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Suzanne-Helmigh — So tired of not achieving what you want?
Published: 2014-03-13 09:48:42 +0000 UTC; Views: 29223; Favourites: 396; Downloads: 0
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Description So tired of not achieving what you want?




Everyone has something they really want dearly, a career, to have a certain loved one, to be able to make certain things...

The most common one among us artist are:


- I want to be able to draw better

- I want to be able to draw like "this"person.

- I want to earn money with my drawing.

- I want to be able to draw what I imagine in my head.

- I want more people to appreciate my art.

- I want more feedback from artists I admire.

- I want more..

- I want better....


All this wanting.. dreaming of... hoping for.


How about doing it!! With these sort of "wants", it's a matter of DOING IT!

How? You ask?

There are many ways, but the usual and only answers to those desires are: 


- Spend the most time you have on drawing/painting.

- Go and ask people for help, it is okay to do so!

- Look at that amazing artwork and try and figure out how this person made it, perhaps he/she will tell you? Perhaps this person has made a video or tutorial??

- Stop procrastinating! It is your biggest enemy!

- You CAN earn money with your art, as long as you still keep getting better and find your target audience. When you find the right audience for your art, there will always be people willing to pay for it. 

- Work hard.

- Be social.




Don't let all the "wants" make you tired, envious or angry.

Use it a fuel, your desire to reach these goals. You can do it!!

Believe in yourself !!





All my other journals:
The 5 bullshit myths of concept art.Concept art is getting bigger and bigger. More people know what it is nowadays, it gets shown in the media more often and more books get released. This automatically results into more people wanting to become concept artists. So many artschools are now creating special courses all towards game art or concept art. (Game art can also include UI design, 3D modeling etc.).

Yet it is a fairly new thing to most people and the idea of "becoming a concept artist" has grown rapidly over such a short time that a lot of people who are new to it seem to get a lot of misguide info. I am going to try to list this misguided info and direct you to the corre  Are you on the right track? + Fuck Talent!Am I on the right track?
This is a thing people often wonder and think it's a complicated to find out, but it is actually pretty simple. It's a different question you need to ask yourself based on different topics.
As for: Fuck talent! You'll find it if you scroll down :P

:bulletblue: Topic 1: Am I on the right track to becoming a better artist?

Does your work from today, look closer to your initial goal than your work from last week? (this needs to be both in skill and idea.)

:bulletgreen: Good skills: Honing your technique, training you muscle memory, being more knowledgeable about your tools and art rules. With art rules I mean: Perspec How to win Art-contests! (+ Caldyra winners!)Let me start by saying how incredibly happy I am with all these amazing and inspiring entries! This definitely calls for doing another such contest soon!
Most of you have really tried their best and it shows! I couldn't have asked for better or more, choosing the winners among these was already aching my brains.
This journal will show the winners and the special mentions but also a bit about how to higher your changes on winning contests (maybe good for the next one).
This was my contest for those interested:

How to win contests?!The change on winning a contest always gets smaller based on the amount of people joining in, however this doe A big black hole called: Procrastination.Procrastination is an infinite cycle that becomes bigger and bigger the longer it's there and the time wasted being sucked into it is a dark matter of nothing.
:P hahah I figured this was the most dramatic way to put it, but yeah, it's real and it sucks.

For those who don't know what it means: Procrastination is the practice of carrying out less urgent tasks in preference to more urgent ones, or doing more pleasurable things in place of less pleasurable ones, and thus putting off impending tasks to a later time, sometimes to the "last minute" before the deadline.

We all suffer from procrastination. It is pretty innocent when you have it wi What to do as an artist in training.There are many ways to Rome they say. But I meet a lot of aspiring artists lost and asking me for guidance
and this is what I tell them.
(This is a revisited version of an old journal with new and updated guidelines/info)
Find out what you really want to do with art, there are so many different professions or hobbies to take on.
Graphic designer, Concept artist (mobile and high end), Illustrator of book covers or for card games and so much more.
Once you can make your pick, or at least pick 1 or 2 you must do research on the most valued artwork from that niece.

