Some more simple skeleton exercises, first I traced over them and then in purple, I did from reference. Looking at others' work I decided to make the cylinders longer, which compared to the first skeleton, the other two look a lot better. The main thing I observed is that when I do it from reference I lose the subtleties that I captured in the traces. In the future, I want to be more observant and capture the poses better!

I also did a 15 minute session of 30 sec gesture drawings!

Here is more measured proportions practice! This is the part that I have the most challenge with. I've done a lot of gesture drawing, but this analytical approach is new to me.

I can see I made the figure a little too short, and her arms too long, as well as some issues with foreshortening.

Really nice work with this! Pretty darn close! Kep it up!

I finally started on the Perspective lesson! I've definitely neglected this part of my art studies, so I hope as I practice, my art improves as well! For the cube assignment, I'm not sure what the norm is, but I personally find the line tool more cumbersome than not, so I did all the cubes and perspective lines freehand. I obviously need to work more on my marksmanship, but are there any improvements needed to be made to the perspective? Thanks!

I'll also be starting the Drawabox course because I've seen others recommend it, and it seems it'll be beneficial to my perspective!

A sketch of a kitchen I did in one-point perspective. Really wanna start practicing drawing environments and props. It'll add a whole new flair to my art! This isn't my official drawing for the Perspective 1 assignment, just some practice!

Looks like you are getting the hang of it! This is a really cool piece. Im not familiar with traditional but I think all the noise in this adds a really cool effect. Keep it up!

Thank you! To be fair, the "noise" is just smudged pencil, and it wasn't intentional, but I'm glad it works!

Hello! It's been a while since I posted. As I was starting to do the Perspective assignments, I decided to also start the Drawabox to improve my line confidence and spatial reasoning, I'll be posting these in batches. Starting with the lines exercises!

Your gestures are nice ! try to incorporate more of them when u do figure drawing, be more relaxed and try to make long, curvy lines, you can do it i can see on your gestures :wink:

Keep up with drawing boxes and cylinders in perspective everyday, its gonna help you so much in the long run with thinking in 3D

Good work keep going !! :smile:

Thanks for the feedback! I will certainly try to incorporate the gesture into my other figure drawings! With the measure proportions, it seems all about getting accurate that I forego the flow, but I'll try to balance it in the future!

I'll also be sure to keep up the basic forms practice, it has been super beneficial to my art! Even before doing ART School.

So I was hoping for some advice. I struggle a lot with overthinking. I overthink so much, that I don't even start drawing a lot of times. There are so many fundamentals I want to work on, and I often wanna do things that I'm perhaps not ready for yet, like color.

If I want to do personal work, I've got a lot of ideas and it's difficult to choose one. Even if I do decide on one, I worry that my skills aren't good enough to make a quality piece.

Does anyone have an idea/advice for a practice routine that'll make it easier to hunker down and just do the work?

I also got into an art rut back in September, and I didn't really pick things back up until April of this year. When I started drawing again it was a lot of study and practice. Now it's challenging to start an original piece. Because I've gained so much knowledge about art, I'm a lot more aware of my flaws, which makes it more of a drag to get through original work. Is there a way to get the creative spark back?

So I think this is probably different for everyone and I think i may be changing my schedule but here is what has worked for me so far.

All week I am thinking about my piece for the following week, giving it time to incubate in my head, so when I get to the next saturday I am ready

Saturday = prep day, prep all my instagram posts for the week, prep my references, prep my study materials. Sunday Monday Tuesday Studies only. I do studies based on what my main focus will be on my main piece for the week. If its anatomy heavy, ill do anatomy study etc.

Weds Thurs Friday = Work on piece. I use the studies I have done through the week and directly apply them to the piece Im working on. I focus on having the same process and trying to punch higher each piece.

I don't know if that is helpful or makes any sense, if you want more details just let me know. Thats what works for me. I like doing studies, if I didnt I would change this up a bit. Anyways let me know if you have any questions maybe this is helpful.

@Lockenheim Thank you! And don't worry, it made sense and was helpful I like the idea of studying what I'll be drawing later to maximize the result, a very efficient system! Using Saturday to just prepare references also seems like a good idea, I hate havng to collect references every time! XD I'll try to incorporate something like this into my practice.

I don't know if this is a probelm you have, but I often have too many ideas and I don't really know which one to pick. How do you come up with ideas and actually pick the one that's best?

So I got COVID shortly after making my last post, so I haven't done a lot of drawing this past week. I'm feeling better though, so I got back in the swing of things with a portrait study! Feedback is welcome!

Glad you are feeling better! I often times have many ideas. I typically have the next 2 weeks pieces planned in my mind, so I can incubate them and think over them and consider what I want to accomplish out of them. I just come up with ideas by getting a small thought of something, planting it and letting it germinate in my mind, thinking on it before I sleep and revising it through the two weeks before I do it. Mostly in terms of what I pick to do I think about what skill I want to work on and try to find a piece that would make sense with that skill. For example I wanted to beef up hair and anatomy this week, and last week was clothing rendering. Next week is some different lighting. So mostly I just think of my practice days during the week as practice and the piece for the week the test. If I don't have any ideas then I just do studies, but I really like doing studies so there is that. Id just say pick one and if it doesnt work out its whatever, I have many pieces I don't like but I really just focus on the improvement I dont really care about the piece.

Let me put it another way that may make more sense. I used to do pottery for a hobby and enjoyed it. But I was focused on getting better at the skill, not about making something to take home. So for the first many months I didn't bake anything, I didnt make anything to take home, I just kept throwing bowls and cups and tried to make it as good as I could until it was destroyed. I never cared about taking anything home I just wanted to get better. I think I treat getting better at art the same way. I don't really care about taking home a pretty picture at the end of the day, what I value is getting better. I dont know if that makes any sense or not, and I know Im rambling anyway ADHD take over OK bye.