What's the most helpful art tutorial/lecture you've ever seen?
practice drawing straight lines
did wonders for my line work
>>2987294
just read the sticky,
you dumb cunt
>>2987325
/thread
>>2987294
Erik Olson's perspective lessons are some of the best I've watched and helped me learn perspective properly. I think every beginning artist should watch them.
Michael Hampton's design and invention was pretty easy to digest for starters like me
MARK FUCKING CRILLEY
>>2987780
stop
>>2987322
This.
>anti chicken-scratch exercises
>ellipse drawing
>literally anything out of the first ~3 chapters of this book
>>2987324
Seconding this.
This picture changed my linework forever.
>>2987961
Boy I really wish you didn't save thumbnails so I could see this potentially helpful book's title or author
>>2988749
How are you gonna focus on detail if you can't read the title.
Look harder
>>2988749
lol
>>2988749
"How to Draw" by Scott Robertson and Thomas Bertling
This book helped me more than almost anything. Sfumato done well is awesome and the stuff in this book can be used for pretty much everything, not just the human head.
>>2987294
just looking at something and drawing it without letting the pencil off the page and looking at the paper
really helps gets you out of the habit of "sketching" and gives you hand-eye coordination with your drawing
>>2988933
Raaaah I can't find the .pdf / torrent of this!
OP, if you're into animation, the Animator survival kit is a game changer as well.
>>2987961
Overly complicated and technical NOT ART.
>>2990532
just absorb the skills you'll process doing some of its exercises then do your own thing mang
>>2987324
Kill yourself
>>2990532
>things people who aren't gonna make it say
Peter Han's Dynamic Sketching series. It's a great, non-boring introduction to drawing that'll get you competent pretty quickly. After that, it's just a matter of doing studies on specific topics and subject matter.
They're all on cgpeers I believe.
>>2990528
you can find it in artbook thread