Find out what makes the best artist of your favorite field the best artist. Wha Where to get started before you can apply for workThere is no such thing as suddenly knowing when you are ready to turn your

passion into your profession. But there is a way of measuring your chances on being
able to get work and eventually sustain a living from it.
Accepting commissions or freelance for low payment won't help you. You can think any penny counts, but it will lower the worth of your work and damage the market.

:bulletblue: How to measure that you are ready?
You probably have high goals, but they are usually not your first step. You must search out the clients who can be that first step. Often found in the card game industry, book cover illustrations and smaller game compan This is why you (and your art) get ignored.People often get the sense of being ignored in the art-scene, especially here online. We all try so hard to get our foot in the door, it's like trying to stuff yourself in an overfull bus like a sardine in a can.
Sometimes you just want to socialize with other artists you admire and you seem to be talking into a brick wall or perhaps you've send your portfolio to a company over a dozen times and still don't even seem to get the smallest response or feedback. I will try and tell you WHY you get ignored and HOW you can get noticed instead.

I will go through the following cases of being ignored:
:bulletgreen: Your comment.
:bulletgreen: Your The problematic behavior of online artists.There is a bunch of things online artist do terribly wrong on a regular basis. Some of it might be directly aimed to you and some might be things you from others.

Shortlist:

:bulletblue: Way too little time spend on painting/practice.
:bulletblue: People making nit pick pointers.
:bulletblue: The extreme fuzz about labels and methods.
:bulletblue: Witch-hunting/ talking smack.
However I'd like to start with a totally opposite note:
This year I've also experienced great support from the art community for which I'm dearly grateful for.
:icontituslunter: got me an amazing birthday gift(video), made by him and fellow awesome artists:
https:// Don't let the crap of the internet brainwash you.warning: This journal is my opinion and my view on things. I support open-mindedness and the possibility of anything.The internet is full of it: People with strong opinions. Usually about 'how to do things' and 'how to absolutely not do things'.
Ask any given person this question: What is good art?
They will all give you a different answer and some of those answers are waaaay to specific for their own good.
Meaning they have a very specific view on what is good and see other work that does not meet up those qualifications as: bad, fake or cheating.
It is natural to have a preference toward certain topics or techniques when making art, but

The stuff that artists go through.There are so many pro's and con as to being an artist, professional or as a hobby.

It feels nice to be able to express yourself through something you make and when that something turns out to be looking good we get this sense of accomplishment.
Most of the time though there are bad feelings mixed with the good ones.

:bulletblue: Not being understood. Those moments where your friends or family does not understand that you have to desire to be alone and work on your art. Those copious amounts of hours you spend working and they wonder why you wouldn't rather be outside relaxing in the sun or hang out with your friends.
The only people who wi  Overcome your unfair obstacles.We all have certain obstacles that gives us the feeling of: 'This is so unfair!.'

To me it's one of the most annoying feelings in the world because in general we don't really know how to deal with it. One little part of us says: 'Don't whine about it, you are just being jealous.' the other part of you tells you: 'If I didn't have this obstacle or disability I would rule the world!!'
So you bounce around anger, sadness, hopelessness and envy.
If you were just sad about something or simply angry it would be a lot easier to deal with, you cry or you just vent a bit towards a friend.
But how to deal with he feeling of unfairness?

:bulletblue: Fast lane to becoming a better artist.I often get this very question: How did you get this good this fast?

Now as I consider myself not being as good as people tell me, even struggling quite often with being an artist in general.
I do know how to get better and how to reach it fast. I'm still growing as I go and it's the main thing that keeps me going.
You need to get into the right mindset and the rest will follow. With the rest I mean:
1. Willpower.
2. Endurance.
3. Positive energy.
4. The NEED to draw.

:bulletblue: Seeing growth in your work gives you the courage to work harder. You know that feeling when you're just about done with an image
and feel like this image is bett Why it's so important to unite as artists.We are with many though yet we are with few. We're all divided over little subgroups such as, fantasy illustrators, concept artists, comic book pencilers, photomanipers, techartists, anime drawers, realism sketchers etc. You might even find your place at multiple sections.

I found that the biggest united groups on Deviant Art are mostly evolved around fan art, such as Sonic, or My little pony.

