The Truth About Perspective

Marshall joins me for a conversation about how perspective relates to how we actually see the world. Perspective is a mix of invention and discovery. We've created methods like one-point, two-point, three-point, and fisheye perspectives to help us depict the world on a 2D surface. Getting good at these methods helps us be more creative with our drawings. It lets us move past the limits of sticking to just one method and really capture how complex what we see is.
If you enjoy this talk, make sure to subscribe to the channel so you’ll see Marshall’s upcoming perspective lessons when the course begins.
And please check out Marshall's existing courses on Proko:
www.proko.com/@marshall/courses
CHAPTERS:
00:00 - Intro
00:42 - Invention or Discovery
01:31 - A Better Way
07:07 - Closest to Reality
09:53 - Environment & Objects
11:57 - Most Common
16:07 - Conclusion
17:03 - Outro
RELATED LINKS:
• How to Learn Perspecti...
• Perspective for Beginners
• Two-Point Perspective ...
#perspective #drawing #fundamentals
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ABOUT PROKO:
Instructional How to Draw videos for artists. My drawing lessons are approachable enough for beginners and detailed enough for advanced artists. My philosophy is to teach timeless concepts in an entertaining way. I believe that when you are having fun, you learn better. I take pride in producing high-quality videos that you will enjoy watching and re-watching.
CREDITS:
Artist | Instructor - Stan Prokopenko (www.stanprokopenko.com), Marshall Vandruff (www.marshallart.com)
Producer - Stan Prokopenko, Sean Ramsey (www.peoplewhodrawstuff.com), Charlie Nicholson ( / shloogorgh )
Script - Stan Prokopenko
Production Assistance - Stephen Clark (www.peppermintgentleman.com)
Editing - Sierra, Charlie Nicholson, Sean Ramsey
Music Used with Permission
Intro - The Freak Fandango Orchestra

Пікірлер: 503

  • @ProkoTV
    @ProkoTV2 ай бұрын

    Next up, we're tackling intuitive perspective! If you're looking to get into that premium perspective content, use code BASICS15 to get 15% off the course until March 31st - proko.com/drawing

  • @tantotheraider2425

    @tantotheraider2425

    2 ай бұрын

    Proko poop draw tutorial😊

  • @DennisCNolasco

    @DennisCNolasco

    2 ай бұрын

    Hey Marshall, how's the full perspective course coming along?

  • @ProkoTV

    @ProkoTV

    2 ай бұрын

    @@DennisCNolasco It's great! We're not sharing any specific dates until it's fully locked in but it's... approaching 😉

  • @French-Star

    @French-Star

    2 ай бұрын

    march 31st is my bday :D

  • @ProkoTV

    @ProkoTV

    2 ай бұрын

    @@French-Star Happy early birthday!

  • @damnrapunzel8130
    @damnrapunzel81302 ай бұрын

    Well, that's just like, your perspective, man

  • @inali_illustrates9142

    @inali_illustrates9142

    2 ай бұрын

    Best comment

  • @Alt.N

    @Alt.N

    2 ай бұрын

    Proko and Proko's Comment section always have the best puns

  • @frederickzorn3542

    @frederickzorn3542

    2 ай бұрын

    The damnrapunzel abides.

  • @RSidd

    @RSidd

    2 ай бұрын

    8 point grids, Dude.

  • @calebclendenin7073

    @calebclendenin7073

    2 ай бұрын

    He kinda sounds like him

  • @artunblock9433
    @artunblock94332 ай бұрын

    It's great to see these dudes together again 🎉

  • @AnneliLMendozaArt

    @AnneliLMendozaArt

    2 ай бұрын

    It made my day! 🥺

  • @aztro.99

    @aztro.99

    2 ай бұрын

    theyre kobe and shaq fr lol

  • @nidhishshivashankar4885

    @nidhishshivashankar4885

    2 ай бұрын

    I miss the irl podcast their chemistry was great pre the virus that shall not be named

  • @deplorablereader

    @deplorablereader

    2 ай бұрын

    Yessss I love Marshall ❤❤

  • @grimmbleaper9981
    @grimmbleaper99812 ай бұрын

    i studied from an animator called miyamoto takuji for a time and he really did not like points so what he had us do is use trail and error combined with draw overs to learn to feel it out. his main focus and most important thing he taught is the exaggeration of lenses where if something is close it will be super exaggerated and as it move away it gradually become almost isometric.

