Artistic Digital Portrait Painting
Artistic Digital Portrait Painting, Concise and unique course on digitally painting photo-realistic portraits for beginners to advanced.
Course Description
A practical and complete course on painting appealing and photo-realistic digital portraits by an experienced digital artist specialized in portraiting.
The course contains 10 parts, each part under 10 minutes of video content, featuring a beginner to advanced introduction to the techniques and best practices in painting artistic digital portraits. The program of the course is following:
- Skin tones: choosing skin colours, creating palettes, using the colour wheel in graphic software to help choose the right tones, using non-standard colours for skin.
- Eyes: eye shapes and proportions, anatomy, perspective, application of shadows, walk-through of the whole process on the eye painting.
- Noses: nose shapes and proportions, anatomy, perspective, application of shadows, walk-through of the whole process on the nose painting.
- Lips: lips shapes and proportions, anatomy, perspective, application of shadows, walk-through of the whole process on the lips painting.
- Ears: ears shapes and proportions, anatomy, perspective, application of shadows, walk-through of the whole process on the ear painting.
- Hair: basic hair shaping, work from basic shapes to details, matching the hairstyle shape to the face.
- How to work with references (portrait edition): the use of reference photos, techniques for recreating characters from photos, useful vs. useless parts of the reference photos, using one vs. many photos, the use of 3D software.
- Sculpting approach to painting: painting without the use of a sketch and guide lines, “building/sculpting” the painting and treating it as clay that can be distorted, cut, rebuilt, reshaped at any time.
- Smart rendering: indicating when it is worth to focus on details and when it is unnecessary, deliberately leaving “unfinished” objects/parts of a painting to achieve specific results.
- Light and shadow as an aftereffect: adding “dramatic” light effects at the end of the painting process (when it’s finished/almost finished), “saving” an average work with interesting character lighting, overview of useful layers.