Observations aside, I think the good thing about those groups is that they serve for companionship. Being an artist all by yourself with no one to share/talk about/discuss your work with can feel rather lonely. And that lonely feeling is not encouragi Are you being honest with yourself?As part of becoming good at something you need to be able to reflect upon yourself. Judge your own abilities and work and consider the possibility that what ever you have been doing it wrong all along. Or perhaps you're actually being to hard on yourself and you're better than your conscious is telling you. (This is bad too because it leads to insecurities.)

Signs that you might overestimate your current skills.
Do you often feel these things when you look upon work from good artists?:  
I can totally do this too.
This is not so hard, I can do this faster.
My work is way more interesting.
It's not fair that this person gets way more atte When someone brings your art down...Putting our art out there makes us very vulnerable, especially when you've made something close to your heart. Perhaps something of your own fantasy, a story, a fan fiction your passionate about?

As much as most of us really want to improve, we also simply want to make art because we love it and when we share it there is a slight hope there is someone out there who will love it too.
There are all kinds of ways other people can bring you down by saying something about your art, or by doing nothing at all! Perhaps YOU are even part of making someone feel down and you're not realizing it!

:bulletblue: The harsh critique.
This person might want How to deal with or get feedback.Getting feedback or critiques may be hard for people.

Some people want it really bad but can't seem to get it, at least not from the people he/she is hoping for.
And other get it all the time but feel a little attacked or bullied by it.

Pretty much anyone with eyes and some intelligence is able to spot mistakes or irregularities in someone's work. This person doesn't have to be more skilled than you.
However, this person... might be wrong....

:bulletpurple: How do you judge a critique?
You initially made your artwork according to the knowledge you currently have. Leaving room for mistakes in the elements you're not trained or knowledgeabl So tired of not achieving what you want?
So tired of not achieving what you want?

:thumb351497375:

Everyone has something they really want dearly, a career, to have a certain loved one, to be able to make certain things...
The most common one among us artist are:

- I want to be able to draw better
- I want to be able to draw like "this"person.
- I want to earn money with my drawing.
- I want to be able to draw what I imagine in my head.
- I want more people to appreciate my art.
- I want more feedback from artists I admire.
- I want more..
- I want better....

All this wanting.. dreaming of... hoping for.

How about doing it!! With these sort of "wants", it's a matter of DOING IT Avoid getting ripped off by a client.As a freelancer most of your business takes place online, which makes it really easy
for people to rip you off. How many times have we seen the following scenario's:

1- Someone offers a descent payment for your artwork but wants you to do an art-test first.
after the art-test you're being told you're not good enough. Later you find out that other people
got to do different art-test topics and also weren't good enough. The client clearly ripped people off to get free artwork.

2- Someone offers good money for your artwork. The sketch gets approved so you continue working. Right when it's done the total image suddenly becomes a great disappoin
The emotional shield that prevents hurt.Being an artist = Being sensitive.We all know it. Making something and then showing it out there makes you very vulnerable, emotionally.
What if people think it's shit? What if they think it's weird... what will they think? Will that reflect on how they think of me as a person?

I know what some of you are thinking right now... 'You should care less about what people think of you or you art.'
In a sense you are right.. than again, you SHOULD care what people think of you and your art! They are your market and potential clients.
It's easier when you're already doing your dream job and couldn't care less for other potential directions... but Being a miserable artist = being a bad artist.I recently felt it being one of the most important things, not just for an artist; being happy with what you do. No one wants to get up every morning thinking.. shit .. another work day. Of course there can be days, maybe even a full week of that, but the majority of your time you should be feeling content and happy even.
With that lack of love and enthusiasm it is most likely reflected into your work.

Now it's not always your own fault that your work doesn't make you happy and doesn't feed your creative monster. But it can be in these cases.

You make your OWN workday miserable when:
:bulletblue: If you don't speak your mind and stand up Timing fucking matters.Time does a lot of things, it makes you older, it gets you to places, it never stops going forward. However you control when and how you use it!

Everyone makes choices on a daily bases, most of them are actually done with your auto-pilot function out of habit.
Most people usually sit in the same spot on the couch, chooses what to wear based on previously made combinations and so on, unless they consciously become aware of their action and might decide it's time for a change. It can be a small thing that makes people aware of their options
You can count that pretty much every person out there works like this and YOU often depend on THEIR ch Things I learned at: The Industry Workshops 2014Holy shit amazeballs... this past weekend....
But let me start of by shortly telling you what the industry workshops actually were.
(The artwork in this journal are from some of the lecturers.)

