हाताने काढलेले एखाद्या व्यक्तीचे स्केच आणि कॅमेऱ्याद्वारे काढलेला फोटो, यामधील फरक आपण सहज ओळखू शकतो. मात्र डायनल एकिन नावाच्या एका कलाकाराच्या हातात जादू आहे. डायनल जेव्हा हातात पेन्सिल पकडतो, तेव्हा त्यांच्या हातून असे पोट्रेट बनते जे एखाद्या कॅमेऱ्यानेच टिपले गेले असावे. अशा फोटोंना फोटोरियलिस्टिक म्हटले जाते.
डायनलने 2013 मध्ये ग्रेज्युएशनचे शिक्षण पुर्ण केले. त्यानंतर 2016 पासून त्याने फोटोरियलइज्म करण्यास सुरवात केली. त्यासाठी प्रशिक्षण देखील घेतले.
त्याच्या इंस्टाग्राम अकाउंटवर एकापेक्षा एक उत्तम असे हाताने काढलेले पोट्रेटचे फोटो आहेत. हे फोटो बघून ते कॅमेऱ्याने टिपले आहेत की, हाताने काढले आहेत हे ओळखणे अवघड आहे.
असे बनवतात पोट्रेट –
हातांचा कमाल…
डोक्यात काय सुरू आहे ?
एक फोटो बनवण्यासाठी लागतात कितीतरी तास.
आर्टिस्टचे वडील.
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It might be a minute before I start another project, but I just wanted to do an update on the tool set I'm using to get these drawings done. Charcoal: General's compressed sticks have worked best for producing the pulverized charcoal (I use it for 99% of everything) and I've found the 6B stick produces the most dust, but the others work in a pinch. I've expanded the range of brushes I've been using. I doubt the brand makes a difference, but the important things are the softness and variety of sizes. Each brush can produce a different quality of charcoal application, and it's kinda fun to experiment with. I try to eliminate the appearance of paper grain in my work, and the brushes have been a good way of saturating the whole space, and that's really been helping with the image quality from a distance. I use the Ritmo charcoal pencils for the true blacks of a piece, like the deepest parts of an iris, or the edges of a shape over a black background. The HB is good for single stray hairs (and lots of other stuff, but that's what comes to mind). Graphite: I've tried a bunch of different brands, but I always come back to Tombow. It still feels like it goes on the smoothest. But I still try to use graphite as little as possible, mostly for shading the smallest textures and to define some of the harder, in-focus shapes. If it can't be done with the charcoal, I'll use graphite, but nearly everything can be done with charcoal. But with something like dark facial hair, I think it's really important to get a variety of tonal qualities between each little hair, and using a mix of charcoal pencils and graphite pencils can give it a really natural look. (I'm being informed that this post is too long so I'll speed through the rest) Tombow Mono Zero eraser: GET ONE. Prismacolor kneaded eraser: better than Blick's. Uni Posca white acrylic paint pen: better than Molotow. Paper stumps and tortillons and q-tips: blending is fine but try using them to apply charcoal. Ask if you want me to explain something more! . . . #gallery #artoftheday #paint #portrait #art #charcoaldrawing #charcoal #realism #create #loveart #photorealism #drawing #graphite #pencildrawing #drawings
A post shared by Dylan Eakin (@drawings.by.dylan) on Mar 11, 2019 at 7:09am PDT
याचा वापर करून बनवतात पोट्रेट.
डायनलचे इंस्टाग्रामवर 39 हजार फॉलोवर्स आहेत.