08-03-2015, 09:42 AM
RottenPocket, thanks for your input! But could you elaborate and explain your point a bit more, please?
Are you telling me that I'll learn faster by making illustrations instead of learning one fundamental at a time?
You said that "you can't improve an entire recipe if all you do is beat eggs all day".
I beg to differ (assuming that I'll move on to other parts of recepie after mastering beating eggs).
When I was looking for a way to learn quickly, many blogs ( http://www.bakadesuyo.com/2012/06/what-t...performan/ ), books ("Outliers: The Story of Success", "Talent is Overrated") and forums (http://crimsondaggers.com/forum/thread-6619.html ) have mentioned deliberate practice. According to this theory, dividing complex skills into more manageable parts and learning them one at a time is essential to learning as fast as possible.
It's simply easier to practice anatomy, when I'm not thinking about texture, composition, cones of vision or colours.
I'm planning to spend next month learning about anatomy and I still don't understand what's wrong with this idea.
As for todays, still unfinished, studies:
Are you telling me that I'll learn faster by making illustrations instead of learning one fundamental at a time?
You said that "you can't improve an entire recipe if all you do is beat eggs all day".
I beg to differ (assuming that I'll move on to other parts of recepie after mastering beating eggs).
When I was looking for a way to learn quickly, many blogs ( http://www.bakadesuyo.com/2012/06/what-t...performan/ ), books ("Outliers: The Story of Success", "Talent is Overrated") and forums (http://crimsondaggers.com/forum/thread-6619.html ) have mentioned deliberate practice. According to this theory, dividing complex skills into more manageable parts and learning them one at a time is essential to learning as fast as possible.
It's simply easier to practice anatomy, when I'm not thinking about texture, composition, cones of vision or colours.
I'm planning to spend next month learning about anatomy and I still don't understand what's wrong with this idea.
As for todays, still unfinished, studies: