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Feb 2021

I use to draw by hand on paper and I would do this most times 4 to 8 hours a day. Since I attended high school at the time, I couldn't put in as much hours I wanted but if I had the opportunity like let's say on weekends I'd draw all day if my chores were already done.
I did this for about 11 years and even when i transitioned to digital drawing, those bad habits continued. drawing from morning to evening, hardly getting enough sleep or eating LOL

The mistake i made was not properly learning how to position my hand and most important of all "TAKING BREAKS", which I hardly did because I was so "Obsessed" with drawing.
After a couple of years, I realized how much damage I had done to myself especially my right hand. The constant RSI (Reactivate strain injury) limits my workflow and I'm constantly taking breaks. At this point, i completely got rid of detail in my work because the more detail you add the more time you spend on that piece. This way, i was able to work faster and spend less time putting stress on my hand and now, I only apply detail to banners or cover pages.

I was very sad at first but then i realized I could still tell a good story and do the best I can with my artwork despite the lack of detailed shading. and I gradually gained confidence over time and now, I don't feel so bad about it and the best part is that my audience doesn't seem to mind much. Interested in checking out our work, link is below. and also, share your experience with me as well.

All flat shading no cap 🤷( lol i know its corny but i had to do it lol)

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    Feb '21
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    Feb '21
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I'm new to comics but not to art. Breaks are definitely something I can resonate with; I'm lucky I haven't seriously injured myself yet. Or maybe I have and just don't know it. I try to remember to do my hand stretches every time but... sigh. Sometimes I just forget. I do my best to set reminders for myself and do wrist mobility exercises.

I think another thing is probably taking risks. I think it's a good way to grow, but until recently I was terrified it. I'd draw the same things until I even questioned my ability to draw THOSE. then I'd go for long periods without drawing ANYTHING and if I did draw, I went back into my safe zone. I really hope that my introduction into this community will encourage me to experiment, but also be kind to myself. I can be really hard on myself but I am learning to accept, even if I don't always love, the ways that I draw.

Let's see if it this ends up paying off!

wow I can really relate to this. and yes you shouldn't be too had on yourself. most artist are because we strive to be a better version of ourself forgetting that we need "time", to accomplish that. Your art looks great and i'm sure you will get a lot of acknowledgment for it :grinning:
Tapas is a fairly decent community and you'd fit in just well.

I don’t have a comic out yet, but I am currently working on my one shot. I’m a big perfectionist in a lot of areas in my life. Because of this, I’ve procrastinated getting my stories done. This one shot is a practice round of sorts, and it’s helping me change my mindset from, “This needs to be perfect” to, “I love telling this story, and though it might not be perfect, it’s my best right now. I’ll only get better from here, and I’d rather have my stories told than wait until I reach an unrealistic form of perfection”. I can tell a story now - why not just do it and have fun? After all, I’d rather have fun doing it than slaving away to reach some unrealistic expectation. Of course, I’m still putting forth effort to do my best and make the art and panels look good. I’m also learning to give myself more credit as I keep doing the art for my comic. I tend to not give myself enough credit, but I think I’m better than I give myself credit for. All in all, I’m learning to just correct my mindset and find the good that I have done and can continue to do. I’m not exactly the same artist from before that wanted to only get into making comics until I knew all of the ropes and have mastered them. I now focus on learning the techniques, and mastering them while I create. It’s made this whole art journey so much more fun.

I really appreciate your reply! Thank you so much for your kind words. And you're so right. It's so easy to get lost in the moment and not be able to "zoom out" and see the big picture of how we've grown and how how we've come!

@Tanako Man that sucks to hear about your injury. I’m glad you found a way to work with it and make art anyway! I love your style and I think its simplicity fits your comic

@eloquent That’s a great goal to have! Drawing stuff you don’t usually draw is always kinda scary but it’s one of the best ways to get new ideas and expand what you can do. I remember I had a month where I wrote down everything I hated drawing and focused on that. Motorcycles are some of my favorite subjects now

A change I want to make in my own mentality is trying not to care as much for what people want to see from me. Like many people, I started out online in fandoms. Pokémon and Wings of Fire were my big two. I drew a lot of fanart and OCs for those series, but it was never all I wanted my presence to be. I still make fanart, but I’m leaning more towards original work now. This year I want to consistently put out new ideas. I’m following through with that by drawing a monkey every day of 2021. Same prompt, just gotta be something different

That is a brilliant and very scary idea :joy: I will have to try that! I don't know about others, but feet, hands, cars, buildings, weird angles (especially if I am drawing people) and birds are super hard for me to draw. I think I find out what I hate thanks to this comic, but I guess it's motivation to try harder.

wow, i love the fact that you set goals for yourself and maybe that's something i should incorporate into my daily activity. I tend to avoid things i don't enjoy drawing as well and you have inspired me to consider making a list and focusing on that. i spend way too much time on my art that i forget to practice and i think it's starting to show in my artwork. i believe it's time to make a change,
and thanks a lot for the compliment. it took a while for me to gain my confidence back after getting rid of the do called "detailed artwork".

Exactly, your audience doesn't mind at all because the crazy thing is, if you tell a good story, it hardly matters that the art isn't super detailed or even perfect. The reader is going to spend more time paying attention to the words then the art itself. Knowing this, I've been able to slowly but surely force myself to not spend as long on small details that the reader is never going to notice.
I'm obsessive over details and so it's been quite a process trying to prevent myself from going overboard for no reason. There's still more I could spend less time on, but again it's a learning process.

I started writing an episode summary in order to speed up my drawing process
I usually drew on instinct and it was fast when compared to some others but noticed i end up being inconsistent and end up drawing one page in a day and like 10 pages the other due to art blocks, but with the summary system i now know what to draw ahead of time.
Also stopped trying to hard to be artistically consistent in order to allow the action to be more fluid when it needs to be

It is actually a newer knowledge to me and I still not instantly realize people can hurt themselves when drawing :no_mouth: it never crossed my mind before until I saw a person with hand arm brace saying she got it from too much drawing and I was like "What?!" Maybe I need to remind myself it could also happen to me.


For me the most important break is mental break, especially in social media. There are times when I feel less or not like drawing at all for whatever reason. I used to force myself to draw and set up a target which usually failed, and get me more frustrated. I figured out simply wait to until my mood got better will give a better result.

Also when you have friends or mutuals on social media, it comes with unwritten obligation to support them. Often you follow them because of their art and personality that you'd gladly do so. However, when I am stuck in a rut and having a terrible mood I often hate just to look at other people's art. It just ruin the mood. Plus the obligation to not ignore it.

I decided to just take a break when such thing happen rather than staying online which probably will result in me spewing bullshit and get more depressed, even though I feel bad. They are free to take a break from looking at my art, so do I.

A lot of people seem to be addicted to drawing all the time, but that's not always the case for me. If I don't have a goal or something to work towards, I take too much time off from drawing.

So I learned to set challenges for myself in order to get work done. For example, I try to draw 100 of something, fill a sketchbook, or finish a comic. Even though I often don't feel like working on my comic, I'm able to get it done because I promised myself to share a page every week.

This strategy helps me make more art and improve faster. The only downside is I have to be careful not to set challenges that are too hard.