timed landscape practice - ipad procreate

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This topic contains 3 replies, has 2 voices, and was last updated by Klines hace 1 día.

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  • #37833
    link: https://imgur.com/a/YwksoI2

    I need some direction for what to focus on. I have never really practiced landscapes before, they feel a lot more difficult than figure drawing practice. At least for timed figures practice I know that the aim is going to be practice anatomy, or gesture, or lighting and values, etc. 

    I genuinely don't know where to start with landscapes, on iPad no less. Should i be worried about brushes technique/familiarity with procreate brushes? Colors? Nature scenes vs manmade architecture?

    Should I continue with a couple of 2 minute warm up landscapes and 1 non-timed landscape? Or would I get more mileage if i sat down with one landscape and focused on that for an hour?
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    #37834
    Hi Klines.

    Here are some simple yet solid suggestions that will help you.

    First of. Draw using real paper and a lead pencil. Forget any colors for now!
    I would also suggest that you go to the Scenes and Environment drawing section, or perhaps start out by trying the Basic Shapes & Still Life section, choose 30 minutes or 1 hour "class mode". You can also make some additional choices of what kind of motives you are interested in and if you want portrait or landscape format. I usually keep all the alternatives on so I get both landscapes and some architectural motives in there.
     

    This is how the 30 minutes class mode works:

    10 poses, 30 seconds
    5 poses, 1 minute
    2 poses, 5 minutes
    1 pose, 10 minutes


    As you probably understand, those first 10 studies are so quick that there is no time for anything other than finding the biggest shape, maybe you can find where the horizon lies in the frame (even if it's not visible) and maybe you can even find a [url=
    ]vanishing point[/url] (no straight edge, only freehand). Sketch out some of the main big shapes and then times is up and on to the next. There certainly is no time to think about color. When the time gets longer, you still use the same approach as you did on the 30 second studies but you will have more time so you will get further. This will come natural after a while. My paper sheets usually come out looking quite chaotic which is fine. I usually switch to a new paper once I'm on the 5 minutes studies.

    Use the cheapest kind of paper, use a lot of it and use a soft lead pencil, 6B or 4B is a good choice. 

    Good luck!
    #37836
    Thestripper, 

    Perfect, thank you so much for the feedback, this is exactly what I was looking for! For some reason it didn’t even occur to me that you could separate the color from the landscape, but you absolutely can! And I should, because it was way stressful to try and juggle.

    I am relieved that you suggested starting with pencil and paper first because that is much more approachable, I can do paper.

    Thank you again, I appreciate the help!!

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