:bulletblue: What is: #IW_14?The Industry workshops took place last weekend August 29 to 31 2014, at 2 venues both located at Hoxton Square, London United Kingdom.
It was organized and hosted by a group of industry professionals in the fields of concept art, matte painting and illustration in film, games and freelance.
Let me name the people that profited the lectures and demo's from 10 in the morning to 8 in the evening, ending with a 1+ hour QA When inspiration is far to be found...We all get these anoying times when we really want to make something cool, get inspired and work that magic. We see everyone around us (online) do it, but how come we are not?
So we look for ways to get inspired, we ask around, find these usual answers: go watch a film, listen to music.. take a walk...

But even when we do that, we still end up stuck most of the time.
Part of the solution is knowing WHY we get stuck and this is my theory.

:bulletblue: ADT - Attention Deficit Trait.
'Experiencing an inner frenzy of distractability, impatience, difficulty in setting priorities, staying focused and managing time. Those are our biggest enemie A simple guide on: Commissioning an Artist.It's often not as simple as one wants it to be when both artist and client want it to be: Cost efficient, time efficient and quality efficient.
I've often spend my time discussing the best way to handle commissions with clients and artist friends that I came to the conclusion that clarity and understanding is key.
I will divide the guidelines I work with based on 3 commission types.
:bulletblue: Character commissions.
:bulletblue: Book covers ( or illustrations)
:bulletblue: Concept art.

Reading all 3 parts will give you the full scope as a lot of it applies to one another as well.

:bulletgreen: Character commissions.

:bulletblue: 1. The Key to keeping yourself motivated properly.Let me start off with telling you what motivation is and why you need it.

A motivation is a reason behind doing something a certain way to work yourself up to a certain goal. Just having a goal but no understanding of how to get there, means you have no way to motivate yourself and your goal will be hard to reach.
Therefore motivation is needed desperately in order to become truly good at something.

The motivation to eat is the feeling for hunger and the end goal of ending the hunger and feeling healthy and energized. This type of motivation is a feeling.
Which brings me to: Intrinsic motivation and Extrinsic motivation.

Shortly explaine


Thanks for all the comments! I will do my best to reply to most of them, even if it sometimes takes a while, reading these always cheers me up a lot! 

Wanna ask me direct questions? Come hang with me on Twitch sometime where I paint and give feedback
Suzanne Helmigh Twitch channel




Disclaimer: The artwork posted in my journals are not (always) made by me but artists I admire. This is my way of sharing their incredibly work with the rest of you. All these journals are based on my personal experience and that of artist friends. English is my second language and I have dyslexia so do note I am prone to make mistakes. I write these journals to remind myself of the things I've learned.

Thank you!


Related content
Comments: 115

TheRockyCrowe [2016-07-05 03:29:57 +0000 UTC]

I use this ideaology everyday in my uphill battle of getting more recognition for my graphic novel.

Than at least twice a week it all crumbles down when I see a copy-cat shitty drawn FNAF, MLP, Undertale or TMNT fan-comic with tons of feedback by the time it hits page 10...meanwhile here I am lucky enough to get at least a few comments.....

On page fucking 102 .
121 counting the revamped prologue I kicked my ass on :'D.

You've every right to call me a self centered whiny bitch, but please understand, this whiny bitch thought people craved uniqueness and creativity. Not something any given publisher or producer of a popular franchise could rehash into the ground.

But alas as an artist with true passion for what she's doing, I continue not only for the public, but because it appeases myself to create and improve! Therefore I continue to fight this hill in perseverance to the bitter end - I refuse to put the car in neutral and let it take me back down.

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Letrune [2015-07-26 15:03:15 +0000 UTC]

And what if I want to have a finer life, a body that is actually mine or such...? When red tape and general not-my-problem and shut-up-and-accept-it is what one gets back?

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saina-chan [2015-07-26 14:52:37 +0000 UTC]

Then I'm going to have a tricky question:
change "I want to draw better" into "I'm drawing better" (or doing what it takes to draw better).

