hi Joan, keeping the values close is really the same as soften an edge. Softening an edge doesn't mean mushing to away. It can. But also putting two close values beside each other even with a crisp "hard" edge is softening an edge. Glad you liked it.
These are (I feel) valid observations. But for me what you talk about is more from the realm of enhancing the chosen focal areas of interest than the letting the mind fill in the gaps theme. Actually the mind would rush to fill in/connect a few lit up, interrupted lines and dots than shapes insinuated in the shadow. Technically it does there too just as you describe it but (for me) not attention-wise. I feel these lost edges are rather a ploy we use for creating Volume. I also like to soften an edge by doubling it with an appropriate color, this way it works even without interrupting it. Talking about Vermeer, he was really frequently using the ploy of the mind connecting a shape out of a few brightly lit dots! Cheers, and lovely painting!
Hi, I don't disagree with your assessment. Most of the lost edges in this painting were as you are saying about releasing attention from one place so it goes somewhere else. But even though the point of letting the mind fill in things might not have been as well demonstrated in this video as lost edges it seemed worth talking about. Thanks for your thoughtful comments. All the best.
Ian, in my humble opinion...I do believe that this lesson session is the most important video an artist can watch. This lesson is more valuable than gold. Thank you for reminding me of my edges, which I did not realize I have been somewhat ignoring...an easy habit to fall into I suppose. You're the best!
That is so very nice of you to say. Thank you Susie! So glad I could help. All the best
I reacted exactly the same way. I realized that I was so caught up on contrast to bring an object into focus, that the painting would be too busy to have a focal POINT!
Ian, you are a fantastic informer/educator.
I agree.
Thanks so much Ray!
Ian, how you are able to erase details from your mind’s eye as you paint is amazing to me. They just simply distract me so much when I am trying to paint. Figuring out what to leave out is a real learning curve for me. Thanks for your guidance.
agreed!! That's why i like to do thumbnails first and resolve all those edge issues!
Leave out anything plastic or stuff that belongs in a trash bin. I did a painting from a photo recently of a young woman but left out the plastic water bottle she was holding for example.
Hi Martha, the most fundamental things really is seeing in terms of design. Not subject matter. I know I"ve said this before. But it is really a right brain approach instead of a left brain. The left brain just looks at an image and catalogues all the pieces in it. There is not synthesis of the what is the big idea. It really is a question of practicing and crafting designs, rather than getting buried in a painting and having too many things to think about all at once. I making a video now that is sort of an over view video on composition so everyone can see the overarching idea of the weekly videos and then I hope each week the new video will fit mentally into the whole. But I'll talk about this idea.
That's the way
Now there's a good rule of thumb. I like it George. If it's plastic, leave it out.
Another master painting. Every week your videos jolt me back to the track of good painting. You show it is worth striving to paint elegant and simple pictures that pack a punch.
Thanks so much Priscilla. Glad you like the videos!
I really found it interesting how you went right in and painted the under painting of the boxes in a brighter blue then I would have tried. Also the mans coat with a brighter green. Then you went over it and toned it down leaving hints of the colour underneath. Brave of you I thought. 😊 Thanks for that! The lost and found edge is so important. I think it was the French impressionists who said - ‘If you can’t see the lost and found edges in nature, you are not looking hard enough! 😊🌼
This by far has become my favorite painting… You always do an excellent job of explaining not so obvious techniques, and simplifying the process. Such simple shapes yet so much detail in the face…. I struggle with the detail. Thank you for the lesson.
Thank you Myra. I quite enjoy this one too. So glad you are finding my videos helpful. All the best
I love this lesson. I went back and watched the one from last year as well. I really wish when I was in art school that more instructors would have spent time teaching us principles like this--analyzing paintings of masters and bringing that to life with a demonstration really teaches one to think before they put marks down one their own surfaces. I really enjoy seeing what you decide to remove from your sources as you paint as well. I really need to work on simplifying the unnecessary clutter and being more decisive up front. Thank you for the time and effort you put in each week--each lesson is practical and makes me really think as I am working in my own studio. I think this is one of my favorite paintings of yours I have seen so far. I am currently reading your books now, so I look forward to your live question and answer day. Best Wishes!
