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Sep 2016

Personally, I never feel discouraged when I see someone else is doing well, or someone else is at a place I would like to be. Rather, it's exactly the opposite for me. It's encouraging to me. It's a sign that it's possible to get to that level. If I see someone else did it, I know that I can do it, too, if I apply myself and work really hard toward it. I look at the other person, and see what they're doing that I am not, and if that is working for them, I implement it in what I am doing if practicable.

So, in short, I look at the situation totally differently. I look at what some others are doing for ways I can improve myself, rather than be discouraged.

Well said, guys! The number one thing is to NOT WORRY. If we keep worrying what other people think or compare our work, who knows what will happen. You either worry yourself till you have grey hair (or worse), or you give up.

Just don't compare yourself with others in a negative way. Instead, see them as an inspiration to strive forward on your work.

2 months later

I understand where you're coming from. Just starting off myself it can be intimidating sometimes. But a lot of good points were made by the others. Learn, grow, appreciate your own work ,be you and hold on.

This is very hard and I'm sure every artist has been through it! I literally ask my husband- who writes our comic, I illustrate, if this is even worth pursuing at all. Do So much time goes into it, so is it even worth It? What if it doesn't go anywhere at all?
At the end of the day you do it for you! I know sometimes it's hard, especially when you might see someone slightly better or ahead of you. But you also have to remember that everyone has their own path, and their own style!
Plus there is a potential age gap- the person you compare yourself to might be ten years older, thus potentially with much more experience. You just never know! smile

Omg you have no idea how jelly I got of you xD

I love my series and was really happy with how quickly it was growing and I was like. Look at this I actually have a good chance of getting recognized on webtoons at this rate. I was doing random number crunches to see how well I was doing compared to other creators on there and was happy to see that my initial push was really helping me.

Then your beautiful piece of a graphic novel shows up and completely anialates my feeling of success and I was like.

O.O what is this magnificant work of art and then I saw you were poping the pages out like daily and I just curled up in the corner like. Please end me now lol

But now that I have been working on the series as long as I have I stopped number crunching and stopped comparing my series and am back to enjoying reading comics and working on my stuff ^.^

1 month later

All right, hopefully as one of the older creators on this platform (or so it feels like) let me tell you - when I spent a long time especially in a competitive Arts Bachelor (Animation) comparing myself and wondering where I would be and who I would be employed before.
Now I've been in the industry for six years as a concept artist, an animator and even as a manager and let me tell you - everyone else has literally zero influence on your success unless you're a bad person. If you work hard, and push yourself as hard as you can go without burning out (please take care of yourself) you'll succeed. It might take longer, it might take shorter than others, but in the end the product you present is your work. It's not your work, co-starring everyone else who was running against you. In the end, everyone is just trying to be their best version of themselves, and the way to do that is to just work on you.
Good luck, you'll get there.

Channel all that nervous energy towards yourself! Pour over your past work, identify the weaknesses, and become someone who your past self would be jealous of. I stuck to that method for a while and now some of the people who seemed impossibly better than me have around the same amount of subs as I do! Just focus on your own growth, it's all you need to do. c:

Hey, do you mind if I PM you about your transition from student to concept artist? I'm graduating with a character design degree this year and I need some advice, but I don't wanna bug you if you don't have the time. c':

I think it's one of those things where every artist does it, but something I came to a realization about was that I was comparing my work to people whose work I didn't really like. "I don't have the style of that artist," I'd think. "They have a distinctive style. I don't like it." But for whatever reason, I kept riding myself hard because I didn't consider myself at that level.

But I was. Even technically speaking, I was always doing fine. It's something that even now I struggle with, the temptation of comparison -- it's toxic, more times than not, and as others have pointed out, sometimes you have to just step back and just stop looking at others if you're going to be tempted to compare yourself unfavorably.

Artists are almost always our own harshest critics. And people are almost always their own harshest critics too; artists get it double! It's important to realize this and let it go, appreciate that you will be developing your style throughout your life and just keep doing that instead of comparing yourself to others who are likely struggling with the same insecurities.

You can do it! smile

Indeed, this is a real struggle! It's especially troublesome with an art style where you don't know how they do it. At least some art styles you can try to copy and learn from them, but when you're clueless, it's easy to say "I'll never be able to do that!" Something I do when I run into this problem is I compare my favorite artists to EACH OTHER. Some have simple art with beautiful colors, others have fancy realistic painting, and some have really good stories! They're all different, but it doesn't make them better or worse than each other.

