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Sep 2018

how did you do it? how long did it take you? did you get better as a result?

it's a good idea to ask other artist how they got to the way they are by asking these questions. hey, I might apply some of your methods to my routine of getting gud. it's a long journey for everyone, me included, and even the most professional have something to learn once in awhile.

and it's not because I'm sick to death with all the nitpicking I get sometimes.

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    Sep '18
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    Mar '24
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@JakiraJurosawa has some great suggestions!

One that's helped my art a ton is by watching art streams live! By doing this, I get to see any neat tricks they use to lining or coloring.

I'm drawing since I remember, I had a few after school classes but they didn't tech really. every thing I know I learned by my self. since I was a kid I could look at a drawing and copy it in a good enough manner.
I started copying drawings and by that I found my way of drawing, using stick figures then circles and then shapes.
Till today when I want to draw something new to me I do a lot of simple stick figures for the pose and build on it with a very fast lines. Then I do it again and again, until I find what I'm looking.

My dad was 2d animator, that's why I'm into drawing since I was born. That doesn't mean a lot, since my drawings started to improve 3 years ago.

In 2015 I was drawing little characters, their size was around two heads :smile:

In 2016 I started to draw females, thanks to their figure, I improved on character's size. Also, I did them talking, that's why I improved a lot in gesture, using eyes AND hands, the two most important parts of Human Expressions.

In 2017 I stopped drawing characters talking, and I started to draw them in action.

The thing that made me improve and will do to anyone, is copy. Copy anatomy, and draw, everyday, I spent like 5 hours per day drawing because my life is boring as hell :slight_smile:

I mean uhh, the normal things to git gud so to say. Though lately I've been doubting myself so idk haha, I suppose just try your best and spend a lot of time on it. Though in digital art, probably would help to study other artist techniques. You want to get to the level where you can look at any digital art work and analyze the process of how they did it.

I think the key is practice, practice and practice as much as possible. Looking at tutorials and studying for example anatomy in every aspect (bone, muscles, skin etc) and gathering photo references to work with
And besides anatomy also looking at things like color theory, physics in order to understand lighting etc
Overall I think what helped me the most was using photo references (which I mostly got from Tumblr) and watching speedpaints in youtube !

I started for fun when I was a kid. Used to have too many magazines with cartoons and also watched a lot of them on tv

But only about 2 years ago, I've been drawing more seriously, searching for tutorials on internet, reading comics, etc. Now I'm struggling to decide a style for humans (I draw vector cats), because I love western cartoon style, but also anime, and vectors lmao

Basically internet, copying(from anime and Pokemon stuffs) and tracing(bases that is) since I was 10. And just kept on drawing.

I am content what I can draw so far, but sometimes I still hate looking at my art.

I can only trace it back to 4-5 years old when I started to make little cut up dolls based on the Powerpuff Girls and Ed, Edd n Eddy. Then, it just spiraled on from there.

A lot of what I learned came from watching cartoons like Looney Tunes, The Powerpuff Girls, and your 90s shows. There were often times I would pause my VHS for a scene and redraw it. Just to see if I could recreate it.

I think I only started to draw anime when I was around 8, 9 years old? Even then, I was so used to drawing more cartoonish styles, it just carried over into that.

I saw a lot of what I learned came from passion and curiosity. The "Oh, I wanna try that" was my foundation, so I tried nearly everything I could as a kid. Making paper dolls, recreating scenes, tracing over anime to make the outline poses, reading "How to Books", taking the occasional (free) figure drawing class.

Just things like that :blush:

I draw stuff since I was an elementary school.My school half an hour drawing class is... uh, not that helpful. Basically in my years of being an elementary and middle school kid, 95% of the time, we just told to draw whatever. :v

My drawing is rather better than the whole class (if I can say so?) And I play with colors more then. And I'm mostly making some nature and copying random drawing or style most of the time but then I encountered an drawing lesson (to draw manga) when i'm like, 10 or 11(?) years old and my interest in doing that kind of drawing just risen.

It is very basic, and very quick speed run, but my drawing skill get better as time goes on. I try to learn about anatomy (though I'm still s*ck at it) from a book (I forgot who's the author/artist is but it's somewhere in the attic).