  • @coreygraham860

    @coreygraham860

    2 ай бұрын

    How did you correct your drawings without using vanishing points?

  • @nmr7203

    @nmr7203

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@coreygraham860trial and error like they said

  • @williamcantdraw4739

    @williamcantdraw4739

    2 ай бұрын

    @@coreygraham860you don’t 😅, there’s no feedback loop regarding that, it’s a bit of a flawed method because of that I feel ( if used in isolation, which the students were made to do, from I’m aware )

  • @mafu_ne

    @mafu_ne

    2 ай бұрын

    Oh that sounds interesting I looked his name up and he has a yt channel. Was that channel where you learned his technique from?

  • @alencherian1739

    @alencherian1739

    2 ай бұрын

    moderndayjames has a great video about that

  • @jumanasaadeh2817
    @jumanasaadeh28172 ай бұрын

    For those who have not yet bought Marshall's perspective lessons, I am telling you as someone who struggled with perspective so much and regard it as a top 3 most difficult things I have to learn in art, Marshall is your guy His course is so easy to understand and is so, so good

  • @karidyas00

    @karidyas00

    2 ай бұрын

    And affordable!

  • @dobi26jo37

    @dobi26jo37

    2 ай бұрын

    umm sorry for stupid question but can you link his course? is is standalone? i cant find it

  • @dobi26jo37

    @dobi26jo37

    2 ай бұрын

    I’m guessing you’re talking about the lessons on his website on perspective, the 1994 ones for $12 and not the new course he’s working on as of now cause I was searching on proko’s website couldn’t find anything

  • @jumanasaadeh2817

    @jumanasaadeh2817

    2 ай бұрын

    @@dobi26jo37 yes the one on his website that's the one I was talking about. I linked it here idk where it went though maybe youtube took it down

  • @A-bp9hq

    @A-bp9hq

    2 ай бұрын

    same!! couldnt either @@dobi26jo37

  • @willalrightaustin
    @willalrightaustin2 ай бұрын

    I could listen to Marshall talk all day. He has that wise man on top of a hill energy about him and it's great.

  • @BVK.

    @BVK.

    2 ай бұрын

    Ye! Ar ar ar ar

  • @DTHRocket
    @DTHRocket2 ай бұрын

    Mind blown. It's just like the problem of mapping on a globe. The more of the globe you include, the more distorted your lines become.

  • @papara31
    @papara312 ай бұрын

    I thought an old critique video came up but its a new one! Love to see Marshall here👍

  • @ProkoTV

    @ProkoTV

    2 ай бұрын

    Definitely an older style Proko thumbnail, right? Thanks for clicking anyway!

  • @miyagi_draws
    @miyagi_draws2 ай бұрын

    100% correct. We see a curved world but we know it's actually straight lines, but we don't actually percieve it that way. Drawing what you percieve vs drawing what you know reality should be. Learning the construct of perspective as a foundation helps you go beyond that to a less rigid and more natural perspective where the lines don't line up perfectly to a grid, but they 'feel' right. Eric Canete's art is a great example of this.

  • @joleh6077
    @joleh60772 ай бұрын

    I realised this when I studied perspective through the camera lens. Once I understood that perspective is defined by where I placed my intention, drawing backgrounds and characters in complex perspectives became a lot easier to express. I started using my senses than calculation, thus making the drawing more natural, even though it may not align perfectly with perspective lines.

  • @RagtimeBillyPeaches
    @RagtimeBillyPeachesАй бұрын

    When I was a senior in high school I worked for Realtors, drawing architectural renderings of homes, and buildings. I taught myself how to use one, two, and three point perspective. I would work in pen and ink, then using water soluble colored pencils to color my work to look like watercolor. It was an integration of art and mathematics that gave me incredible pleasure, and money in my pocket. This was in the '50s, and I styled my work after a famous architectural renderer named Jacobe.

