>>5851998Every artist struggles in the middle of a paitning. That's just the nature of the game. The diference of the pros is that they have gone thought it so many times that they trust themselves to come on top of it.
As someone has already said "I have forgotten more paintings/drawings than most people see in their whole lives" Zapata, Steven.
That said there are some courses that can help if you feel it's some lack of knowledge. And remember to clip and design your values.
>Landscape Drawing Crash Course with Steve Huston>Designing with Color and Light with Nathan Fowkes>Environment Design with Nathan Fowkes>Pictorial Composition with Nathan Fowkes>Landscape Sketching in Watercolor and Gouache with Nathan Fowkes>Painting with Light and Color with Dice Tsutsumi>Environment and Light wuth John Burton>Color and Light Workout with Nathan Fowkes>Digital Landscape Painting Workout with Nathan Fowkes>Watercolor Workout with Gonzalo Carcamo>Introduction to Landscape Painting with Ben Fenske>Designing Your Landscape Painting with Stapleton Kearns>Creative Composition with Steve Huston>Outdoor Landscape Painting Quickstart with Bill Perkins>Composition for Visual Artists with Bill Perkins>Tonal Landscape Drawing with Vadim Zanginian>Beginning Composition with Bill Perkins>Landscape Phase I, II, and III with Jeff Watts>Studio Landscape: Structures with Robert Watts>Art Camp 1, 2, and 3: Landscapes with Noah Bradley>Art Camp: Environment Concept Design with Titus Lunter>Adventure of Painting with Scott L. ChristensenIf your goal is environment concept design or cutaways then Perspective and architechture design are very impotortant:
>Fundamentals of Perspective with Robert St Pierre>Perspective with Roger Oda or Pat Marconett>Perspective Crash Course with Gary Meyer>Linear Perspective Master Course with Erik Olson>Environment Sketching with Dzu Nguyen>Sketching Anything with Aaron Limonick>Fundamentals of Environment Design with Kalen Chock