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Jan 2019

Okay so, the way i made up the question is kinda weird cause style is something that usually you develop through practice and time. But i was wondering if there were some specific exercises to develop it qui kly.
Like, i tried humanizating animals but totally failed the purpose....

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    Jan '19
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    Jan '19
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During college I found I enjoyed doing master-studies.
We would pick an established artist that we liked, choose one of their works, and attempt to replicate it.

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I picked up a lot about shapes and painting techniques from looking at this piece by Leyendecker and applied it to my own work later on. Like this old digital painting I did of Dorian from Dragon Age

people usually do practice by doing those OC Request threads

what I kind of think might work well are those "try different styles" challenges (on deviantart were a few back in the days but idk if they're still online) like one is chibi, one manga, one is the simpsons, or adventure book covers, stuff like that (or you pick favourite creators and try to draw in their style)

the reson why I say this even though it is adapting another style is because even though we draw in different styles, something that is uniquely us will sneak into the drawing. they might look unrelated at first glance and yes, artists can have multiple styles, but there's always little things that are a continuety.

I don't know if this counts as an "exercise", but... just experimenting with a lot of different styles?

The way I see it, finding "your style" is just what happens when you've done a certain volume of experimentation and found out what you like / dislike, and what comes naturally / unnaturally to you. And you can't find out if something works for you or not until you try it, so... just try a bunch of stuff!