  • @trianor
    @trianor2 ай бұрын

    Always good to see the Marshal/Stan dynamic. This helped me understand it a lot more and want to draw

  • @beardmonster8051
    @beardmonster80512 ай бұрын

    I'm glad Marshall mentioned that it gets more complicated when we look with two eyes. Just try closing one eye at the time and see things jump around. Neither of those views are what we see with two eyes. It's a combination that's bigger than its parts. But human vision is even more complicated. One aspect is just how tiny the area where we actually have sharp vision is. Try taking a regular playing card at arm's length and moving it in from the periphery of your vision towards the center while staring straight ahead and see where you can see what card it is. You'll be surprised at how close to dead center you need to bring it to tell. So it's just a tiny part of our field of vision that has any sharpness at all. The rest is just more limited cues plus our memory filling things in. And if you move your eyes, you've switched to a new view. It's not the same one. (Fun thing: We're basically blind while the eye moves. The eye knows that it'll just get unfocused nonsense during the eye movement and ignores it.) And then there's the big aspect of how our vision actually is interpretative. We don't see a bitmap of pixels. Shapes and distance and motions is hardwired into perception and there's no neutral view without that information baked in for us to see.

  • @palm0018

    @palm0018

    2 ай бұрын

    Looking with two eyes is just another mechanism to understand distance beyond linear perspective. Brain compares images if each eye. The bigger difference the closer the object.

  • @Mr.TOONz.
    @Mr.TOONz.2 ай бұрын

    Been study art for a few years now and in the last 2 months I’m just starting to realize how important boxes truly are. I regret not doing it sooner but it’s better late thn never

  • @jonahcoffman3078
    @jonahcoffman30786 күн бұрын

    This is one of my favorite videos of all time! I keep coming back, realizing more with each viewing. Thank you Marshall and Stan.

  • @alvarotavares1966
    @alvarotavares19662 ай бұрын

    This is something I figured out by myself after years of not conforming with perspective point techniques being so limited. Loads of objects will break 1, 2, 3 or even 5 point perspective if you shift them by even a little. So i canned all of these techs and just follow perceptual, scene based perspective and after a few years I can do it in my sleep. Glad to finally see a video of experienced artists confirming this is in fact true. Just choose an FOV and draw everything based on the POV of a lens, and it will open your mind to infinite compositions compared the hard grid, box-based models.

  • @meagancrowley5197

    @meagancrowley5197

    2 ай бұрын

    I sometimes can't believe how over complicated, while also over simplified, my art teachers in public school and university, made it seem. Always using the same examples, 1 point = a room, 2 point = train tracks, 3 point = a skyscraper. And no, there will be no more examples, only boxes. For the rest of the class. Direct quote "you probably wont be using 3 point unless you're drawing skyscrapers, and you wont be using 2 point unless you're showing off some kind of design, like a car" They NEVER explain that perspective points are just a tool, and not actually real, and that EVERY object drawn on a picture plane is gonna be in a version of these perspectives, not that there are types of pictures that have only one 😂 I'm pretty sure they don'tbring this up becausethey literally don't know it.. I mentioned to one teacher "you know a quick way to discover if you're looking at a 2 point or a 1 point is that 1 points will have true horizontal and vertical lines, and 2 points will only have true verticals" I pointed this out by instinct. I had never been taught this. And he looked at me like I was saying something either untrue, or just totally useless to the lesson, and brushed me off! I was so confused! But all I can assume is he had no idea what I was tlaking about, and really wasnt open to talking about it. 😬 Then a little while ago, yEARS after I was done with that college course, I was trying to explain perspective to a beginner drawing friend of mine, (whos taking THE SAME CLASS I TOOK) I realized out loud "The horizon line is a lie! It's all lies!" And essentially had a total breakdown. I've never had trouble drawing what I needed to draw in perspective because I just drew from life intuitively. Whenever I wasn't sure about something I just fudged it! But when I tried to explain it to someone with 0 experience, I realized the teachers I learned from never actually taught me how it worked either! And we're all just relying on intuition to make up for really crappy lessons!

  • @katakana-kun2122
    @katakana-kun21222 ай бұрын

    I had Marshall as a perspective teacher in college a little under 10 years ago. This brings me back, good times. Love you Marshall.

  • @geezgus
    @geezgus2 ай бұрын

    This video is actually so great. Learning the way others "THINK" is, sometimes SOOOO MUCH more important than simply learning the way others "DO". I've learnt so SO much from this

  • @giuseppedagostino6854
    @giuseppedagostino6854Ай бұрын

    I'm taking a 3 years course in comics, the second year is nearing to its end. We have a teacher who tought us all the basics of drawing (anatomy, perspective, storytelling, etc.), we put a lot of effort into perspective since we were all doing it wrong. We spent a month (maybe more) redrawing scenes and pages, everytime from scratch, we spent two whole lectures doing one mountain range in the most accurate way possible. By the end of the month we were somewhat capable of putting things into perspective, that is when out teacher sits down in front of us, looks at us dead in the eyes and states: "Perspective doesn't exist anyway, and comic artists don't actually do what you are doing" And then we learned intuitive perspective. I swear the confusion on our faces was a sight to behold

