Using online resources to learn how to oil paint
Let's admit it, it's not going to be a walk in the park learning
the right oil painting techniques online. But if you don't have
a lot of time and maybe you don't have the kind of financial
resources to learn oil painting techniques by attending classes
right now, you can always try to find online resources that will
help you adopt the right oil painting techniques.
Nothing can take the place of one-on-one guidance but with
in-depth information, useful tools and your own willingness to
learn, you'll master the art of oil painting just as quickly as
a person who attends oil painting classes for three years. You
don't need a certificate to prove that you can paint in oil as
well as others, your own portfolio and samples is proof enough.
That's the amazing thing about art. Your talent speaks for
itself and you don't really need a college or academic body to
affirm it for you. Most artistic geniuses of previous
generations didn't get the kind of guidance or lessons that some
of our artists get today - and look at the number of outstanding
artists we have in those times compared to now.
When you're relying on online resources to help you learn the
right oil painting techniques, the most important thing is for
you to absorb whatever is being said, research words and terms
that you do not understand through communities and message
boards, and then apply the stuff that you have learnt from those
lessons consistently.
So, the steps to learning oil painting through online resources
are:- Absorb: read and take in whatever that they're trying to
tell you. You don't have a lecturer or a teacher to stand over
you and correct your mistakes. That's why your reference to the
online resource should be meticulous.
Research: One of the biggest challenges to learning oil painting
online is that sometimes you're left in a lurch because no one
teaches you all those technical terms that they're spurting out
and you're lost. Either research the word through
www.wikipedia.com, www.dictionary.com, or go to online
communities and post your questions there. Don't be ashamed or
shy to ask. The biggest mistake you can make is to hold back and
pretend that you know.
Application: Application is the biggest and most important part
of learning oil painting through online resources. Keep in mind
the things that you have learnt, print it out and file it nicely
so that you can be reminded of it later on.
Feedback: This is also called 'humbling' time. Whenever you've
learnt something new, copy it into digital format by either
scanning it or taking a picture of it, go to an online forum and
get feedback from people like you or from professionals. Don't
take their feedback or comments personally, instead, take it
professionally in your stride. Their comments and feedback will
only serve to make your work better the next time round.