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Mar 2023

So far I don’t have one but when I get one I think it will be like:

every day at 11am to noon, or later if I can’t do it then.

Hands and feet monday

Gesture sketches tuesday

Heads wednesday

individual character sketches thursday

No practice friday, just redrawing older panels of my comic.

Saturday face sketches

sunday… something else I don’t know.

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    Mar '23
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    Mar '23
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I don't have one... anymore...
Not that I don't need to practice, just I don't have time and I have yet to make time. I get by with skills I have, but study is something I should really spend my time one. I do it every once and a while.

I´m not in a practice schedule right now because I have too many things that I need to work on.
But it always worked for me to divide my week in different themes like you did.
You can put in some regular daily things which don´t take a lot of time. Like doing 10 gesture drawings á 30 seconds
in the morning and 10 in the evening. That´s just 5 minutes each and is very effecient.
Gesture drawings will pay off in the long run and suck when you start them and IMO it doesn´t make sense to dedicate
a whole day on gestures, because you´ll get better at them by doing it daily.
You can also do eyes on monday, noses on tuesday, lips on wednesday, ears on thursday and hair on friday and
then divide it into learning theory and then drawing

Nonexistent. Tried to have one but started college and everything went to hell. I still try to get a sketch in every week or if I learn some new technique from TikTok I hope right on it.

None; I work full-time during the week, but I can usually squeeze in a sketch at lunch, and do an hour or so of art in the evening after chores, as long as I don't have any other plans.

If I need to figure something out for some art, I might do a few quick studies on the side, but I don't draw pages of hands for no reason these days. If I go to a museum or to lifedrawing, that's the only time I would do studies for multiple hours at once.

I haven't got a solid schedule since my energy levels hardly honors that so I just go for doing general sketches or full art pieces when I have the free time and energy (or if i don't have work that day :sweat_02:)

I don't think I've done specific practices unless it's tied to a full piece I'm doing (whether comic page or illustration) tho sometimes I will dive into gesture drawings or quick anatomy practices but if anything i'd say my focus has shifted more towards things like body types and dynamic posing lately. current goal is to try and get a hold of the morpho books it's just the where and how much it may cost

I get my practice while actively working on products and my comic. I used to do a lot of aimless drawing and body breakdown studies but I found it to be a total drag and made me not want to draw after I got to a certain skill level. I've never been one for doing things that I don't want to so I just suffer and learn as I go. I find out I don't know how to draw something at the moment I need to draw it and I just brute force my way to a satisfactory solution.

Same :stuck_out_tongue:


As for general drawing schedule though, I've been trying to adopt the practice of 'whenever I have the urge to check the forums/social media but I'm not allowed4, I will instead pull out my phone and get drawing'. It works sometimes, so I've been drawing slightly more that I did before I vowed to limit my forum checking XD

Don't have one.
I simply work, since I do personalized illustrations and webcomics for clients I consider that my practice since it's always something outside of my comfort zone or personal likes.

A little bit off topic but I like threads like that better than your other question threads and I think it also works
better for you and for the other forum members because it´s more of a general question

  1. I wake up.

  2. Have a pee and give my head a shake up.

  3. Have a coffee to give my bowels a wake up.

  4. Find my pens upon my table.

  5. Have a go at drawing a little Cable.

  6. Erase a lot to hide away the fuck up.

  7. Toilet time to give my bowels a shake up.

  8. Why'd I leave my phone upon the table?

Just as many people up there I don't have any. While I think it sounds useful, I know I would bore myself to death while just trying to sketch hands for a few hours, I feel like it makes much more sense to draw like half a body of a gesturing person or a full body in a particular pose while thinking how it works (and it's better if I can do it while drawing comic, but if I can't - it's ok).
But then I don't have any art education and I may be completely wrong in my assumptions on more efficient studies, I just do what I feel works better. So yeah, at least worth trying different approaches and see which one works better :slight_smile:

I'll give you my junior year University Art Major schedule. My first 3 semesters was very different since I Majored art at University as opposed to going to an Art School.

Studio Concentration (Painting/Technical Drawing)
2 days a week 6 hours a day

Elective Art (Printmaking/New Media)
2 days a week 2 hours a day

Art History
1 day a week 3 hours a day

I don’t really practice now a days (even tho I probably should). When I was in school, I would doodle between classes. I also felt like making a webcomic has helped me because it changed me to draw things I wasn’t used to.

I had a classmate in college who was a designer for a gaming studio. He said to draw everyday. His favorite thing to draw was animals. There used to be these websites that would show you random stock images, and that is how some artist would practice.

I don't have a practice schedule either. Like a lot of folks here, I suspect, I practice things as-needed. If I'm about to draw a panel that has a horse jumping, for example, and I'm not sure how to draw that, I take an hour or so to figure it out and experiment until I think I've got it well enough.

Sometimes, if I'm going to be drawing a new environment in my comic, I'll take a day or two to figure out how I'm going to draw/color all of the major features by copying some references photos as closely as I can, or doing color tests, or whatever. I did this when I had a scene set in a wheat field at sunset.

Yeah, I don't have a practice schedule. I just practice when a specific issue comes up.