  • @felisyaalaudina5140
    @felisyaalaudina51402 ай бұрын

    I miss your podcast 😭

  • @AaAa-je5eo

    @AaAa-je5eo

    2 ай бұрын

    Same. I know they've covered everything three times. But I want to hear it another 30 times, from different angels, with guests and interviews 😂

  • @KoniWorx
    @KoniWorx2 ай бұрын

    Something that always helps me is imagining where I am (the camera) and the direction my eyes (the tilt of camera). Put yourself in the scene mentally.

  • @procrast
    @procrastАй бұрын

    I'll always be thankful to Marshall, those 90's videos taught me perspective 🙏🙏

  • @bess1955
    @bess1955Ай бұрын

    I bought Marshall's Perspective Course, and it goes far beyond what they taught me in college. Marshall is also a great teacher and has a way of explaining things to make it easier too. I wished had known about him in the 90s.

  • @ProkoTV

    @ProkoTV

    Ай бұрын

    Glad you liked it! His older lessons were fantastic. This year, his new and lengthy perspective course will finally be coming out with us. We'll share some of those lessons here and hope you find that they live up to those old lessons!

  • @bess1955

    @bess1955

    Ай бұрын

    @@ProkoTV I just started the Drawing Basics Course and I have no doubt I will learn a lot. I remember when I discovered your first Proko videos which then led me to the Draftsman Podcast. I can't tell you how much I have already learned from you guys not just in skill but mindset too. Also, I love the humor. You guys are great and I am so glad you both teach the world!!!!

  • @rskrakau8137
    @rskrakau81372 ай бұрын

    Very well explained Marshall, you are a perfect teacher. I always explain that our eyes are spherical inside and outside, but a camera-sensor and a piece of paper are flat. That's why there is no "true" perspective on paper.

  • @prim1791
    @prim17912 ай бұрын

    I can listen to them talk all day

  • @kevilleb
    @kevilleb2 ай бұрын

    2:32 😂 This is how I teach perspective in my class. I said "Imagine your driving a car. One point is the straight road, two points are the houses on the block, three is the package on the passenger seat." I draw 3 panels in an "L" layout and draw the inside of the car integrating a point from each panel.

  • @hgilbert
    @hgilbert2 ай бұрын

    perceptual perspective is a natural evolution of a "wait a minute ...." moment. i noticed that lines curved and then later on saw an artist doing that which I thought I singularly discovered and would have been revolutionary. then found out digging further, many many others have come up with the same conclusion ages ago.

  • @joelaguilarfuentes8758

    @joelaguilarfuentes8758

    2 ай бұрын

    Exactly how I felt when I discovered.

  • @cryptess
    @cryptess2 ай бұрын

    I once had a panic attack in art class because my neurodivergent brain decided that It's All Vanishing Point which represented a Truth About the Universe

  • @prime-mate

    @prime-mate

    Ай бұрын

    The beauty of neurodivergence.

  • @romanatah

    @romanatah

    Ай бұрын

  • @ionchhhhh4108
    @ionchhhhh41082 ай бұрын

    This channel is a service to humanity

  • @cassettetape7643
    @cassettetape76432 ай бұрын

    Great! I was *blissfully* unaware of all the straight lines appearing curved. Now I can't unsee it. In under 3 min you have completely changed my perspective Sir!

  • @Hopischwopi
    @Hopischwopi2 ай бұрын

    Don't look at the sphere! I can't unsee it anymore 😂. Sometimes at least. It's so fun though how we are able to percieve or not percieve things depending on our brain and thinking. Same thing with the nose thing, we technically see it all the time but our brains just say "Nah".

  • @CantonWhy
    @CantonWhy2 ай бұрын

    Marshall and Stan have such great straight man couple energy. Best art brosephs.

  • @joantorrez2465
    @joantorrez24652 ай бұрын

    Can't get enough of Marshall and Stan, this videos are awesome!

  • @meikahidenori
    @meikahidenori2 ай бұрын

    As someone with vision problems, perspective drawing has always been a problematic issue for me. Something I eventually learnt was you could actually tell if an artist had eye problems from looking at how they paint & draw, especially with older artists we show case in galleries and you can tell where they 'faked it' to compensate. Learning this made me feel less panicky about my struggles with my eye conditions.

