Grips! The best for drawing, and NOT getting carpal tunnel!

2020 ж. 5 Шіл.
30 795 Рет қаралды

I recorded one on this ages ago, but it's kind of low rez and I have better gear now, so time to revisit Getting A Grip!
dd.salgoodsam.com/grip/
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/ salgood
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#inking #comics #art #process #drawings #lessons #tutorials

Пікірлер
  • i came here after learning the attack on Titan creator draws this way to avoid carpal tunnel

    @abelrrant@abelrrant9 ай бұрын
    • Cool. Which grip specifically? Link?

      @Salgood@Salgood9 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this! I've been struggling for years w/ progressing my fledgling skills due to time constraints brought by the inevitable pain that always came from how I grip the pencil. That final grip is extremely comfortable & doesn't feel like losing control. Thank you!

    @nomadicwolf6132@nomadicwolf6132 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing your knowledge. I found this video because i noticed some pro inkers wrapping the thumb around the pen, kind of tucking it under the pointing finger. I'm usually a tripod gripper myself, but i want to learn about the "thumb tucker grip", and if it has any advantages compared to the tripod grip. By the way - being left handed myself, i would argue that it makes no difference what hand you are drawing with, because a drawing doesn't have a set direction, unlike writing.

    @tommymeyer@tommymeyer10 күн бұрын
  • As a leftie, thank you very much for that last grip between index and middle finger! Was actually searching for something like this after my cramping hand forced me to pause my drawing 😅

    @lukasmarks6504@lukasmarks65047 ай бұрын
    • Wonderful, hope it's helping!

      @Salgood@Salgood7 ай бұрын
    • @@Salgood Definetely allowed me to continue my drawing. Although, I noticed that the angle towards the page changed more to 25 or 30 degrees, which was messing a bit with my pigment liners. Apparently I adopted a weird wrist position again a few times to mitigate that. Have to test around a bit more there.

      @lukasmarks6504@lukasmarks65047 ай бұрын
  • It doesn’t come easily at first, but the more you alternate between the various grips, the more you will start to do it automatically. You’ll even invent your own hybrid grips without thinking. The pencil will float around in your hand without any thought at all, sometimes line by line. It seems like a hassle when you’re learning but it ultimately becomes an easier, more natural way to draw with much better control over all aspects of line-thickness, direction, straightness, curvedness, darkness, etc. Hand dexterity isn’t innate, it comes with practice, even if you’ve got sausage fingers like me.

    @robertaragon8270@robertaragon82702 ай бұрын
  • Great video. I'd never paid much attention, but switching from the not-quite-a-tripod against the middle finger to the tripod felt really good and I noticed the increase in control right away. Thank you.

    @leojpowers@leojpowers3 жыл бұрын
  • That's so helpful.Thankyou!

    @rt_ka@rt_ka Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you so much. My wrist has kept me from drawing but these techniques really take the strain. 🥺

    @kellyallen1558@kellyallen1558 Жыл бұрын
  • Ооо thank you🎉

    @OralxanLarzimova@OralxanLarzimova5 күн бұрын
  • Oh wow! I tried the grip with the pencil between the 1st and 2nd fingers, and it gets the body of the pencil out of the way so I can see the area around the point of the lead better. Excellent for detail work! Thanks for all this!

    @WanJae42@WanJae423 жыл бұрын
  • I have enjoyed your work for some time and appreciate this video. I never considered grip and origin of motion (shoulder/elbow vs. wrist/fingers) when I used to draw as a boy. I try to be mindful of it now. Thanks for the insights. As a lefty, I will give the last one a shot! :-)

    @oldhorseshoe1776@oldhorseshoe17763 жыл бұрын
  • Loving that grip near the back end of the vid - really useful on my quick test just now, thanks

    @Lumpsack@Lumpsack9 ай бұрын
  • Thank you! The best vídeo that I saw in this subjet s2

    @lksxxtodin5292@lksxxtodin529210 ай бұрын
  • This is great, thanks!

    @fletcher8210@fletcher82103 жыл бұрын
  • Great video. I'm very heavy handed and have always struggled with controlling my pen/pencil. This has resulted in bad handwriting and lines that don't look aesthetically pleasing. Could you make more tutorials on how to fix this? Thank you for this amazing knowledge which seems simple but is important.

