 It is up, my guys. We are back here with another video from their reversal, but you thought I wasn't coming back, didn't you? Well, in fact, I am. What now? Anyways, I'm being a little bit quiet because my parents are actually asleep in the other room, so I'm sort of keeping my voice down just for them. For today's video, I'm gonna be drawing. I've actually been drawing for quite a while now. I have been drawing since sixth grade, and I'm a junior now, and so it's been, let's see, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven. It's been five years since I started drawing, and I started off real crappy, you know, like most people do, and with practice I've been sort of getting better, but for today's video, I thought I would sort of put my skills into what I like to do. For this video, I don't usually use markers when I draw. In fact, I don't usually color anything I draw, but for this video I am going to, and I think it's gonna be fun, you know, to have all of you guys here experiencing something I do very rarely, and sort of getting into the skill that I really like to do. For this drawing, I'm gonna be drawing one of my little scenes, her name is Siren, and I really like her. She's one of the villains of a story I'm working on, actually, and she's half-human, half-fish, which I think you'll hear me mention a lot in the video itself, but we're just gonna ignore that, you know, we're just gonna pretend I don't even do that for the sake of the beginning of this video, and I'm gonna be going over what art supplies I use. I believe I use our acrylics as a point and some markers that I got a really long time ago, but I've had them for a while and, you know, some of them have actually not gone out on me, so it's kind of nice. So without all that excess love at the beginning of the video, we're gonna start the drawing. Let's go. Alrighty, everybody, so let's get started. First, we're starting off with my white acrylic craft smart paint. I use this for highlighting sometimes, since I don't have a white pencil pen. This is an eyeliner, but I like to use for painting, and that is an actual brush, but it kind of has a sticky outy part, so I only use it for the end. These are Creole markers I got about six years ago. They still work really well, aside from the fact that I'm missing a few colors, and my dog's sort of chingled up, and that is my blue Sharpie marker. I have no idea where I got that. Now what I just showed right now was a 0.5 lead pencil. I forget what brand it is, but for me, it works really well, and it gives me a lot of control, and I think I really like that about it. Had that for years. It's actually my favorite pencil to draw with. The other pencil that I'm using, the eraser, the actual pencil itself. I use it for the eraser. It's just a regular number two pencil, but since my lead pencil doesn't exactly have an eraser, I sort of use that in replacement. Now I'm just drawing the eye and the regular body outside eyelat and line. I'm sort of confusing myself here, but right now I'm just drawing the actual line art of it, and I'm gonna fill it in with colors later, but this part was actually fun because I get to finally get my ideas out, and I'm not really too big on coloring. Most of my drawings are just black and white because I enjoy the actual structure of it rather than the coloring, and I test out my colors before I actually use them, and this one is blue. I really like this for the color for hair, you know, I thought it would be a really nice touch to just her character because she is half siren and I just thought that, you know, blue, the color of the ocean, would make a really nice detail to her personality. This marker sort of ran out on me towards the end, and it made it sort of difficult to color in with, but eventually I think I'd go back in the end and I sort of fill it in with the rest of the marker, and so filling in for the hair and now I drew the scales on the side of her face because she's sort of, she's half women, half siren, you know, half fish, and so naturally she would have scales, and I like that part about her because it sort of shows her background and stuff, and I think that having the scales there would, you know, keep it sort of keep the continuity of her character. You notice her eyes have like sort of like cat almost, and I like that about her too. That was actually suggested from one of my friends, and I really liked that idea, so I decided to go with it, you know, I thought it would be a really cool addition. Now the marker that I'm using for her skin, I tested it out on paper, and it seemed like it would be a good skin color. Later on, it sort of looked more like an orangish reddish color, which I was expecting, and so I ended up just deciding to outline the shadows and stuff instead of actually coloring in the entire face, you know. This way it would not look so overpowering. For the lips, I'm using a pink crayola marker, and usually she doesn't have pink lips, but for the sake of this drawing, I thought it would be really fun to use, you know, because I've never actually done lips before, especially with her crayola. So it was fun to try. The highlighter I'm using for her eye, I think later on I go in and highlight that, but right now her eye colors are really bright in contrast to the regular hair color, which is darker. And then coloring in the background, this is actually an idea I got from somebody online. It's sort of like a circular shape to her drawing, and I really like that part about it, because you know, I usually draw usually draw full bodies, but this time I thought that I would only draw the strap, because I don't do those often, and those are really sort of my comfort drawings, and I thought maybe having a first drawing like that would set up a good mood for the rest of the drawing videos that I have. Then coloring the bubbles, because usually bubbles are clear, and they're not white, depending on what kind of bubbles we have, of course, and I put the white acrylic paint on a piece of paper just so that it wouldn't wouldn't bleed through, and I finally got to highlight things. And this is where the regular brush comes in. Notice I'm only using the end of it, just because I really don't like the other side of it. It has a piece of string that sticks out and sort of begins in the way, you know, and I would not care about that, but I think I really wanted more control with this drawing. This one is the eyeliner brush. It definitely wasn't meant to use for painting, but I thought that it was really good for painting, because it gave me thinner lines, and it sort of gives me more control rather than the cheap brushes that I got. Using anything I have, sort of, it's sort of fun, because it feels like I'm using my resources, you know? My most of my supplies are stuff I've gotten from years ago, or stuff I don't really know where I've gotten from. This is the end product, guys. I hope you enjoy. Bye, buddy! Thank you! Bye, guys!