This painting was made on an iPad using ‘Brushes‘ by the painter Kyle Lambert. Really impressive piece of work created in 6 hours, so the video is of course time lapsed.
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David writes – A quick Apple ipad live fingerpainting demo that I streamed live from my Brooklyn studio on Monday June 21st. 2010, The model sat for 3 hours as I painted and answered questions on how I use the iPad and the Brushes app. Just thinking of creative uses for the ipad
A few people complained that “tablets can’t be used to create” – the same could be said for any new technology I suppose, but I think we’ll see a lot of amazing art and music come from this form factor as time goes on…
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We’ve speculated before about what artists could do with the iPad’s bigger screen, and here’s an answer. In the video above, portrait artist David Kassan uses theBrushes app to create a painting from a live model. I don’t know what the fingerless gloves are all about, but you can definitely see how the iPad helps — he can make bigger swipes across the screen, match colors with the extra screen space, and run touchups on a few different parts of the work at a time.
According to the video’s description, the whole thing took about three hours, and the end result looks great. I like one of the YouTube comments on this one, too: Who needs a camera on the iPad, anyway?
That’s just terrific! I love seeing his process. I totally plan to try and incorporate some of those techniques in the future (my results will not be YouTube worthy though
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Just as handy is learning about the gloves. I’ve been going nuts when drawing with the iPad and finding that I have all sorts of crud in my drawings from errant palm contact. The glove solution is cheap, effective, and might even clean my screen as I draw.
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While I’m impressed with the results that some people can get from drawing on the iPad, some of that is simply because I’m impressed that they can overcome its limitations. Even with a stylus and/or zooming in and out, the iPad has no pressure sensitivity, and the fact that you need gloves to avoid touching the screen with your palm, makes me appreciate the technology of a pressure-sensitive stylus all the more. Multitouch is great for most things, but not for drawing.
ctually, the moment photography became widespread enough to replace photorealistic painting is the moment when painters went beyond reproducing what they saw and started experimenting.