Remember that you can ALWAYS change your style or technique if you're not happy with it! Try something new, even if it doesn't seem like "you" yet. If you like it, give it a try and figure out why you like it! No one is on point all the time, and it's okay to change. In fact, if you were satisfied with your art all the time, it might mean you're not growing as an artist!

If I'm really overwhelmed, I do what @shazzbaa and @avimHarZ do and just STOP LOOKING! It confuses me until nothing I draw looks right, so I take a break. I make some tea, watch TV, read a book. Then in a few hours, I try to draw without looking at anything. I'll get something that is only mine in its purest form, plus it's usually faster and easier than before! Don't think too much about it, tell yourself "I don't care how this turns out, as long as I do something." In my experience, these doodles are some of my best work haha

1 month later

I usually just compare my works to other creators, and yes I admit I have those negative thoughts of giving up, but then again those creators that I look up to are the kinds who either just dump their works and call it a day, some just develop a "lazy" art style but original OR those artists who won't even bother making a living out of their talent and just create stuff for the enjoyment of people.

Tho nowadays I just browse into pixiv, but instead of getting disappointed, I kinda ended up being inspired since I can somehow see what they did on the shadings, strokes etc.

I agree with you: as creators, we need to come together and encourage one another wherever possible!

Personally, I struggle with comparisons too, although I've been a lot better about it in the last year or two. What I have to remember is that my style is different from another artist's, my approach is different, my stories are different; I had a major breakthrough when I realized I wasn't really being honest with myself. I'd look at another artist's work, another comic or what have you, and feel immediately bad about what I was doing.

Then I took a step back and asked myself, "is that really what you want to do?"

It wasn't. It never is. Even if it's something similar, it's not the same. Even if it's along the same lines, I would realize it differently, I would develop it differently.

It's still very hard to look at things sometimes if I like the style or approach, but something important to remember is that every artist has a different style. Like Judy Garland said, be yourself -- you'll only ever be a second-rate someone else. There already is one, after all!

We all have the things we're doing, and they're fantastic. We must hold onto them and keep working to develop our own personal styles. We're so familiar with our own work, our own output, that it often doesn't give us the same feelings or effects that others' work will. That's just natural. But it does give those feelings to others who enjoy our work. We are always going to be our own harshest critics, in large part because we are so intimately familiar with every slightest flaw due to working so long and so intimately with our art.

I'm always better at it when I'm giving someone feedback or critique they've approached me for, but I've finally started to remember it for myself: in art, there really is no "better" or "worse", art is expression and there is no handy scale for absolute figuring of quality. Photorealism for example is not superior, and it isn't a goal for every artist, or even most artists -- which is a huge thing for some people to realize. We must walk away from terms that set certain specific stylistic approaches above others. There is no better or worse, as I said; there is only "different".

We can always develop, and we will be developing the whole time we are creating art. A good artist, I think, continually develops and tries to become the best possible at any given time. It's perpetual learning. But as artists, and as audiences that appreciate creative work, I feel we must reach the point of understanding that every artist and every style is -- and should be -- essentially different. We must appreciate our abilities and skill that we have worked so hard to cultivate.

1 month later

I just remain focused on my goal. And keep going and going and going.

Sometimes I compare my work to others, but I've kind of avoided doing it as I kind of felt like an asshole for doing that. I would compare my work against others I felt were inferior, and pondered how my views/subs would be less, but it wasn't really worth it. Getting critique about my art was even more annoying (with the exception of anatomy comments which I actually have been working on). Someone compared my work and I just said forget it. My works fine the way it is, it's my style and my subs like it.

If you compare yourself to another artist just remember you two are very different people with different skill sets. It's how you use your skills that matter.

1 month later

So many amazing and helpful tips... Thank you guys for sharing your thoughts! I hope that other artists feel encouraged and never gives up on their passion. If this is what you guys love to do, DO IT! Don't feel that your not good like others. We all have different and unique styles and stories to tell. Don't give into that negative feeling of giving up and comparing yourself in a bad way. Instead, keep on doing what you love and keep improving. You got this!

1 month later

NEVER COMPARE! But learn from them and others to help grow your own styles and skills

I catch myself doing this- "I can't draw as well as so and so," "I'm not as prolific as..." "I'm not as funny as..." and "I must be awful because I have only a few subscribers, " Then I tell myself "You're not gonna get any better by whining. Stop complaining and start drawing, dummy."

Ugh I compare my art and storytelling capabilities to other people all the time and whenever I do, my art and writing gets WORSE until I cut the crap and just create without thinking too hard about it =_=

Look at their first page/strip compared to their newest. Do the same for yourself. This helps to show that everyone starts somewhere and that you're capable of improvements as well.