I support you brother, i've always had this mindset that being able to draw literally ANYTHING is just the best skill i could ever learn for creating stuff. The very first thing i did was to buy a graphic tablet, it suited me better than drawing on paper, maybe for some people this approach is easier or more playful in some way. I wish you luck in your journey, just don't let the infinite art fundamentals to dampen your passion for creating and having fun, this is the only thing that will actually push you forward.
im glad this popped up on my feed. im in the same boat, with having drawn a bunch growing up and a little in highschool but then not really drawing in a long long time. im going to use this video as a sign to start drawing again
Hey! I saw this vid like a week ago, and was reminded of it on my homepage, hope your still making a good effort. I have/currently am going down this journey and had started at about the beginning of this year. I think personally from my experience you just need to spend as much personal time as you can, no distractions, just fully working out your thoughts and how to transfer it on paper. I have found that nearly no professional you will find on youtube or similar platforms (cant say anything about the courses on skillshare) can actually remember and teach how a beginner SHOULD be learning. I've found that resources like books that encourage you to spend more time of your day sitting in thought and being more comfortable with the patience involved in drawing. (I would recommend the book, drawing on the right side of the brain, I only read about half of it and gave it to a friend but it has some pretty alright material in there) drawing is kind of a self-confidence thing and you only get better at it as soon as you think you are getting better at it. Find personal ways to make it enjoyable for yourself, stuff that you come up with yourself. People find little tricks and whatnot to make art easier for them, do not be the type of person to blindly follow along, discover why it is people do the things they do. (Like how children think that they NEED to make guidelines for drawing proportions on characters, when it doesn't really make sense why its useful until it like aligns mentally or whatever) Sorry for blabbering in ur comment section, you seem like a creative type from your editing style, just do it everyday, or not, just feel confident about yourself.
type an essay brother idgaf. i appreciate tf out of this, yea I've noticed that too that most people who are really good at drawing aren't always the best at explaining it. I think skill share offers more tailored classes and its easier to find more specific material sometimes. But yea I've learned its just been down to how many hours am I able and willing to put in. Gonna be a process to learn how to draw for sure, but I still got other creative outlets till then.
@@chef_420good luck homie, it kinda always works out if u can keep up the desire to keep learning, and can always accept that you can change to a big degree. Its kinda always been kind of a mental health thing so like try your best to grow as a person. Your drawing, and definitely other creative outlets will improve as well.
its good to just do the drawing and not think so hard about it. thats why drawing with pen is so great. once you make a mark, you cant go back. So when you mess up you have to improvise, and you simultaneously learn to be more careful. But dont be too careful. Just do. Nothing will teach you better than straight practice. Also, redraw famous paintings and drawings. You will intuitively learn/understand whats happening in the piece by doing so. Copying drawings is your friend! but don't trace.
i've always preferred paper and pen in almost anything. that tangibility that comes with it just makes the drawing process more fun. Also thanks for the tip I never thought of doing that, and of course no tracing
im a freshman in art college rn and my drawing skills have been stagnating recently. hearing u talk abt that drive to improve reminds me of the mindset i should be having.
yea man its hard sometimes to get over those humps, but once you do its super rewarding. With anything even outside of art those challenges in life always pop up.
This video is so well produced, I’m truly amazed. I wish you luck on your drawing process!
Thank You! I just finished my semester so im be hitting the ground running now
Really? Well produced it isn’t. He wasted $165 US dollars and trying to rationalize it.
@@asimian8500 yea. and?
I support you brother, i've always had this mindset that being able to draw literally ANYTHING is just the best skill i could ever learn for creating stuff. The very first thing i did was to buy a graphic tablet, it suited me better than drawing on paper, maybe for some people this approach is easier or more playful in some way. I wish you luck in your journey, just don't let the infinite art fundamentals to dampen your passion for creating and having fun, this is the only thing that will actually push you forward.
