Комментарии:
Reminds me of old painting my parents had found in home they purchased, which the bank purchased from them. They were gorgeous, the colors and age are beautiful!!!
ОтветитьThank you so much you are so talented!!
ОтветитьPurrrdy
ОтветитьOnly only Tutorials like these have the audacity to hold me to the vid till end 🥲
ОтветитьGreat video!
ОтветитьOff topic but I can’t get over the fact that you remind me so much of Johnny Depp around the time the first Pirate’s film came out!!!
Gorgeous human. Gorgeous art. Also you just helped me figure out how to render this painting I’m working on! Thank you!!!
Again and again you are just amazing!!! I have been following your videos and learned so much from you... Continue to make Magic!!! All the best ❤shalom
ОтветитьMind = 🤯
ОтветитьI have respect for your talent sir, however, the "depth" of the painting itself is much more important than the mere depth of the 'image". See Van Gogh Landscapes!
ОтветитьThank you for posting, Beautiful!!!
ОтветитьBeatifull
ОтветитьThank you very much, my love for painting is being revived!
ОтветитьIts romanticism??
Awesome
I love this lesson very much!
Ответить@AndrewTischler absolutely outstanding. Almost annoying that you make it look so easy. Thank you
Ответитьquick question, how do you keep those dagger brushes sharp edged? mine always separate down te middle, thx for the awesome vid
ОтветитьBeautiful!
ОтветитьAs a talented child I spent three years oil painting under the tutelage of an elderly painting professor who had escaped Europe during WWII where he had taught in St. Petersburg. He was an “academic” painter and I had no idea how fortunate I was to learn from him even if he was still learning English. When I attended a top university art school later, the trends were different and I suffered them sadly because though they were clever, they lacked the craft and shear magic I had experienced earlier. I was made ageless—transported back in time sixty years by this tutorial! We become easily dulled by our digital viewing experiences and an acceptable photocopying style which too often pass themselves off poorly when compared to the many genuine abstractions and interpretations that become artistic sleights of hand in the artwork of deep observers. Even Andrew Wyeth considered himself an abstractionist, but one whose model was nature itself. Thank you!
ОтветитьAmazing video
(thank you )
Genius ,thats why you’re the best
Ответить😮😮❤
ОтветитьJust beautifull. You are such a good teacher and artist. Great video.
ОтветитьThank you so much for sharing this beautiful painting. Outstanding!
ОтветитьI think I've watched this before...but today, it seemed like a first time. Your cowboy and horse has been my favorite up until today. This painting now takes first place in any of your work I've seen. Was good to get rid of those horses. I'm not near as detailed as you... but like to have a bit more of what you did here on my canvas. thanks Good job with this vid.
Ответитьthe audio is so low, I almost can't hear it 😅
ОтветитьYou amaze me.. Your talent is phenomenal, but you completely leave out any imagination. Why? After copying for years, don’t you want to do something original with that part of your creative brain?
ОтветитьThank you very much!
ОтветитьAndrew is a lovely
painter.
Technically brilliant , beautiful painting 👍
ОтветитьThat’s just beautiful. I wish i could paint like this
ОтветитьSo much thx for showing ur strocks in zoom i have a question? tht y u ist color the base of canvas ?
ОтветитьSaved this one to Favorites. Quite a masterclass, thank you.
Ответить"Think that would tension to these horses you see in the midground.. they're not going to make it." 😂😂😂❤️
Ответитьmasterpiece
ОтветитьI work as digital matte painter and I feel that my job has almost nothing to do with yours... I put photos together trying to think and seeing things like a real painter. Your skills in composition, lighting, color theory, atmospheric perspective are impressive and I find your work really inspiring to me. Thanks for posting this video, keep up the good work!
Ответить❤❤❤❤❤❤
ОтветитьGreat work
ОтветитьGreat video😅
ОтветитьI just could not get the color right for the distant mountains. He said ultramarine blue, burnt umber, with a touch of quinacridone magenta. Obviously you have to mix some white in that, but the color is not close to what was shown, it looked more grey. How to get the green with the green highlights? I never heard how to mix that for the most distant mountains and mixing greens is some of the hardest mixing to do
ОтветитьToday, my grandpa sat me down in front of one of his half-finished paintings and told me to paint. I've never used oils before, so i found myself very much out of my comfort zone! Watching this video has definitely helped me understand what I'm doing better and i look forward to painting with oils more often :)
ОтветитьThank you so much for your guidance 🎉😊
ОтветитьHi Andrew, did you invent the whole drawing and compo of the painting from imagination ?
ОтветитьDemystifying a constant question. Thank you so much.
ОтветитьMáster piece
ОтветитьBeautiful work!
ОтветитьGood job!
ОтветитьThat is awesome.
ОтветитьI like your all paintings. Amazing work, thanks for sharing. Love from Pakistan ❤️.
Ответить