I was once challenged by my friend (who is good artist)- draw every day at least 10 poses from figure drawings photos (no option to join life model drawing classes for that time). Every day.
Did it, after 6 months I didn't get better.

On the same time I saw artworks of two people who used to be my friends- one had 4 years break from drawing, second one was drawing maybe once a month.
They drawing style, anatomy, everything were so much better than their last art work.

What went wrong.

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somebodyoranybody [2015-07-22 20:59:33 +0000 UTC]

If you want to make money with your artwork, you have to understand what your client sees and then draw that. Not what you see, but what your client wants to see. I think this is hart, because even if there is a detailed description what your client wants can still be different. I think you can test/train this quite well by joining contests, because there you have the exact same situation.

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Kikkofan123 [2015-02-15 19:30:12 +0000 UTC]

Thank so much for writing these!! I have read all of them so many that I can't even remember. Everytime I feel down like I'm not doing progress at all I read all these articles and they make me feel better and inspired. Thank you a billion times!!!       

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pennp [2014-08-19 21:27:34 +0000 UTC]

It's the kick up the backside that I needed

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TerraQuartZ [2014-07-15 22:22:48 +0000 UTC]

wow, these reads are the best, read them all. some even multiple times. in fact, I read this one so many times already and it keeps fascinating me, but it also realizes that i procrastinate so much and that i spend so much time on other stuff. It feels like i dont enjoy making art as much anymore as i used to do. It gone even that far that i question if i wanna give up or not. But there is also that feeling that i cant go for something else since i wouldn't want anything else than this.

I had the feel to share these thoughts, i guess it had to go out somewhere and this is kinda a place for it, because maybe someone here has dealt or still deals with the same thing.
maybe someone has any tips for those? (including me :S)

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Static-Foil [2014-06-18 23:11:51 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for all of your journal and deviation helps. Its not just a 'pat on back,' but very inspirational. ;w;

I really appreciate it and hope I can learn more from you :3

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ForgottenAmnesty [2014-06-17 09:23:10 +0000 UTC]

I find this journal very helpful. You just said what I keep telling people, in list form. The thing we also need is support from fellow artists, and sometimes someone to say, "Stop."

Artists aren't machines (we don't and shouldn't have a set pattern we all work with, or all draw the same thing) and sometimes, we just need to stop and take a step back and whatever we're doing wrong, fix it and move on instead of putting ourselves down and holding ourselves back over such little things. Or take a break now and then

"I can't move forward with my art, because I'm just not good enough."
"I'm a horrible artist. All my art just sucks. I don't know what to do."

Whatever you tell yourself you are, you are and whatever you tell yourself you're not, you're not. Sometimes it's good to stop, take a breather, and evaluate your thoughts.

I used to want to be a good artist. Now I do.

Turning your Wants into Do's

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CupcakeCookiie [2014-06-07 09:15:54 +0000 UTC]

I have to thank you for this article!

I tend to give up very easily & throw my dreams out the window as soon as I notice it's not working the way I want it to...
I also get jealous on other deviants so easily but that's actually unnecessary when I think of it...

I mean, professionals & good artists aren't born, they became professionals/good artists because they worked hard to reach that level.
Every one of us started small. Every one of us can be good if we just try hard enough.

Your articles really have a motivational effect on me!
After reading it I finally got that little spark back, that I really want to draw & upgrade my skills by doing so!
This time I won't give up & will keep on trying, no matter how hard the way gets!

Thanks!

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johnway [2014-05-20 14:04:07 +0000 UTC]

What stops me from getting better is the pain barrier. Sometimes spending hours on a losing battle seems immensely pointless and one that was stacked against me from the start. Sure, practice makes perfect and i ideally strive to learn SOMETHING every time i draw. But when i draw and it feels like i've learnt nothing that's when it gets really painful and frustrating.  

For example, i want to study materials (say orange peel) and when i attempt to make a start in photoshop i hit a brick wall before i begin as i don't know what to do. Get the color and lighting right and then add the textures is my first guess. All well and good, but how do i do the textures? The problem then spirals out of control and call it quits whilst the second attempt is just me beating my head against the wall trying to figure out what i'm doing. 

Just have to keep going i suppose. 