  • @KoongYe
    @KoongYe2 ай бұрын

    Marshall is the gift of mankind. We need to protect him.

  • @itsScoots
    @itsScoots2 ай бұрын

    This is inspiring, the more I listened and the more I understood the concept of what you guys were saying the more inspired I became. It's sounds so simple when you break it down like this.

  • @johangronvall9473
    @johangronvall94732 ай бұрын

    Game programmer here! Marshal described 3d programs mastery of perspective. ...All we do is divide the x and y coordinates by the depth z. boom linear perspective :P

  • @Mary-fo2uv
    @Mary-fo2uv2 ай бұрын

    I was recently struggling with this since ive decided to seriously understand perspective and there were so many gaps i didnt understand. Like i knew the fundamentals but not like basic intuitive stuff which was explained in this video. Loved this video tysm all the time ❤

  • @demetriocran4123
    @demetriocran41232 ай бұрын

    I daresay that there is a very simple way to explain what perspective is. Cameras work according to the law of perspective. It is a real phenomena because optics is physics. It is likely that Brunelleschi used some optical device to develop the law of perspective. One, two, three points perspective are useful simplifications that can also be beautiful. Thanks Marshall and Stan.

  • @donovanheimer4002

    @donovanheimer4002

    2 ай бұрын

    As someone who works with cameras and 3D computer graphics, I was hoping to find something like this in the comments section.

  • @SurprisedSniper420

    @SurprisedSniper420

    2 ай бұрын

    Useful explanation

  • @johnestock7283
    @johnestock72832 ай бұрын

    Awesome! Thanks Proko & Marshall!

  • @WisdomThumbs
    @WisdomThumbs2 ай бұрын

    The strangeness of perspective vs real vision has fascinated me for decades. Now that I finally have a real job AND a launching art career, I’m excited to finally try your courses.

  • @Topcatyo.
    @Topcatyo.Ай бұрын

    I really enjoyed this format of video. Really demystifies the concept of perspective to hear two seasoned artists discuss it and even disagree on aspects of it.

  • @HowlingMoonCinemas
    @HowlingMoonCinemasАй бұрын

    One of my favorite duos!

  • @carpenterhillstudios8327
    @carpenterhillstudios8327Ай бұрын

    Thank you! This was fascinating to watch. I come to perspective from a divergent place. When I was in elementary school, the itinerant art teacher did a unit on perspective. I understood it from the beginning. She drew a cabin as demo. we copied it. I asked her, "how do you draw a room inside the cabin?" She said, "Reverse the vanishing pointgs." And away I went. In high school art, my art teacher called the horizon line the "eye level" line. It made sense since we lived in an environment of hills and valleys, no where near a desert or sea. In art school, I took an art history course and came across the frescoes in Pompeii which showed still lifes of fruits and glassware painted in perspective. Iin asking one of my professors about this he said, "The Renaissnce didn't invent how we see, but they did systematize how to create the illusion of depth on a flat surface. This same professor, now my friend, and I one day made a list of all the historical perspectives. Before he died we had hit about 19. Here's the thing which was mentioned in passing in the video. The illusion is dependent upon one eye - a single point of view. We require two eyes to make the scene work (perceiving depth) but we have to manufacture the illusion from a single point. Move a bit and the scene falls apart like all those painted scenes on the streets. Thanks again. apologies for the biography. best wishes

  • @tinandglass
    @tinandglassАй бұрын

    In college art history classe "one point" was used to illustrate how we went from simplified to more complex portrayals of how we understand a universe we're trying to recreate.

  • @fenston
    @fenston2 ай бұрын

    I could listen to Marshall all day long.

  • @BigNightLikeDog
    @BigNightLikeDog2 ай бұрын

    This fascinating and enlightening conversation (as well every other video on this channel) is absolutely invaluable to me in my journey towards understanding what I don’t understand about perspective! Thank you so much!

  • @MrPelida
    @MrPelida2 ай бұрын

    Perspective and perception combinated it's hard topic. I can't imagine best teacher to explain this. Thanks guys.

  • @nebbiula
    @nebbiula2 ай бұрын

    I see Marshall I click

  • @spenser6236
    @spenser62362 ай бұрын

    Came here for Marshall. Received Marshall. Very happy viewer. Bring back draftsmen!!!

