Hi. Help needed.
#2
Hello there :)

I'm going to try and give some pretty general advice, because there's so many ways to possibly answer your question, and there is no single good place to look or start, because the journey is different for everyone.

In terms of improving your art technique, you'll need to work on fundamentals like anatomy, colour theory, values and perspective. If you keep browsing through these forums and looking at how people are studying those things in their sketchbooks, you'll get an idea of how to start on each of those tasks. Personally, I like the 'ART Fundamentals' book published by 3DTotal, and Andrew Loomis books for human anatomy. Lots of people recommend a book called Color and Light by James Gurney, but I can't personally vouch for it because I haven't done intensive study from it yet. The best possible thing for a beginner to develop their skills is to study from life - just find something in the real world and draw it. If you wanna draw people, then draw the people around you. Try to be as accurate as possible. The more accurate your study is, then the more accurately you'll remember it for the next time you need to draw that thing.

The awesome people on this forum will be able to give you tons of advice about all that stuff, and by 'that stuff' I mean learning how to be 'good' at art.

But I think there's a really important step that some people miss out, so I'll mention that too.

Figure out why you want to draw and WHAT you want to draw. The great thing about drawing is that you can channel all your other interests. For example, I like nature, history, fashion, women, and fantasy. So that stuff influences what I draw. If you want to improve at art, I think you have to be  excited about the stuff you're going to make. Otherwise learning to be 'good' will seem like a long, pointless slog.

I see loads of people learning to draw and they are like 'I have to spend a year drawing boxes... then a year shading things in black and white... then two years learning anatomy.... and then after ten years I can start drawing cool things'

Screw that.

Draw cool things. Draw the stuff that keeps you daydreaming when you should be doing something else. Draw that stuff that sticks in your mind, the stuff that you're obsessed with. And draw it from the beginning, even if you're not 'good' enough yet. Tap into the same excitement that made you draw when you were a kid! The reason so many people draw as a kid and then stop as an adult is because they get to a certain age and stop focusing on the cool idea they wanted to draw and start worrying too much about if the art is 'good' enough.

Think about that cool thing you want to draw, and maybe study some things that will help you. Like if it's a character, then study some anatomy first. You don't have to study ALL the anatomy in the world before you're allowed to draw people. Just study enough that you look at the cool thing you drew afterwards and you think 'yeah I learnt something, and then I got this awesome drawing from it. It's not perfect but my next one will be better.'

Anyway, that's my idea of how to start an art journey :)

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Messages In This Thread
Hi. Help needed. - by arcvision - 08-02-2016, 02:54 AM
RE: Hi. Help needed. - by BadWoolf - 08-02-2016, 05:58 AM
RE: Hi. Help needed. - by RottenPocket - 08-02-2016, 06:27 AM
RE: Hi. Help needed. - by arcvision - 08-02-2016, 06:57 AM
RE: Hi. Help needed. - by RottenPocket - 08-02-2016, 07:06 AM
RE: Hi. Help needed. - by Artloader - 08-07-2016, 01:51 AM

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