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Melanie-sama [2014-05-08 07:13:41 +0000 UTC]

Eh, my problem is I taught myself everything when it came to art. I'm at the limit of what I can teach myself, and now I need somebody who can teach me to improve the small things: hands, feet, overall design.
I've asked for help, and I've looked for official institutes to teach me. To no avail: so far all I've heard from non-officials is: 'Keep working the way you do now, you'll get there.', and the officials told me: 'You need to abandon your style, THIS one will get you further in life.' Both two extremes, and I think none of them will really work. I've tried teaching myself new things, and I've hit an impasse. I'll be extremely unhappy not drawing in the style that carried me this far, though I wouldn't mind developing a new art style next to my own. Also, people just expect me to be able to do that in mere weeks, while my own style cost me years of practice to learn. Some people may pick up a new drawing style that fast, but I can't do that yet. I'm still a newbie to the art world, after all.
Only having people say: 'Your characters are so original and creative, I love it!' isn't helping either. Sure, the compliments are nice, and a good motivator... But what I need is somebody to tell me where to improve. Constructive criticism. So far the criticism I've had were all death threats and the like: another extreme I can't work with, because that's usually just people getting offended. Sheesh, I know my ideas are far from perfect, and I'm getting repetitive, so I better come up with something to make progress for myself soon.

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ImmarArt In reply to Melanie-sama [2014-05-10 02:16:55 +0000 UTC]

I hope you don't mind if I give you some advice.

First: Don't listen to the people who tell you to change the style you love. You will find work and people who love your style as long as you do what you love, period.

There are two type of people: The people who can work on their own and people who need structure. If you can work on your own follow the advice below. If you need structure, you will need to go to an art school or take online art classes. There are tons of professional awesome artists who teach online classes. Here's one: www.schoolism.com/school.php

Second: To improve, draw what you want to improve on. You want to learn how to draw feet? Copy photos of peoples feet a few hours every week. Take a look as suzanne's schedule she posted and make one of your own to fit your needs. If you need reference photos, deviant art has tons of them. search 'feet' or anything you want. draw your own feet. take photos. As a professional, I always use reference before I start an Illustration. I gather photos from google, pinterest, deviant art, i take photos of myself and use them to help me see what I can't imagine. try this: www.pinterest.com/characterdes…  Drawing from life will improve your illustrations 100%. When I started out I refused to draw real people. I just wanted to draw in my style and I thought it was useless to me. I was sooo wrong. You can still draw in your style and learn from life. Its a tool. use it. Another way to improve is to gather a list of 5 artists you admire and copy their illustrations every day for years if you need to. Copy 80% of your time and use 20% to draw from imagination. It's a slow process and it will take years to get better. there is no secret to it. just plain hard work and dedication. You can't be a pro athlete in a few months. From my experience, It takes 2 years to get good at something and 3 to 4 years to start to earn a living. 5 years and you will be living your dreams. (use it as a guide and break the shit out of it with a faster time) But they have to be completely focused. make time for art. Give up a few hours of tv or games or going out. you NEED to make art a priority if you want to make a living from it.
You will loose heart, you will want to give up, you will hate it sometimes but just keep working EVERY DAY and you will be one day closer to living your dream.  

to sum up:
1. draw what you love.
2. copy, copy, copy.
3. draw everyday.

Have a great day! 

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Melanie-sama In reply to ImmarArt [2014-05-10 07:09:35 +0000 UTC]

So noted... I usually draw every spare moment I have already, but I've been going on my imagination most of the time. Empty hours in school sound like the place for imagination(I don't always have a PC at my disposal to find reference on), and I'll squeeze in some practice after school. I'm usually itching to draw after homework, so that's really not a problem.
Drawing real people sounds like a good thing to practice, since I've always had trouble drawing them. Oh, the times where people asked me: 'Can you draw me?' and I had to reply: 'I can't draw real people, sorry.'... I already have a special drawing mannequin for hands, it's literally a wooden hand. The problem is the fingers bend back way further then actual human hands can, so it's pretty useless for poses where the fingers are completely upright. The segment where the fingers are attached to the palm works like a real hand, but the middle segment bends back about 2 or 3 centimetres further then real fingers. I tried posing it like a real hand, but the weight of the wood makes the fingers just drop into that inhuman pose, really annoying. I should really draw hands from photo reference.

