Home Artists Posts Import Register

Downloads

Content

It's time for another tutorial! This one is on painting clouds, and I tried to use clouds as a jumping off point to discuss some helpful design principles that can be applied to other subject matter too, like rhythm, overlapping shapes, and hard vs. soft edges. I hope you enjoy this one!

If you want to draw along from the same reference photo, this is the image that I used:

Here is the cheat sheet, which you can also download as a PDF file at the bottom of this post with clickable links:

As always, the subtitled version is coming up in a minute! As always, let me know if you have any questions or requests for future tutorials! ❤

Files

Comments

Anonymous

Ah thank you for this! I don't have a lot of time for personal art at the moment so clouds are so perfect for speed paints. Thank you for sharing your tips! (Also, I giggled at the AI art dig lol)

Anonymous

Brilliant! Thanks for creating this! For being organic blobs, this subject matter can be deceptively tricky. I too chuckled (and found it amusingly satisfying) when you revealed the ‘artist’ who didn’t execute good cloud art.

Loish

i should make this a standard section in every tutorial i do ;)

Anonymous

I never considered using motion blur before, I can't wait to test all of these steps myself! Thank youu

Loish

it's honestly one of my favorite tools to give it some softness and movement at the same time!

Anonymous

I just got around to watching this tutorial, but I really struggled to follow along as I'm not really used to paint in one single layer. I usually focus on characters and use a lot of layer modes and defined shapes. So I decided to start with a black and white cloud study and that made all the difference! I was able to focus on my edges and shapes rather than trying to get the right color and it was much much easier. Then I went ahead with a gradient map and other color adjustments to finalize!

Loish

That’s a smart move! Scaling down the creative choices so you can focus on a specific aspect of the drawing can be so helpful.