I sometimes watching the 'how to draw this and that' on YouTube, but not that often. Nowadays I only watching Ibis paint tutorial (that I almost never use...).

Well, now I'm still trying to make my skill better, but the progress is kinda slow. It probably from the fact that I'm only drawing once in a while when inspiration and motivation hits me because I'm becoming very busy with work, but I still going for my dreams to became an manga artist. (Am I going off topic? XD )

Mostly from friends and some free classes I took, but I am also self-taught in many ways.

I just grab references and try to force myself to dry them in my style.

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5 years later

I am self taught and I referenced several styles to get things right. I learned male anatomy from Akira Toriyama (rest his soul) and female anatomy from Sailor Moon. I got expressions, action scenes and my toon style from Looney Toons, the Mickey animated shorts and the DC Animated Universe.

This is an interesting topic. I wish I had realized how much practice and study can help improve your technique over time. Often when I'm struggling with how to approach a drawing or idea I do something like this: with each size increase adding a little bit more detail until I feel confident I can tackle the final product. Each time the drawing gets bigger it becomes more refined and I solve little problems here and there until the final product.

:

I forget where I learned to do this. I think it might have been Jazza on Youtube... He doesn't do as many tutorials these days, but his old stuff is still pretty good, especially for comic artists and character creation. https://www.youtube.com/@Jazza

Since five or six. Doraemon inspired me, I have been one to create spinoffs from series I like that include me (like if in Doraemon, somehow I am in the gang lol).

I learn by myself, especially my current style. I do not major, nor actually ever going into informal classes for drawing. Manga and internet's been my best buddy for this.

First, I learn from doraemon. Then, I stumbled upon shoujo manga and started to draw in shoujo manga style. Then, I stumbled more references via social medias (not that manga, but kinda manga? Semi realistic, idk?) Then somehow mine developed into my current style.

How long is a hard question. I think we learn until we stop. But if you ask my art progression, it's my whole life progressing until stopped when I got into accident and gotta redo the progress for 3 years.

How? Practice. See references. See other artists' creations. Can't say I am good in anatomy and sometimes misses some parts. I am not familiar with rendering as well. Still learning color theory. See others' videos and tips, try to apply, stick if it fits.

I am self taught. When I was very young I used to draw pictures of my father’s Dodge Ramcharger. In elementary school I drew comics (I still have my first comic book, made in 1983). Junior high and high school I got more serious into comics and even had my strip (Sam the Shark) published in the school papers. I was inspired first by Garfield and Asterix (though I’d never claim to have the drawing skills of Albert Uderzo), then later on by Bloom County, Calvin and Hobbes, and The Far Side. Even the Simpsons had a big influence on my drawing style in the early 1990’s (and it definitely showed). In the mid 1990’s I just stopped drawing for some reason. I don’t know why: I just put down my pens and didn’t pick them back up. Then in 2022 I decided I wanted to draw again, so I bought myself a tablet & stylus (Microsoft Surface Pro 8) and set to it. As I’ve been learning how to use the software (Krita) I’ve been improving.

I've been drawing since I was a baby. Literally. I just picked up a crayon one day and never stopped.

I also studied fine arts in college and have my Bachelor's of Fine Arts with a focus in Digital Art :slight_smile:

Mostly self-taught since age 4-5. I had art classes since middle school, got really "good" in college (not an art college, nor my major, but I loved it/did very well)

I had a long break from 2d/drawing to do 3d models/animation -also self-taught and wanted to work for Dreamworks/Pixar- but after a bunch of failed ambitious projects, got back into drawing and jumped into digital drawing/storyboarding/comics and done it for a few years now.

Still have learning gaps to fill, but I'm excited to see improvements and learn more, if I try hard enough, that is.

Where did you learn to art?

At home

how did you do it?

Started by simply drawing the things I liked, by copying the Covers of my favorite videogames/anime/shows

how long did it take you?

Still learning, but I've been drawing since I was born. Depending on what you want to focus on, you have to change the way you do things

did you get better as a result?

I think so, its a matter of trying, checking tutorials, tips, etc. The internet has lots of videos, pdfs and such, so those who search find. Then its a matter of testing things out.