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ForgottenAmnesty In reply to Melanie-sama [2014-06-17 09:32:30 +0000 UTC]

Photo referencing is good, and so is video, or watching your own hand. Not just watching your hand, but watching the tendons and skin and muscles that make a hand what it is.

I taught myself art, too, and we didn't have many references. I worked off of what I saw from life, and photos in old books. With the internet now, there's a wealth of resources to work from, and that can be a big help.

One thing I have noticed is that a lot of artists not only rely on a reference photo, but they also rely on the "perfect" pose. It's gotten so that some artists will stop drawing and go into a funk if they can't find the "one". You become bound. This is why I suggest life and video moreso than photos, though they are very good too.

I challenge those I teach to take a photo and only use it for the things they need, and change the pose on their drawing from the photo. If you also research upon your subject beforehand, and memorise the workings of whatever it is you're wanting to draw and not just the exterior, it will become much easier.

With action, the image in mind should be thinking of the motion that your subject is going to be taking next, rather than just what you see in the photo.

Pardon my popping in. Hopefully I had something to add

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Melanie-sama In reply to ForgottenAmnesty [2014-06-17 14:12:01 +0000 UTC]

Eh, I recognize the ragequit on the pose thing... Even I sometimes go a bit diva if I can't get the pose I want. Just today, I was drawing this character tripping over a rock, and I couldn't get him to look like he was halfway done with falling. xD I'm just going to get some reference there, it's not a lose I've drawn before after all.

Thanks for the tips, I always appreciate advice if it's brought in a civil manner ^^ My art teachers never managed to do that, and it drove me nuts.

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TerraQuartZ In reply to Melanie-sama [2014-07-15 22:27:15 +0000 UTC]

Melanie,

You should go to www.ctrlpaint.com its the best selfteaching/tutorial site ever. loads of video's nice on order and what/how to learn. even on how to get the right mindset, (which i dont doubt with you c: )

cheers

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Melanie-sama In reply to TerraQuartZ [2014-07-21 15:05:58 +0000 UTC]

Hmm, I like their slogan already. 'Teach yourself digital painting for free'. I'll certainly have a better look around once I find the time. ^^ Thanks for the link, I love the works you have up in your gallery, by the way.

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ForgottenAmnesty In reply to Melanie-sama [2014-06-18 13:49:43 +0000 UTC]

C:

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isiwilis [2014-05-08 05:01:38 +0000 UTC]

Odderly expected answer

Yet not enough to be effective. How about asking for help to God?

Now that would be more realistic for those means

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YOKOKY [2014-03-19 21:01:10 +0000 UTC]

i will fallow you- wish all your request to come truth- with all my heart....         

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queencreeper13 [2014-03-19 10:24:13 +0000 UTC]

You are in my IIG list. 
IIG; Inspiring Intelligent Girls.

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Kasai1214 [2014-03-19 09:28:11 +0000 UTC]

Inspiring. 

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914four [2014-03-19 03:06:35 +0000 UTC]

"Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent. The slogan "press on" has solved and always will solve the problems of the human race. " - Calvin Coolidge

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Natureisnatural [2014-03-19 02:33:30 +0000 UTC]

Exactly. Like Walt Disney once said, "If you can dream it, you can do it."

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NinaYamanaka [2014-03-18 20:50:28 +0000 UTC]

I can't get paint tool Sai or other cool things,so I'll never be AS good as some people but hey,I'm cool with that!

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ForgottenAmnesty In reply to NinaYamanaka [2014-06-17 09:41:17 +0000 UTC]

It is not the program, but the artist

I used to work with a mouse in MS Paint and programs like Sumopaint later.

   These I drew with a mouse in SAI, and the one below with a laptop touchpad in MS Paint


Keep at it! No need to tell yourself you will never be as good as someone. That limits yourself. As an artist, there are no limits

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7APTARSHI In reply to NinaYamanaka [2014-05-09 18:35:32 +0000 UTC]

WHY can't YOU get paint tool Sai or other cool things ??? 

paint tool sai is a free software , just google it , go to the website and download it . . at ur own house / or anyone else's or any cyber-cafe . . . 