Hi Natalie, really delighted you are seeing the steps you suggest here about how to improve your painting. And happy you are enjoying the videos.
@@IanRobertsMasteringComposition I really think planning is key. I have always had a reference to work from but I just did not take the time to do drawings first. My drawings and paintings where two separate things. Since I started watching your videos, I have started doing drawings first, which has been so helpful. Now I am working on letting things go and not over detailing.
Such a good lesson. Less is more and engages the viewer. Love this painting.❤️
Thank you so much Joyce! Glad you liked it
Thank You Ian, I did indeed find the video helpful. Seems I'm ready to focus on edges for a while. I also did have a fantastic day!
Glad it was helpful! And glad you had a fantastic day!
How powerful and intriguing at the same time this whole painting is...and so poetic.. Thank you for helping us to improve.
You are so welcome Joanne
Revisited this for refresher. 8:15 "... like an old master painting ..." - couldn't agree more.
Your videos have made a world of a difference in how I approach my artwork. Thank you! 🙏🏻✨
I'm so glad! Thank you Tara
‘ Trust the viewer to fill in an edge’ , I hope I remember this lesson. It takes confidence to point the viewer to a certain place in a picture , if as a painter your not confident that place is painted well. Seeing you do it, and explain the process of seeing, is helpful. Thanks for the lesson Ian.
Wonderful painting and the explanation on edges is so helpful. It is an aspect which I tend to forget a little during painting, so this was a very useful reminder.
Delighted you enjoyed it. Thank you for watching
The video was very helpful, as always! I'm trying so hard to stop getting caught up on the details and overworking my painting until there's too many places to focus on. Your videos are the best lessons for that.
Hi Ian. Thanks so much. Glad you are enjoying the videos. I have more that talk specifically about simplification - I think you will enjoys those too
The moment you add the sunlight... It made all the difference...
It's incredibly generous of you to offer such high level content in such detail for free! I've been reading your book on Creative Authenticity and going through all your videos here on TH-cam. You've been both inspiring and informative for me and my creative process. I cannot thank you enough Ian!
Makes me happy to hear. Thank you for supporting me - both in my books and videos. All the best
Very clear demonstration of how edges are useful in moving (or distracting) the eye. Thank you!
You are very welcome Ralph
I got back into drawing again recently after burnout and depression after a couple of years, and your videos have been wonderful, inspiring and extremely helpful and to the point for me. They have been helping me see more like a painter and they have especially been helping me with values and composition, two of my weakest points. I have been aware of how edges work before this, but your video made things even clearer. I can't wait to work on my next painting. Thank you
I've been drawing/painting animals mostly, but i do enjoy your vids and have been making my way through them while I work. You just know when you have a good sketch but your lessons help me realize whtas working and whats not
Edges! Amazing!! Thanks 🙏 Ian. Your painting is beautiful!
I love how you show us an old master painting, focus on one concept and then apply it to one of your original paintings.
Thanks Summer.
Fantastic lesson! Beautifully rendered, and you made it look effortless, like all the rest of your paintings. Thank you Ian.
Glad you enjoyed it Katrina!
Hi Ian, you are a fantastic teacher and artist! Thank you very much for your videos !! Greetings from Germany!
This is so eye-opening - thank you Ian! I have studied with quite a few oil painters -- quite good ones, in fact, -- but not one has ever explained the importance of edges making certain elements recede into the background. I can't thank you enough for your generosity in sharing this information.
A great example of art. The photograph shows reality and the painting the spirit behind it. The painting is so much greater than the photograph. Brilliant. Enjoyed this one a lot
Well said! Thank you Tony
Love your channel Ian. Keep up the content.
Glad to hear it! Thank you
Excellent little demo / instructional video
I watch so many videos where the 'instructor' shows them making a nice painting- but who cares? Often they don't even show the reference well. So what has the viewer learnt? Something about colour maybe, some brush work.
