After I died, I became popular againCh53 - Lue Lue Lue

 

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30 comments

  1. love the chapter but wow if pan was my teacher id hate him. manz didnt even show them what he was talking abt and then gave them something above their level to test 1 student? also yh talent matters but it means nothing if you dont practice and put your talent to use

    that’s why rich pple who have the time are more likely to be known for their art. anyway, id drop out his class if he was a college professor tho he’s fake lmfao

  2. Not surprised that some jelly people are starting a new round of rumours instead of concentrating on their own life :’D

    Thx for the ch ٩(。˃ ᵕ ˂ )و

  3. Normal people would really not understand the brain of a genius 🤯😂 we are only commoners lol who were a salted fish 🐠 😂

  4. As an artist, I found QLQ’s ability to grasp watercolors to be a little shocking at first? But after thinking about it, watercolor and trad chinese painting is kind of similar. Actually, you could probably use watercolors to create traditional chinese paintings.

    I think the biggest challenge QLQ will come to face would be using mediums like oil paints and alchohol markers, which don’t really have any direct parallels to ancient chinese art mediums. While things like composition and color theory are foundational knowledge that can be applied to any visual art medium, knowing how to properly use and take advantage of the unique properties in different art supplies and mediums is highly subjective. Fu Yi is the Painting Saint, but I would like to see him being stumped by how different these mediums that he didn’t encounter in his past life (especially alchohol markers), and be able to truly learn new ways to create art (I haven’t even mentioned digital art yet… thats a whole other battlefield!)

  5. These class painting explanations give me a headache 😂 as someone who studied painting…. Is half of it gibberish? Or they are disordered, What the hell is a “formula” in color theory? Know that yellow + blue makes green? ¿that shadows are blueish or purpleish or marron ish according to the temperature?…. I just…. Spend so much time try to make it make sense.

    Besides…. Acuarela inst actually the best media to replicate clothes? it supposed to be oils (I know you can, I’ve seen it, but watercolor offers much less control over the brush stroke and the value of the color depends on the resistance of the paper, therefore, it is better to use more controlled media).

    Although Watercolor and Chinese inks are quite similar on some things, but Chinese inks are HELLISH level acuarela, ¿Maybe will be better start with acrylic or gouache to talk about pencil strokes?

    And WTFH with this college? Learn and master two opposite disciplines just to apply? It’s like ask someone to be good at swimming and rugby to apply to sports. I’m not saying it’s imposible, it’s just ridiculous to ask.

    Yeah, ok. I’m sorry, I have to vent. Thank you for the novel.

  6. These class painting explanations give me a headache 😂 as someone who studied painting…. Is half of it gibberish? Or they are disordered, What the hell is a “formula” in color theory? Know that yellow + blue makes green? ¿that shadows are blueish or purpleish or marron ish according to the temperature?…. I just…. Spend so much time try to make it make sense.

    Besides…. Acuarela inst actually the best media to replicate clothes? it supposed to be oils (I know you can, I’ve seen it, but watercolor offers much less control over the brush stroke and the value of the color depends on the resistance of the paper, therefore, it is better to use more controlled media).

    Although Watercolor and Chinese inks are quite similar on some things, but Chinese inks are HELLISH level acuarela, ¿Maybe will be better start with acrylic or gouache to talk about pencil strokes?

    And WTFH with this college? Learn and master two opposite disciplines just to apply? It’s like ask someone to be good at swimming and rugby to apply to sports. I’m not saying it’s imposible, it’s just ridiculous to ask.

    Yeah, ok. I’m sorry, I have to vent. Thank you for the novel.

    • I agree that watercolor are absolutely not the media I would be starting people off with. Even if I wanted them to learn a wash-based painting technique, I’d opt for acrylic with either water or a thin float media to create a wash, since it won’t lift when you go to paint over it once it’s dry, allowing you to make corrections or layer your washes. Oil paints can do the same if you thin them with turpentine and linseed oil or other augmenting media, but they take too long to dry for it to be practical unless you’re doing a course specifically for oil painting. Like, apply oil paint too thick and it can take weeks to months to dry and polymerize. Color theory is a bit more complicated than that, but I never made it far enough in my art electives in college to need to take the courses that covered color theory. I just know that you need to take into account thinks like the opacity, translucency, and sub-surface scattering of light on your subject in order to render them as accurately as possible. Also have to take into account light interference rendering a different color in the shadow.I’m curious how he’ll react when presented with oil or acrylic paints, since their application and working methods are very different to thin media like watercolor and ink.
  7. Color theory really is one of the most difficult things to learn in traditional art, particularly for watercolor and other paints applied in washes or which are translucent or allow blending on the canvas. I was never talented enough for that, so acrylics were as far as I ever made it into painting, because they could be allowed to dry quickly and then worked over instead of mixing on the canvas. Watercolor, ink and wash, oil paint, etc. are just beyond my understanding. I can mix any color you need pretty readily, but I can’t plan far enough ahead to do this on the canvas or paper. But for someone who is an expert in ink and wash painting techniques, handing them watercolors is a trivial challenge.