yea there is a lot about art that can be overwhelming, but its just taking it one step at a time
im glad this popped up on my feed. im in the same boat, with having drawn a bunch growing up and a little in highschool but then not really drawing in a long long time. im going to use this video as a sign to start drawing again
Hey! I saw this vid like a week ago, and was reminded of it on my homepage, hope your still making a good effort. I have/currently am going down this journey and had started at about the beginning of this year. I think personally from my experience you just need to spend as much personal time as you can, no distractions, just fully working out your thoughts and how to transfer it on paper. I have found that nearly no professional you will find on youtube or similar platforms (cant say anything about the courses on skillshare) can actually remember and teach how a beginner SHOULD be learning. I've found that resources like books that encourage you to spend more time of your day sitting in thought and being more comfortable with the patience involved in drawing. (I would recommend the book, drawing on the right side of the brain, I only read about half of it and gave it to a friend but it has some pretty alright material in there) drawing is kind of a self-confidence thing and you only get better at it as soon as you think you are getting better at it. Find personal ways to make it enjoyable for yourself, stuff that you come up with yourself. People find little tricks and whatnot to make art easier for them, do not be the type of person to blindly follow along, discover why it is people do the things they do. (Like how children think that they NEED to make guidelines for drawing proportions on characters, when it doesn't really make sense why its useful until it like aligns mentally or whatever) Sorry for blabbering in ur comment section, you seem like a creative type from your editing style, just do it everyday, or not, just feel confident about yourself.
type an essay brother idgaf. i appreciate tf out of this, yea I've noticed that too that most people who are really good at drawing aren't always the best at explaining it. I think skill share offers more tailored classes and its easier to find more specific material sometimes. But yea I've learned its just been down to how many hours am I able and willing to put in. Gonna be a process to learn how to draw for sure, but I still got other creative outlets till then.
@@chef_420good luck homie, it kinda always works out if u can keep up the desire to keep learning, and can always accept that you can change to a big degree. Its kinda always been kind of a mental health thing so like try your best to grow as a person. Your drawing, and definitely other creative outlets will improve as well.
that skillshare wakeup also happened to me and i had no time to use more so my friend used my account to make it worthwhile :)
gotta get our moneys worth some how
its good to just do the drawing and not think so hard about it. thats why drawing with pen is so great. once you make a mark, you cant go back. So when you mess up you have to improvise, and you simultaneously learn to be more careful. But dont be too careful. Just do. Nothing will teach you better than straight practice. Also, redraw famous paintings and drawings. You will intuitively learn/understand whats happening in the piece by doing so. Copying drawings is your friend! but don't trace.
i've always preferred paper and pen in almost anything. that tangibility that comes with it just makes the drawing process more fun. Also thanks for the tip I never thought of doing that, and of course no tracing
good luck dude, don't get burnt out on your path to growth and have fun while ure doing it. i hope to see your progression soon
ty, ill be sure to have a nice update video for it in the future
excuse me?? YOU?? landed on my HOMEPAGE?? it's as if they're tracking us
HAHA dude no way, the little FBI agent is always watching
im a freshman in art college rn and my drawing skills have been stagnating recently. hearing u talk abt that drive to improve reminds me of the mindset i should be having.
yea man its hard sometimes to get over those humps, but once you do its super rewarding. With anything even outside of art those challenges in life always pop up.
this channel is extremely underrated wthh
thank you! i appreciate the fuck out of that
@@chef_420 np! your content is actually so fun to watch and idk how you’re not getting more views 😭
I wish you much luck on your journey! Insanely produced by the way.
thank you brotha!
I love the presentation and editing of the video. I also want to actively learn how to draw, will be following your journey!
good luck :)
I just started to learn how to draw 2 days ago aswell. We got this
😤 yessir we got this
You got this!! Keep going!
thanks!
You better get sponsored by Skillshare because this is the best ad for it I have seen
haha thank you, maybe one day
Keep at it!
Good luck 🎉
Great video
Thanks!
Também quero aprender a desenhar mano, boa sorte ae pra você aprender e melhorar suas habilidades
Obrigado, desejo-lhe boa sorte também!
@@chef_420 thx 🤝
how do you wake up missing $100 and think *inhale opportunity
no clue
@@chef_420 i praise and envy your optimism
fuck w this format heavy, you betta update eventually but do you boo
gracias boo, ill get around to it eventually
I so fucking love this vid
please keep going w this
u have insane talent and i really wanna se more vids