I this, you have shown how you have interpreted a subject- what your decisions were, the process of taking an image & converting it into a personalised piece of art- THAT is what people need to see!
Thanks you again!
You are by far the best instructor! Thank you for sharing all your expertise and talent!
Thank you. This video was one that gave me some extremely helpful tips and information. I enjoy every one but sometimes you answer the questions I didn’t even know I was asking. 🙏
Thanks Bobbie. I am happy to hear I am helping!
I love this picture , it is like an old master
I need to rewatch this before I start any painting to reinforce this valuable information
You are a terrific teacher and I can’t wait to read your books.
I think you just became my fav YTer
Wow the quality of light in that painting is sooo beautiful! Crazy awesome! Great painting!! Thank you 🙏
Really loving your figurative paintings!
Thanks so much Nancy!
This video finally helped me to figure out why my paintings look so flat. Thank you.
Glad I could help Darlene. Edges are so important
Wow. What a lesson! In just a few minutes I learned a valuable lesson. I never figured out why my eyes gravitated towards certain details in great art. Now I understand how that was an intentional decision by the artist. Thank you for sharing this.
Excellent! Glad you found it so helpful
So clever! I feel like you are an orchestra conductor, directing the viewer’s attention and holding it with just the right amount of intrigue. All visual, and playful. Very enjoyable!
Thanks Natalie
absolutely wonderful, I can't get over how confident your brushwork and command of shapes are. Of all things, I was especially inspired by how (seemingly) effortlessly you carved the background.
You make it look so easy. You are one of my favourite teacher artist
That is very kind. Thank you Edie
Edges play a very important role. Thanks for the video. 👌🏾
I am so lucky to have your tuber in 2022. It is so instructive to me. My teachers never told me all these principles in painting. And it is amazingly wonderful to watch you complete every work. Thank you so much.
A very good lesson with simple and best explanation . Thank you sir.
Wonderful reminder of a simple Idea...so important, so hard to achieve. You do it so well. I watched it twice and then wanted to jump right on a painting of a human. Thanks so much for the reminder to improve on my ability to lose edges....It's just so cool to watch you do it. Great video!!!!
Thank you so much Ramona. All the very best.
Ian...thank you so much for sharing your knowledge and skills...you are a terrific teacher
Simple and beautiful painting 🎨 & you explain very beautifully 😊
Thank you Angshuman!
Congratulations. Another wonderful video presentation. You provide a valuable service to our creative community. Blessings
That’s ridiculously good. I’m going to have to give this a try.
So amazing watching your painting come alive!
Thank you so much Claudia
Thanks that was great, i have apainting with snow so can adopt losing background with the jumper being light blue and snow settling on the shoulders
So happy to find your channel recently💓 Thank you for sharing!
You explain everything so beautifully. Thank you.
Thanks Ian for another excellent and simple explanation of this important topic. I just realized how crucial edges are for paintins :).
Absolutely. Happy that this video helped Lukasz
Thank you so much for this tutorial. Your description of softening an edge to release the eye was a real light bulb moment for me.
Glad it was helpful Robin!
What a fantastic painting. You look so relaxed and sure of what you are doing. Great info thank you.
Thanks so much Jen. I have decades of practice, which would help anyone
I am on a painting course at Acton Scott Hall in the glorious Shropshire Hills, so very happy to come back to my room in a country pub, and watch this masterclass. We were schooled in line, shapes, tone and edges today - wonderfully reinforced in these few minutes.
Hi Ian, I love the idea of painting all day and coming back to a pub for the night. Glad the videos are reinforcing the ideas on the workshop.
wonderful painting!
Thank you so much Noumine
Great, great lesson on edges! I'm using some of your video lessons to help ME be informed enough to teach an art class. I'm giving them all your video links so they can look for themselves. You really make the instruction easy to understand and inspiring enough to want to grab a paintbrush and get to it! Thanks!
Glad it was helpful.
Thank you so much for making thoses valuable videos!
You made me rechanllenging from the lost my passion of my art...