    @tinktwiceman@tinktwiceman3 жыл бұрын
    • Weighted pens and pencils can help tremendously for this. Unfortunately they are hard to find

      @catherinebealka6014@catherinebealka601411 ай бұрын
  • Great video

    @Abdi-libaax@Abdi-libaax Жыл бұрын
  • this vid helped me somuch ty

    @RealYoSized@RealYoSizedАй бұрын
  • I've been holding my pencil between my pointer and middle finger recently and it is so nice I'm baffled that more people aren't taught about it Dx

    @shindig9000@shindig90002 жыл бұрын
  • Fantastic video! I'm definitely gonna pay more attention to how I hold my pencils. And you were right about the left-handed people mistake (I'm left-handed and I do it sometimes). BTW, you're very good at teaching and conveying information :)

    @adjvic13@adjvic135 ай бұрын
    • Thanks!

      @Salgood@Salgood5 ай бұрын
  • I have used modified tripod since forever and never learned the other way. Very useful for cursive, but for me odd with art. That’s probably just my lack of practice, though.

    @mygills3050@mygills3050 Жыл бұрын
  • Hi @paintedwyvern13 AbyssWraith Kaameus For some reason while I can see your question in notifications it's not showing up when I click through to here so replying like this. I think part of the issue is if there is one, will be around how long you're using/applying more pressure? If it's just a short time to get a bit more dense color in a spot it's probably not doing any harm unless you already have a reparative strain injury. Otherwise it takes a sustained period to cause strain. But you could also minimize any strain by using an overhand grip rather than a tripod. I also know from back when I used to use color pencil more that you can build up the color density/darkness more gradually using a lighter pressure but going back over on multiple passes in the same areas. I learned to do that mostly because I was just sloppier when I pressed harder and I was able to be more precise if I didn't do that and just went back over the same area as multiple times. Also really got into color mixing that way using multiple passes of different colors to get an interesting hue.

    @Salgood@Salgood5 ай бұрын
  • As the human failure I am, I never learned the tripod grip when I was young. Trying to learn it now, but it's really hard, especially writing...

    @virtuosyc@virtuosyc6 ай бұрын
    • It's always hard at first learning new motor control paterns, especially as we get older. Remember to relax and breath and just go slow at first focusing on getting used to the way things feel.

      @Salgood@Salgood6 ай бұрын
  • THis is really helpful but i have a question how would you grip something like a micron or other fine tip

    @JL-vt5nb@JL-vt5nb3 жыл бұрын
    • Mostly exactly the same things apply . Standard tripod for fine work, extended tripod and more using the arm for larger forms and longer lines. And not too hard, in grip or pressure on the paper. Microns are pigment pens, and all pigment pens mostly draw best when more vertical, so the only real constraint is that you need to keep them more upright, the overhand or underhand grips are less useful with them I suspect.

      @Salgood@Salgood3 жыл бұрын
  • Is it bad to draw with the locked grip(left-handed)? 1:01 Tips for grips?

    @Nag11s@Nag11s9 ай бұрын
    • it restricts how much you can do with your wrist so it's not great for it. The video has my tips in it, try working from the top right side down to the bottom left corner to be able to not cover your drawing as you go. No reason a drawing has to be done left to right. For the occasional situation where your hand is over the art you have the same issues a right handed person does, move your head or stop and lift your hand out of the way for a moment to look at it all.

      @Salgood@Salgood9 ай бұрын
  • Your the only one on KZhead that even addresses this. I’ve hand terrible hand writing and a fisted grip my entire life. Switching to a tripod hasn’t been easy at all. Feels like I can barely make a mark before it wobbles. Been trying to practice by drawing circles and lines, etc. It’s been about a 2-3 months now but I still can’t make a decent circle. Is that normal? Should I be doing something different? Do you lightly have your hand on the table or it just relaxed and planted. Thank you for making the video, hope I can make marks like you one day!

    @aabirk8400@aabirk84009 ай бұрын
    • I'm often resting my arm if not my palm on the desk a bit, but not all the time, depends on the nature of the strokes I'm doing. I'll use my pinky to stabilize things when I'm using a brush and you can't really do that as much. Posture and stance is important in this, if you're leaning over it's hard not to be using one or both arms to brace yourself so that's where being able to suport your body without your arm is impacted by your posture. But there's lots of times where it's fine to rest your arms own weight on the desk for some of it. Try that last grip for a bit to break the only fist habit maybe? it's really stable and I suspect a more comfortable intermediary from the kind of grip you're trying to get out of the habit of. And make sure you're hand and arm are relaxed and not tensed, that will help a lot too. For the circles, remeber to do it more with the arm. And then it's basicly two isolatable movements - swing of the shoulder back and forward and the swing of the elbow left to right - being smoothed into one.

