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How to Arrange Photos in an Art Studio

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Summary: Learn how to set up models and photos in an art studio with expert advice on how to set up an art studio from a professional artist in this free online instructional video clip.

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By Matt Cail
eHow Presenter

Matt Cail is a painter, makeup artist and cartoonist who grew up drawing Dracula. While in college, he acted in, directed and designed the University of Washington's campus haunted...read more

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Video Transcript

"MATT CAIL: Hello! I'm Matt Cail. And on behalf of Expert Village, I'm going to show you today how to organize and setup and tame your own art studio. One of the last things we want to make sure we have space for in our art studio are some nice flat and open surfaces. There are couple of things we're going to be using with these, both horizontal surfaces as well as vertical surfaces, walls. First off for the horizontal, it's great if you have 'em to get small models. This can be used to help you master and practice both shape, pose, form, I mean all of the above. These are excellent in terms of, like, getting how the actual body is going to be moving in certain ways. So it's great to have at least a little bit of open, flat surface to be able to put some of these. Now, I've seen these little tinny tiny. I've seen almost life-size ones. They're, of course, crude. It's not an accurate representation. Generally, for your artistic purposes, it doesn't have to be. You only have to kinda see how the joints interplay and, like, the shape of the limbs and the proportion of the head. In addition, make sure you have some wall space. This is for like wherever you have, any photographs and the like, you might actually be doing like a drawing or a painting of. It's great to be able to have the actual photograph nearby. Now, you don't want to be going like this, where you're painting this picture, like that all the time. First, you're going to get an awful crick in your neck. And your arms are not going to be as good. Much better to actually stick the picture over here along the wall, now, I mean, that's actually where you really want to go because then it's very, very easy to be going from there to here and back again. So this supposed to mean placing your easel not too far away from a wall or at least having a stand or something else which you can serve to hang a picture on. I don't advocate having it right on the easel especially if it's a nice photograph. Way to easy to get bunch of paint spatters all over it."

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