Very interesting lost edges Thank you for this beautiful demonstration
Thanks for watching!
Thank you for reminding us to review your previous videos, “How Edges Make or Break Your Painting” and “How Edges Drive Your Painting.” Both were great reviews, and complemented today’s video! This is a topic that I never tire of hearing and is worth often repeating!
While the concept of hard and soft edges is easily understood, it is very challenging to implement. In my experience, I have a difficult time with achieving contrast, particularly with darks. I tend to blend my darks to mid-tones; everything seems to be too grey, with very little contrast…..everything appears to have a soft edge.
I always start my paintings with establishing the darks. But once I start adding more color, I find I tend to soften the darks because they appear too severe or too much of a contrast. I feel like I have made a mistake and quickly try to ‘fix’ it rather than determining the next hue to add……considering warmer or cooler, darker or lighter, more saturation or less……and remembering to compare the relationships of color, value, and placement of the major mass shapes.
I think the reason for this struggle is because I have not mastered color mixing to create the correct hue and intensity as well the value. I may get one correct, but never have I succeeded in all three.
Hue, value and intensity in addition to the composition’s structure are so very critical to a successful painting……it is through these elements, including edges, that contrast is established and interest in the painting is achieved……directing the viewer to the focal point of the composition.
This concept is so apparent when done correctly, as you have demonstrated with your painting…..your instruction and demonstrations are excellent……your sharing of this knowledge is so very much appreciated! I look forward to next Tuesday’s topic!
HI Ann Marie, you describe the problem very clearly. The issue is really having to think of so many things at the same time and they all need to gel together. It's like juggling. But you see the problem. I would suggest just paint in black in white for a while and figure out the design of the value masses. Then come back to color. Those two things, color AND design of values masses are two big pieces to be wrestling with at once. Hope that is helpful.
Thank you kindly! This was very helpful when I do portraits!
Thank you for that wonderful session.
I love your comentary. You explain the reasons for your brushstrokes. "I'll soften that edge in a moment, I just want to keep the paint clean", this sort of explaination of your decisions is so, so useful. You make it look so easy. Another great lesson.Thanks for sharing.
I am so glad to hear it. Thank you for watching. All the best
Thank you Ian for such a great lesson!
Aha! I was never quite sure what it meant when you said you can tell the experience of a painter by the way the treat the edges. But aftr watching this I had an aha moment. I get it now!! Thanks!
HI Andrea, it really is the idea that they are under your control to orchestrate the whole effect. Nice to hear from you.
One of the best teachers on TH-cam! Thank you for your time and energy to make these videos.
So glad you are enjoying my videos. Thank you Dom
Omg that is just wonderful. Thank you so much for this gem 💎 of instruction!
Waw, thank you for sharing about edges, amazing, I'm glad found this channel
Another great tip. I will be monitoring edges more closely! Nice to see the masters examples too!
Wonderful! Glad you liked it Joe
I much prefer the paint than the picture! 😍🙌🏼
Thank you Deborah. I guess that is the idea for us all, isn't it? All the best
@@IanRobertsMasteringComposition I hope to get there some day! ☺️
Wow! I so much admire the way you think ☺️
Thanks so much Shraddha!
That was so interesting and helpful and you explain everything so clearly. Thank you again!
Glad I found you yesterday! Thank you for the lesson.
My pleasure!
Wonderful Ian, great help thank you very much!!!
You are so welcome Ana!
Love your work. The painting you did is very Edward Hopper - esque. But with better edges.
Ha, I can see the resemblance. Thank you Ryan!
@@IanRobertsMasteringComposition no thank you, this is an impressively concise and professional tutorial. Do you have a patreon account?
@@IanRobertsMasteringComposition by the way do you have any video on how to set up a mall stick?
Hey there Ian,
I learn by doing, and your demonstration gave me the “aha moment” where I understand the blending of edges and pushing objects back (although still a part of the painting) to bring the viewers eye to where you want them to go. Thank you.
