This chapter breaks down the essentials of how warm moves to cool (and vice versa) through photo studies and painted studies.
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Angel Contreras
2yr
Hi Marco, great course. Wish I had an instructor as clear when I was in school. Anyhow, you refer to brushes included with the course that you use, I am not sure where to get a hold of them. Is there a link?

giaogiao
2yr
Can't believe he turns a kinder garden coloring into something like thattt
AJ Nouri
2yr
Waw, the exercice with the photo is spectacular on how cool and worm colors work!
mameko
2yr
Hi Marco and fellow students,
I have a question about color tempreture. Is there a warmest warm and coldest cold color ? The vedio said warmer "red" will go towards orange. If I want to have a warmer "orange", which way should I go ? towards "red" ? I am a bit confused. Same question for the cobalt, if I want a colder "cobalt", which way should I go on the color wheel ?
Thanks,

Douglas Adams
2yr
If you want your orange to feel warmer or your cobalt to feel colder, I think it might have more to do with the colors you pick to put around them than the hue of the color itself.
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Matthew Manghi
2yr
Here’s my try at said tree. Thoughts?
Nancy Yocom
2yr
This looks like cool colors to me. Some of the green in the tree top looks warmer. But I think he was explaining that all the colors in the sun, will be warm. So, the grass in the sun should be more towards yellow than blue.
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unicodeee
2yr
holly F, Marco Bucci is a genius. I think I should relearn to paint like a kindergarten from now on.

doppio
2yr
This has been really great so far! Been following your YT for a long time and I always found you to be a great teacher. So happy to be learning so much from you! Thanks a lot

Adrian Potato
2yr
That was just the first half of the second chapter but i feel like i already have learned so much.

soupguy
2yr
fr fr
Christopher Beaven
2yr
Totally agree!
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Gift card for art students to use on anything in the Proko store
About instructor
Marco Bucci began serious study of art when he was 19. He began with drawing fundamentals for 3 years before discovering a love for painting.