  • @nocantry
    @nocantryАй бұрын

    "Parallel lines will meet somewhere" is such a weird, romantic sentence to me. I love it. Might get that tattooed.

  • @jmarcguy
    @jmarcguy2 ай бұрын

    Great video!! Thanks for turning me onto Fechin! Sat in a a doctor’s office looking up his paintings. Then started looking at sketches. Those blew my mind!

  • @loganl7257
    @loganl72572 ай бұрын

    The branch of math that studies and extends perspective is called projective geometry, and it's one of my favorites. It tells you really precisely what it means for shapes to be "in perspective". Recommend NJ Wildberger's series on it if you are interested.

  • @midnightdreams8136
    @midnightdreams81362 ай бұрын

    Is this a real life? Is this just fantasy? Is Marshall's pespective course... finally happening? 🤔❤

  • @ProkoTV

    @ProkoTV

    2 ай бұрын

    It is! It's so close but we don't want to say any specific days until it's locked in. But it's gooooood.

  • @natuvampire
    @natuvampire2 ай бұрын

    Always helpful to hear your perception on art topics!

  • @dezzdinn
    @dezzdinn2 ай бұрын

    All I saw was Marshall. Glad for another Draftsman podcast.

  • @keremaldemir2579
    @keremaldemir25792 ай бұрын

    Love to see Marshall here, even better to see Stan along him!

  • @bruce-le-smith
    @bruce-le-smith2 ай бұрын

    amazing information, thank you!! this was so interesting and helpful

  • @dmcdevils
    @dmcdevilsАй бұрын

    Discovered this when I made a panaroma 360 art 😂. Things only remain straight if the camera is looking directly at it, at that point the only way to make things spacially sensible was to relate the objects with one other in space using a connected line , basically a perspective grid. It's a fun experience that I would recommend all to try.

  • @onikemango
    @onikemango2 ай бұрын

    NGL this was one of the most inspiring pieces of content I've experienced in years

  • @s5az428
    @s5az4282 ай бұрын

    how useful this video was to me, during the last two days I was in conflict with myself for not being able to express the fact that looking at the road seemed different from when I drew on paper, it seemed like something was missing, but I couldn't explain what it was , the best analogy I thought of was that, when I draw on paper it's as if I did everything inside a cube using straight lines, while what I saw seemed deeper without straight lines, almost like a "fish eye".

  • @pampamtamtam4001
    @pampamtamtam40012 ай бұрын

    Your environment and objects section was golden. It was thought provoking and a good way to look at perspective. I think it'll help me out as I practice perspective more.

  • @johanneshalberstadt3663
    @johanneshalberstadt36632 ай бұрын

    Without being a pro, just from listening amd thinking, one thing I want to add is: These perspective drawing methods make most sense and mainly fascilitate drawing our industrialized constructed invironmemts with all their right angles and parallel lines. If you establish vanishing points and create a radial grid, it becomes mich easier to fit allthe lines from architechture, technology and city planning inside this grid. You dont have to gues anymore as far as how to orientate the angle of a line. Just follow the grid. There is a reason why mamy drawing that illustrate or demonstrate perspective use checker-board planned cities or architechture as their motives amd I believe that these object of our self-made environment in reverse are the reason for perspective drawing methods with vanishing points to emerge.

  • @alaanasser3243
    @alaanasser32432 ай бұрын

    Currently studying math and I just admire Marshall's take on why math is both and invention and a discovery. I am actually leaning more and more to it being a discovery.. Unravelling a hidden truth.

  • @artworkbygabrielle
    @artworkbygabrielle2 ай бұрын

    Loved this conversation- thank you for sharing your knowledge with us!

  • @JH-pe3ro
    @JH-pe3ro2 ай бұрын

    One of my favorite games to play is to trace over a "flat" image like a front-facing figure and "perspective it" by adding a horizon and a vanishing point...to arbitrary parts of the figure, making it warp and distort. Perspective grids are just grids, and when you distort the grid, you can create many kinds of effect.

