These videos explain and demonstrate the process of how thumbnail sketches work within the artistic process. ‘
- 1 min. short (small thumbnails)
- 1 min. short (large thumbnails)
- 1 min. short (thumbnail supplies)
- Art Director thumbnail process
- 3 min. video (thumbnail basics)
- 2 min. video (color thumbnails)
- 80 min video (lecture & demo)
- 80 min. video(landscape thumbnails)
- 78 min video (worst mistakes)
- 59 min. video (tracing paper)
There are many benefits of thumbnail sketches: they can save you time when working on a final piece of artwork and allow you to explore more options for composition.
The demonstration shows simple strategies on how to crop or expand your thumbnail sketches and how to diversify your options.
Demo and discussion led by Art Prof Clara Lieu and Teaching Artist Cat Huang.
Video Walkthrough
- Thumbnails will save you time!
- Planning out compositions is more efficient.
- You can work out mistakes in thumbnails very quickly.
- Thumbnails need to be small, about palm sized.
- Don’t add details to thumbnails
- Industries like editorial illustration require thumbnails.
- Start with about 5 thumbnails.
- Use any media that is useful to you in your thumbnails.
- Be sure the aspect ratio of your thumbnail matches the final art.
- Don’t draw a grid and fill in your compositions, it’s too confusing.
- Draw a literal rectangle for each thumbnail with space around it
- “The first mark is the 5th mark.”
- Tweak your thumbnails by cropping and expanding.
- Mixing digital and traditional media for thumbnails is useful.
- Viewfinders are a concrete, physical way to see composition.
- Larger sketches that show value and color can help with the final art.
- Getting feedback on your thumbnails from others is useful.
“I think it’s somewhat a time management thing; if you can get lots of thumbnails out, you’re actually targeting the objective with the thumbnails so that you can get to the final painting quicker.
If your thumbnails aren’t really focused on the composition, and you’re thinking about color and brush technique, in a way that’s delaying your ability to get to the final piece.“
Prof Lieu
Thumbnails: Line
Christine, Attagirl, Erica, M. Tordy, Wadalafer, Cat Huang, Woodcut tutorial thumbnails, Ashley Tanelle, Crissie B., Neil Espinosa, Jen Noelle, JenK, Bowsers, Ginger, Kaining Wang, Caterpillar illustration thumbnails, Joy Liu,
Thumbnails: Value
Erica, M. Tordy, JenK, Johanna, Sarah Bernhardt cookies thumbnails, Neil Espinosa, Ashley Tanelle, Helen Cook, Bowsers, Sarah C. McGill, Portrait Painting thumbnails, Cynthia, Wadalafer, Oil pastel landscape thumbnails
Thumbnails: Color
Fan Art Draw Along, Expressive Color live stream, Erica, Crispy, M. Tordy, Creature design thumbnails, Johanna, Radish monotype thumbnails, Neil Espinosa, Sarah C. McGill, Crispy, Jordan McCracken-Foster, Gouache tutorial thumbnailsl, Ginger, Ashley Tanelle, Wadalafer, Purple/Yellow still life thumbnails, Soft pastel cookies thumbnails, Triplegem
Prof Lieu’s Tips
I don’t think I have ever said to a student (in person or online) that they showed me too much in terms of their preliminary sketches, second or third attempts on a drawing, their reference images, and more.
If anything, most of the time I am telling students that I want to see more of their process.
Often I can get insight on their thinking from looking at their thumbnail sketches!
Art Supplies
Artists mentioned
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