      @Salgood@Salgood9 ай бұрын
    • @@Salgood Thank your for sharing advice. I’ll try to keep at it and draw with the last grip, but I’ll try to keep my stance and posture straight more. When you say circles come from the arm, I already can make pretty much any stroke I want from the arm. Big to medium circles aren’t a problem for me. It’s just like you said in the video that I lack a lot of finesse and my detail work sucks. I never learned to write correctly and as a result I can’t make a small stroke with my fingers or medium stokes with my wrists without it being wobbly. That’s mainly the issue I’m trying to solve. I think that has mainly to do with my grip and not my arm, right? I saw you make really good small circles with only your fingers in this video.

      @aabirk8400@aabirk84009 ай бұрын
    • @@aabirk8400 Probably need to work on strength and dexterity for your fingers, i use a couple of large bearings and pool balls [heavy and light options] like Baoding balls, as a warm up/stretching/dexterity exercise to deal with hand cramping, might be of help.

      @Salgood@Salgood9 ай бұрын
    • @@Salgoodsorry I have one last question for you. When you rest your hand on the table, is your weight towards the bottom or top of the side of your hand. I put most of my weight towards the bottom I I think it’s causing me to move my fingers weirdly.

      @aabirk8400@aabirk84009 ай бұрын
    • @@aabirk8400 so really it's only on the outside edge of the bottom of my palm. But i hardly put any weight on it most of the time, really mostly use that for some stability.

      @Salgood@Salgood9 ай бұрын
  • 🆒😎👍

    @Patshes@Patshes3 ай бұрын
  • I often use fineliners for drawing and am finding it quite irritating that quite many fineliners only work if they're held completely upright(vertically). The tip of these fineliners are often stuck in a metal or plastic tube that is simply too long - especially the FaberCastel fineliners, but many others also. (Fortunately this isn't true for Monochromos but most of these are just too thin for me).

    @43Rhein10@43Rhein10 Жыл бұрын
    • Hmm, I don't know what brand you're using but generally I don't find they are that limiting unless the nib has been mashed in or worn down. If that's the case you may be just pressing far too hard and damaging them? Most don't work that well past about 40, 45 degree angle and do work better, or give you their full line width around 30. But within that range they work pretty forgivingly I find. Not nearly as limiting at Rapidograph pens are. The Windsor Newton fine liners might have a nib you like better, it's not flat so it works a bit more like a felt pen or tinny brush. Tolerates more of an angle.

      @Salgood@Salgood Жыл бұрын
  • i take it this doesnt really apply to wacom styluses

    @polar6066@polar60663 ай бұрын
    • Quite a lot of it does actually. Since a couple months after I made this I've been working in animation nearly full time in an all digital workflow and I set my tablets [XP-Pen 22] sensitivity to pretty high to help reduce the amount of pressure needed and try to work with a light hand as a rule, based on what I leaned working in traditional mediums.

      @Salgood@Salgood3 ай бұрын
    • @@Salgood woah, a xppen? i didnt know they were that popular. honestly my experience with styluses has been mostly the pro pen2 which i struggle a lot using (you can see in my channel) and the spen/wacom one for my samsung s7fe, which is somewhat better since it has a screen unlike the intuos pro m... but the wacom one pen for some reason always feels like i need more force to activate it, especially if i tilt the pen (no app changes solved this). i started watching this video because everytime i use my propen2 on my intuos pro m i get a looooooot of pain on my quervain zone, its crazy. sometimes i think if its related to the surface or my grip... which is why i started watching your video. i actually want to upgrade to those chinese displays they sell since most of my latest work has been done on the s7fe, despite the complications... what i fear is that it might be too heavy too activate in comparison to the pro pen2 (which, unlike the wacom one or spen can be activated with no force at all). iirc pro pen is less than 1 gram and xppen is more, but idk how much

      @polar6066@polar60663 ай бұрын
    • I don't know how popular they are but they make some good laminated screen tablets. I had a 15.6 Pro for a few years and was slowly getting into more digital rendering. Then the studio I got hired by late 2020 uses Artist Display 22E Pro and gave me one to use at home and i've been on that ever since. Would like to get a 22R Pro at some point for myself but for now sticking with the one that costs me nothing ;) I like them a lot, I had a few older model Critique screens to work on in a class I taught in the years before but never really liked them as much. And the prices is a lot better for what you get too with the XP-Pens. And yeah, that muscle group in particular is going to be too much GRIPPING most of all, pressure on the tip will add to it but mainly you're probably holding the tool in your hand too tightly. For the pressure you're applying on the screen, most styluses have a setting interface with a graph and you can set how much/sensitive it is to how much pressure on that. That's what I used to make it so I have to use very little pressure at all. Doing that might help you to grip less hard but it's maybe also just a thing to work on with your grip as well. @@polar6066

      @Salgood@Salgood3 ай бұрын
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