  • @shrug_shrugsly
    @shrug_shrugsly2 ай бұрын

    So good it deserves all the algorithm love. Comment 3 ❤ Proko, it’s great to see you clearly being an amazing student. Most hosts have a pompous air of, pre-filming, always knowing all things. That’s ridiculous! People have guests in to teach EVERYONE. Anyway, thanks for not being pompous and thanks for these lessons!!! ❤❤❤

  • @tyrannosaur4191
    @tyrannosaur41912 ай бұрын

    I was totally lost at the start but as the video went on I started to understand the idea that each element of the artwork has its own perspective and mini perspectives within itself. The only thing I need to know is how you draw the larger bounding boxes relative to the universal perspective of the piece... very tricky for someone at my level to understand how im meant to think and see the 3D space on the paper to be able to orient the objects correctly. Great video

  • @To_You-op5pu
    @To_You-op5pu2 ай бұрын

    Marshall and Proko's collab means interesting and happy learning. ❣️

  • @luckyguess_
    @luckyguess_2 ай бұрын

    wow. This is the explanation I've been waiting for. Thank you!!

  • @shrug_shrugsly
    @shrug_shrugsly2 ай бұрын

    So great!! ❤ you Dr Vandroff!!!! ❤❤❤

  • @KKnsley
    @KKnsley2 ай бұрын

    It’s good to see Marshall again !

  • @gustavofarias8321
    @gustavofarias83212 ай бұрын

    Thanks for bringing professor Marshal!

  • @ahmedengineer5778
    @ahmedengineer57782 ай бұрын

    "it is both a Discovery and an invention" perfect phrase

  • @The_Rock_Princess
    @The_Rock_Princess2 ай бұрын

    Honestly mind opening! I never noticed my fisheye view of the word before. Thank you for making me a better artist❤✌️🤘

  • @pamparam4637
    @pamparam46372 ай бұрын

    Remark about old cameras and paralel vertical lines was quite a revelation to me :) Nice talk, always good to recall some fundamentals.

  • @neonroad12
    @neonroad122 ай бұрын

    Love when you two are on the camera!

  • @yannsalmon2988
    @yannsalmon29882 ай бұрын

    « You’re so far away from the line that you can’t see the line. The line is a dot to you. » That was a line (pun unintended) said by Joey in the sitcom Friends and I feel there’s some truth to it. The paradox is that the way we try to emulate 3D is fundamentally 2D. When you think of it, the idea that separated points when looked from far away join into a single point is obviously incoherent with reality. The points never ever join, they stay separated. It’s the human ability of perceiving those separations that diminishes the further away you go. Without going too philosophical, there’s a parallel (other pun unintended) between this and perspective in the other sense of the dictionary : if you exclusively think about things two dimensionally from one point perspective, you will only have a somewhat accurate perception of reality if those things are right in front of you.

  • @jacquelineminer3899
    @jacquelineminer38992 ай бұрын

    So good to see Marshall. I’ve missed hearing him talk. Would love to take the course.

  • @samanderson4166
    @samanderson41662 ай бұрын

    This really puts things into perspective for me. Thanks!

  • @fernandochavarria9536
    @fernandochavarria9536Ай бұрын

    Good explanations to something that is very complex. I learned conic perspective with strict rules and projections on a screen. It’s an instant in time at a specific angle and “printed on a screen”. With this system I can draw one, two,three or whatever points.I can understand what are isometric drawings and others. I can project shades and shadows from given angles. It’s a good way to understand what I am drawing. When I go do plain air the concept of printing on a screen helps me a lot.

  • @BionicRambutan
    @BionicRambutan2 ай бұрын

    MARSHAAAALLL!!! We love you!!!

  • @zazafiend
    @zazafiend14 күн бұрын

    Wonderful. Love this so interesting

  • @sadrecliner7201
    @sadrecliner72012 ай бұрын

    Amazing❤ I absolutely love proko!!!!

  • @feshgogulululu
    @feshgogulululu2 ай бұрын

    I’ve been studying perspective this is so convenient

  • @idee8or
    @idee8or2 ай бұрын

    Excellent conversation and explanation of techniques developed to understand the limits of human vision.

  • @krzysztofmathews738
    @krzysztofmathews7382 ай бұрын

    Great conversation! Glad to see you guys!

  • @glaucohenrique3d
    @glaucohenrique3d2 ай бұрын

    Your knowledge is incredible!

  • @ricardodantas2788
    @ricardodantas27882 ай бұрын

    Guys thank you so much! This was great! Wonderful ❤

  • @martiantony777
    @martiantony7772 ай бұрын

    Love you and your art Marshall!