Fantastic! So delighted you enjoyed it Albert
Excellent as always. If I keep watching these am hoping eventually these ideas will filter through to my paintings. 😁
It will! Thanks for watching Gail
Another great video. Amazing how you simplify and handle the light.
I appreciate that! Thank you Joyce
Ahhhh...would that I could paint with such confident ease!
Practice!
I love watercolor and right now I’m working on that thing of “focal point” and this lesson of yours was just absolutely fantastic!! I have learned a lot! Many thanks!!
You are so welcome Deborah.
@@IanRobertsMasteringComposition thank you! 🙌🏼
What a great video and such a lovely painting. Such a critical concept too. Thanks again for the time you take to help all of us.
Glad it was helpful Christine
Wonderful teacher thanking you so much.
Love your comment about not seeing comments or replies to comments on TH-cam. I had the same problem, I also have a problem when someone sends me a message on to my Facebook business page, when I see the notification in my feed, I click it and it takes me nowhere. Weeks later I get a text message on my phone, "well I tried contacting you through Facebook with no luck I'll try your cell." I've lost sells because of this so it can be very frustrating... Love the way you approach your lessons on TH-cam!!
Thank you! Just discovered your channel, I’m soo happy to watch these! Very inspiring 🍀
Thanks for following up on this. I have a tree which I am working and this demo of lost edges is exactly what I needed.
Great! Glad I could help Gerald
Thank you for the well-thought-out and presented videos you upload. Very helpful. Stay safe. Peace. ♥
Thanks so much Jeff. All the best
I love the simplified painting.
Thanks so much Tarma!
This by far is one of the most insightful videos I have seen on edges......It really keeps your focal point in the spotlight. Thanks for sharing this!!!!!
Glad it was helpful Andrea. All the best
I truly love this lesson, it is so inspiring! Every video you make makes me wish I could subscribe all over again. Thank you!
Danke schön. Das ist sehr informativ 👍
lovely , thanks so much , you videos are brilliant and gems after gems ! thanks so very much !
Glad you like them Kenton. All the best
I've been watching your videos quite a bit. I'm not an oil painter myself, more of a drawer who occasionally dabbles with watercolours, but I love how you manage to break down scenes to their simplest forms and craft them into something that is very expressive and presentative of the reference. That is something I've been trying to achieve myself, as I've always felt I get trapped with details when less would often be more.
It is something that takes practice. I do hope my videos are helping with the process. All the best
Awsome, many thanks, many, many 🤔😁🏴
Glad you enjoyed it Lesley
Amazing job, Ian! I wonder if you could speak to "keeping the values close", like the range for doing this and when you would want to do that. I'm thinking you did that for the background shape. I appreciate so much this lesson on edges - I feel like I'm just learning to appreciate their value in painting. Thank you so much for sharing you immense knowledge with us.
Hi Joan, keeping the values close is really the same as soften an edge. Softening an edge doesn't mean mushing to away. It can. But also putting two close values beside each other even with a crisp "hard" edge is softening an edge. Glad you liked it.
Brilliant. Simply brilliant.
Thanks so much
thanks for this lesson! You made it look so easy
These are (I feel) valid observations. But for me what you talk about is more from the realm of enhancing the chosen focal areas of interest than the letting the mind fill in the gaps theme. Actually the mind would rush to fill in/connect a few lit up, interrupted lines and dots than shapes insinuated in the shadow. Technically it does there too just as you describe it but (for me) not attention-wise. I feel these lost edges are rather a ploy we use for creating Volume. I also like to soften an edge by doubling it with an appropriate color, this way it works even without interrupting it. Talking about Vermeer, he was really frequently using the ploy of the mind connecting a shape out of a few brightly lit dots! Cheers, and lovely painting!
Hi, I don't disagree with your assessment. Most of the lost edges in this painting were as you are saying about releasing attention from one place so it goes somewhere else. But even though the point of letting the mind fill in things might not have been as well demonstrated in this video as lost edges it seemed worth talking about. Thanks for your thoughtful comments. All the best.
You are a genius!
You are very welcome Moda! Glad they are helping