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    Making art process video tutorials?

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    • xin li
      xin li @NessIllustration last edited by

      @skillydan thanks for the feedback. I watched @NessIllustrationยดs video and it is great. I always think my art is not very compatible with "wall art". I tired to make some greeting cards illustration as the agency reps me now also have licencing part. But I never get very far with greeting card idea. My stuff is bit too narrative, great for book illustrations. Not so much art prints, journal clipart. I should try a bit more to see if I can find something that works for me.

      @NessIllustration I think video tutorials are not really new products. I have purchased some in the past on Gumroad as well. It is probably not something you find in Esty though. You are the one made me start to thinking about digital projects. :-). For sure, more research needed :-). I started to follow a few fine art painters who makes a living with vlog, Patreon. They do a lot of painting process videos ๐Ÿ™‚

      Web: www.lixin.no
      IG: www.instagram.com/lixin.illustration/

      donnamakesart Julia carlianne 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 3
      • donnamakesart
        donnamakesart @xin li last edited by

        @xin-li the idea reminds me of Jason Brubaker, Marco Bucci, and Parka Blogs. Would love a female voice on Gumroad.

        Lioba Bruckner does great on Patreon. A few others I followed were Chris Hong and Jared Cullum -- they use Patreon more as tip jars though haha.

        Who have you bought/ patreon-ized may I ask ๐Ÿ˜ƒ

        Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/donnamakesart/
        Behance: https://www.behance.net/donnamakesart
        Website: https://donnamakesart.com/

        xin li M 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • xin li
          xin li @donnamakesart last edited by

          @donnamakesart hehe.. for some reasons, I am following landscape, and nature painters at this moment. Karen Margulis, Sarah Burns, and Julia Bausenhardt. Personally, I am not very into nature painting, I want to learn paint traditionally. Right now, watching nature painting tutorials is my new hobby. ๐Ÿ™‚

          Also all 3 of these artists made a full time living by teaching, vlog, and Patreon. It is interesting to follow them to see how they run their business.

          I am still looking around for more fine-art painters to follow. I especially interested in impressionist painting style, and something very raw such as Victoria Semykina, and Laura Carlin (would be cool to see process videos from these 2 artists, but very little info online, except little snippets in their instagram feeds occasionally).

          Web: www.lixin.no
          IG: www.instagram.com/lixin.illustration/

          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • M
            Mara Price @donnamakesart last edited by

            I have bought process videos in Cubebrush.
            You can find Jeff Parker's process on Patreon. Marco Bucci sells How to Digitally Paint and how to Paint with WC. Jake and Marco have a lot of free YouTube video content.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • Julia
              Julia @xin li last edited by

              @xin-li I heard it is very difficult to make a living out of Patreon. A friend tried and it was as costly to maintain (giving rewards) as profitable. Unless you are already very big on social media and attract a crowd with your name!

              What works best for him is the digital brushes he sells. His marketing is only through IG (a link in his profile) as he has gained thousands of followers over the past years and many of them are now buying his brushes.

              I do watch videos of painting process from time to time (mainly oil painting and pastels) but rarely more than a few by artists on youtube. It is inequally interesting (depending on the artist, topic, technic, etc) and mostly time-consuming. It requires time to invest. Therefore I think it is a good avenue to explore to bring additional revenue but I don't think it will be substential enough unless you already have a large fan base.
              That said, I encourage you to try! I might be totally wrong ๐Ÿ™ƒ

              A niche that is currently little (or not at all?) explored is a series of different processes : ex : concept, character design, choosing colors, etc. until the final real-time painting.
              I would be quite interested to buy a whole pack from the same artist showing how to build an image from scratch to the final painting and painting process itself.

              Good luck!

              https://www.instagram.com/julia.nsw/

              xin li 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • xin li
                xin li @Julia last edited by

                @Julia thank you so much for sharing your thoughts. I think maybe the most realistic way to start this journey is to start a youtube channel to document my process and see if there is any traction. I am considering doing something with traditional media, getting myself outside of my comfort zone - it would be more of a documentation of my learning process rather than a tutorial in the beginning before I figure out how to paint traditionally myself :-).

                Web: www.lixin.no
                IG: www.instagram.com/lixin.illustration/

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • Nyrryl  Cadiz
                  Nyrryl Cadiz SVS OG @xin li last edited by

                  @xin-li Skillshare is also a good option

                  Portfolio: nyrrylcadiz.com
                  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nyrryl_cadiz/
                  YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbJCF1Im8ZO7hpGWTKOJMuA

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • carlianne
                    carlianne @xin li last edited by

                    @xin-li I think that's a super interesting idea! I have had a lot of success growing my instagram by doing tutorials, and a friend of mine who does watercolor started posting process videos on Instagram of his water colors and grew to over 100k in a year. I would recommend also promoting your youtube on your instagram as you can encourage your followers there to check out your channel as well.

                    Personally, I don't think I would sell the tutorial videos by themselves, I don't think I've ever bought one, but I would buy a class or a course from someone. I've also had people suggest "udemy" as a place to do that.

                    I also just started a youtube channel with tutorials, and my plan was to put the full process videos on my patreon, but gumroad is an interesting idea. I think ideally though if you could sell them yourself on shopify or something so that you could also get their emails and grow an email list, that is probably the ultimate ideal solution.

                    Check out my art and tutorials :)

                    Instagram: www.instagram.com/carliannecreates/

                    Youtube:
                    https://youtube.com/c/CarlianneCreates

                    Shop: www.carliannecreates.com

                    xin li 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • xin li
                      xin li @carlianne last edited by

                      @carlianne Great input. Thank you so much. your suggestions give me a lot to think about ๐Ÿ™‚

                      Web: www.lixin.no
                      IG: www.instagram.com/lixin.illustration/

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • carolinebautista
                        carolinebautista @xin li last edited by

                        I wonder if any small groups of illustrators have done something like a printshop collective? I think digital products are a great way to go of course, but wonder at the real cost of selling prints and whether that would be easier to share.

                        xin li 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • RioSim1
                          RioSim1 @xin li last edited by

                          @xin-li Hi, I think this is a great idea! And, there is an audience for every artist. Your voice is important! There are multiple to ways to monetize this - a YouTube channel will make money with enough subscribers. You don't always have to sell the "art object." Good luck on your exciting journey!

                          Open Heart, Open Mind
                          www.Instagram.com/RioSim1

                          xin li 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • xin li
                            xin li @carolinebautista last edited by

                            @carolinebautista I think it is a really good idea. But I think it might be much easier to organise such things with your local artists in the same city. At least the accountant and tax side of the thing would be a bit easier to grasp with a collective business :-).

                            I used to rent studio from a collective. The owner of the collective run an online shop which sell everyone's prints. Customers can also come to the collective to pick up prints themselves. But that was the time before covid, now I am working from home like most of the artists I knew of.

                            Web: www.lixin.no
                            IG: www.instagram.com/lixin.illustration/

                            carolinebautista 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • xin li
                              xin li @RioSim1 last edited by

                              @RioSim1 thanks for the encouragement.

                              Web: www.lixin.no
                              IG: www.instagram.com/lixin.illustration/

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • carolinebautista
                                carolinebautista @xin li last edited by

                                @xin-li so far the idea had only been interesting to me as a version of a publisher business model that would deal with international artists, not sure why except as a sort of publisher of standalone images, something that is never the focus of picture book makers. ๐Ÿ™‚ But the idea of a local collective sounds really fun the way you describe it. If this pandemic would ever end...

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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