  • @cameronrobinson3933
    @cameronrobinson39332 ай бұрын

    This was such an awesome video to watch. It is so nice to see the perspective of experts. And both these guys I see is being experts. I have spent 20 years teaching myself how to draw basically by looking at things and trying to draw them whether it was a cartoon character or a person or building or whatever and I was just doing it on my own watching KZread videos and reading books and then drawing. I was slow at it I didn't practice every day during at least 20 years I would go months at a time without drawing. But then one day in the last year or so everything came together and now I can draw whatever I want and I can't even explain how or why. But one thing I do is I don't Focus too much on the rules of perspective as much as I just look at a drawing and I can tell it doesn't look right now and I'll figure out what I need to do to make it look right and I'm almost never measuring perspective or putting Horizon Lines and Vanishing points I'm just trying to figure out what looks right and I'm getting pretty good at it lol.

  • @madiko
    @madiko2 ай бұрын

    The philosophical draftsmen are back! How lovely! Speaking of which: I love the perspective course by Marshall from 1994 (you can spot him at 0:12). It's funny how he uses the chalkboard until everything is messy. The first lectures are quite easy to understand. The further into the course it's really challenging, to follow along and even more to create your own versions. Still today I am coming back to it regularly to refresh my knowledge. I am intrigued and very curious to see the new one! Thank you lads for sharing. It is a pleasure and interesting - as always. 😘

  • @proctormacbelle4904
    @proctormacbelle49042 ай бұрын

    really enjoy marshall. more marshall!

  • @pcatful
    @pcatfulАй бұрын

    Two point perspective doesn’t multiply with various rotated objects. It’s still called two point- each object or set of (real or implied) parallel lines has two points. Just because those two vanishing points aren’t the same as the next object, does not make it “n” points.

  • @stillfeelme
    @stillfeelme2 ай бұрын

    Two guys just sharing their perspectives

  • @ProkoTV

    @ProkoTV

    2 ай бұрын

    Very good 😂

  • @PercyJacksonTheGoat
    @PercyJacksonTheGoat2 ай бұрын

    Ok so I just wanted to say, the talked about all I tried to understand in my mind , because expepet the promo videos, like a year or more before I clicked on 1,2,3 point perspective that was only roles bla bla bla without how it effects in real life so I figured myself and tried to visual in my mind , there is a toad one point prepective line , and I thought to myself what will it be if I put a box that is 3 point perspective on the road, I knew it made sense because its possible in real life and I thought as long the boxes(or the object u visual in a box) cover to 1/2/3 prospective line it’s ok , like he talked about the human body, and I m so glad that they talked about it because a lot of videos don’t talk about it and I had to figure out it for myself, I just want to say thank u for the channel and videos and speak of things that a lot of artists need to figure in there own

  • @jirayutchimaoy5347
    @jirayutchimaoy53472 ай бұрын

    5:52 “Marshall’s course” We still wait for his course😂

  • @juanhenriquezvargas9687
    @juanhenriquezvargas96872 ай бұрын

    Siento que tengo suerte de existir ahora con tantos maestros que enseñan cosas que ayudan a agilizar el aprender

  • @MonkeyTheyGoofy
    @MonkeyTheyGoofy2 ай бұрын

    It's always a pleasure seeing Marshall in videos. I loved listening to his views on perspective and it made me think about my own beliefs when it comes to art, in general. Also, I wonder if the interview that he's doing will be available anywhere?

  • @johnperic6860
    @johnperic68602 ай бұрын

    I'm a big fan of Hugh Ferris' architectural renderings, and I tried to do one myself with a neo-classical skyscraper design I came up with. It was the first time I had ever done a three-point perspective (and drawn with charcoal), and while I was extremely happy with it and plan to do more, I learned a few interesting things along the way. I think what connects perspective on paper to real-life perspective is matching the vanishing points. People try to fit all their vanishing points within their field of view, but this doesn't occur in real life. In real life, if you are looking at an object with a right angle, your vanishing points for that object will always be separated by 90 degrees within your field of vision. So, if you look at a right angle from 45 degrees, the left vanishing point will be 45 degrees left of your facing direction, and the right will be 45 degrees right of your facing direction. If you rotate this so the right vanishing point is 5 degrees right of where you're facing, then the left vanishing point will be 85 degrees left of the direction you are looking. In the latter scenario, that means the vanishing point will be beyond your field of view. To address this, two of my vanishing points for this drawing were left far outside the paper (I was drawing on my desk, lol). Doing this made my drawing looked far less warped and far more true to real life.