As a visual learner, what are some good resources (channels, videos, courses, whatever) with timelapses that show every step of the process?
>>7909207>"As a visual learner"Get away from this idea that pictures are visual so there's no need to read. Im not crabbing here, at some point you're going to have to read, and if you don't, then learning to draw will take 10 times longer. Videos can be helpful, but if you're not reading, you're not putting in the basic level of effort required to learn this shit.The worst thing is that the reading in most art manuals is very limited, maximum 100-150 words a page.With that said, I'll throw the Morpho BOOKS in for figure drawing.
>>7909209>With that said, I'll throw the Morpho BOOKS in for figure drawing.I guess I was thinking a timelaps of the entire drawing, from the basic sketch to coloring and shading, just so that I can have an idea of what drawing entails and how every part of the process is layered on top of each other from the very start.
>>7909212timelapse*
you can find shitloads of timelapses just by searching on youtube, for anything.>how to draw thingand you'll find timelapses. many artists also post timelapses on their social media.pro tip: you're not gonna learn much from that unless if you've already got most of the basics down well and you're looking for something specific like how to render/color digitally or for tricks/refinements you can apply to your process.reading is important if you want to actually git gud as first post said, especially from master artists & good instructors like Loomis.