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NinaYamanaka In reply to 7APTARSHI [2014-05-10 05:35:07 +0000 UTC]

My parents wont let me,but I've gotten better without it! 

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LoveAnimals8 [2014-03-17 18:33:17 +0000 UTC]

This was very inspiring. My biggest dream as an artist is being able to draw what I imagine in my head. But it's very difficult and I don't even know if it's possible... But I really got inspired with this. Very helpful.  

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Phantagrafie [2014-03-17 17:06:20 +0000 UTC]

Stop procastinating. Work hard. Be social.
I will stick a post-it with this words on my screen. Thanks!

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moonbaby17 [2014-03-17 04:23:54 +0000 UTC]

Words of wisdom. Thanks man, you've helped the masses by a land slide!

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myrddent [2014-03-16 19:24:58 +0000 UTC]

thank you for this, It is very inspiring and helpful. It is appreciated.

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nicolastrent [2014-03-16 16:07:51 +0000 UTC]

As always, wonderful article

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larmyne [2014-03-16 02:22:23 +0000 UTC]

Amazingly inspirational. No joke, I got the itch to draw.

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K-suthe [2014-03-16 00:47:58 +0000 UTC]

cant ask anyone for help its a sign of weakness of ability and also kinda shy doing so

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whydeviantart [2014-03-16 00:19:42 +0000 UTC]

so what happens if you literally CANT draw what you imagined?! like for one i definatly dont have big enough aper and two im not talented enough to do something like this!: www.google.com/imgres?sa=X&esp…

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Merli-V3 In reply to whydeviantart [2014-03-17 08:33:04 +0000 UTC]

Just keep practicing until you can reach your goal. Try drawing smaller things or practice techniques to help with your drawing and shading I'm sure you can do it ^_^.

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whydeviantart In reply to Merli-V3 [2014-03-18 23:59:54 +0000 UTC]

im fine with shading trust me techniques never do any good ad practicing PAH i draw everyday

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Sondari [2014-03-15 22:30:04 +0000 UTC]

The things YOU want to achieve are exactly my things. I have also found something in myself - whenever I draw / paint it's never hard, always easy,  I just tried hard and that was all! Usually before, whenever I looked at a really good piece of artwork I just got jealous and really sad, but now, that is something I don't have in myself anymore. Practice is really helping, even to overcome jealousy! It's not that I do work better than them now, it just happened. So another tip might be is to not to be jealous at others people artwork.

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AnimatedMadness [2014-03-15 14:28:07 +0000 UTC]

Thank you for these inspirational and passionate words. I used to be in this phase but I am slowly getting out of it and doing more of what I want to do. I found this yesterday and I will still look at this journal because it is very motivational.

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NinjagoStorm [2014-03-15 03:15:52 +0000 UTC]

It's very inspirational.

but all I really care about rit now is figuring out how to use my tablet.. XD

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whydeviantart In reply to NinjagoStorm [2014-03-16 00:20:14 +0000 UTC]

yeah same

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NinjagoStorm In reply to whydeviantart [2014-03-16 00:22:06 +0000 UTC]

Yeah. 

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Desert-Poppy [2014-03-15 01:31:32 +0000 UTC]

Aww this is very inspirational! Thank you!

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BalloonPrincess [2014-03-15 01:08:11 +0000 UTC]

It's something you have to decide and then once you do, you move forward.  Only you as the person can decide when you are ready to move forward.

I know this all too well.  I cut my finger on my right hand badly back last year and it's taken a while to get back into being able to use my hand for fear of damaging it again.  A lot of that is psychosomatic to be sure, but when you also get busy with other things, you really don't want to do much of anything else. 

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MarcoPellino [2014-03-14 21:25:53 +0000 UTC]

Thank you, maybe is that I really need in that moment!

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shewolf66 [2014-03-14 17:22:42 +0000 UTC]

True...so true

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Ghostsquid [2014-03-14 16:55:01 +0000 UTC]

I think the most difficult part for me is socializing. I honestly don't know how to converse with other people, especially if they're so much better at art than me. I need to get better at socializing. :I

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hakepe [2014-03-14 12:57:45 +0000 UTC]

Very good points and very true, focusing too much on the I want / I cant takes a lot of energy (been there, done that). Focus on just doing it instead.

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