- Joined
- Sep 25, 2014
Yep, it's why I had to get a 12.9" Second Gen used for a decent price, and the pencil!But you’ll go a long way with the iPad Pro tho.
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Yep, it's why I had to get a 12.9" Second Gen used for a decent price, and the pencil!But you’ll go a long way with the iPad Pro tho.
A bit off topic, but there seems to be this cosmic correlation between artistic drive and sexual drive. I'd argue that 9 / 10 artists began drawing to vent sexual frustration, and historically speaking, there seems to be a long history of artists being complete perverts from Raphael to John K. It also always seems like schizophrenics / people prone to visual hallucination have bizarre sexual obsessions/fixations, but maybe I'm over speculating.
God damn dude. You are spot on. This reads like my story.
I'd argue that beginners shouldn't even be doing commissions at all. Until your technique is good enough to be considered good, if not amazing, by almost anyone, you shouldn't be wasting the time of others by suggesting that they should pay you to create art. No-one wants to pay someone for an abomination made with sub-standard technical skill, and you're setting yourself up for disappointment by doing that.
To add onto this, telling people to buy screen tablets, even when they don't need it is AWFUL advice. Screen tablets are a pain to maintain and now you have the extra problem of worrying about your screen potentially breaking making the tablet unusable. I've been seeing art tubers shill out the Wacom One which is supposed to be an "affordable" screen tablet for beginners. Which runs at the lovely price of $400 USD. The fact that people are trying to argue this is "affordable" is laughable to say the least when you have competitors that sell screen tablets for half that price. Compared to the amount of money you could just spend investing in a decent monitor, I don't feel it's worth it UNLESS you have some sort of issue in that you need to see what you're drawing correctly.
Rule 34 art is fast exposure from an easy drug hit. The inverse problem is that artists are less likely to draw non-porn or fan art because it's harder to get noticed through innovation.
Now we have a problem of "rule 34 identity" becomes the safe norm.
Beginners trying to get commissions is just a bad idea all around, for artist and consumer.
IMO it takes the focus away from creating something that the artist itself is proud of and destroys passion and motivation through disappointment and drawing shit you don't want to draw.
Especially nowadays, people have crap taste and will ask for the ugliest shit.
Ugh yes.
I bought a lovely UGEE 2150 tablet for like $400. It's a great screen tablet but I have a short torso I have to adjust my chair all the time and it gives me back problems.
I like that I can see where I'm drawing, but an iPad is a much better option (for me personally) since I don't have the desk stabbing my fupa while I attempt to draw.
Screen tablets that sit on a desk are veeeerry different from drawing in a sketchbook.
Thankfully it functions as a decent monitor as well.
not really bad advice, but a bad habit I've seen in tutorials is people relying too heavily on layer effects like overlay/brightness/contrast.
sure, it works, but you never really learn how to do it manually & don't really improve your own understanding of color and creating good palettes.
definitely not saying it's a bad tool, it's a great tool, but for someone trying to improve, i think it can be a crutch, esp for beginners.
This is kind of off-topic from the thread as it relates to a particular past incident. Though I think the general message still stands:
https://youtube.com/watch?v=Xvs_tgYJYWI
A little bit of humility goes a long way.
It's one thing to roast other artists, give some really blunt critiques, or simply poke fun of some artwork. It's a whole different story though to completely degrade a person for their art and act all mightier-than-thou about it.
I wouldn't be surprised if they are kind of people that have an mental breakdown at the thought that someone said their art reminds me of this. Also I don't get the mentality anyways because all art is inspired by something even if it's subconsciously and not to mention just because something is original doesn't mean it good you can make the most unique character ever but if its shit people won't care.OOoohh I remember this shitstorm. I'll try my best to fill people in with some interesting facts, but essentially this was huge for a short time (like all things on social media).
1. Surprisingly in THIS particular clip, while the GF is being cringy egging him on. From what others have mentioned this is NOT the first time he's done this. It's just that nobody clipped it or cared to clip it to share it at the time. Former friends came out to say that they were shocked to be ridiculed on stream meaning who knows how long he got away with this shit but no one was popular enough or cared to say anything.Guy deserves it for being stupid enough to share his shitty views on a (former) 9k streaming platform in which ANYONE can clip things easily.
2. The girl they made fun of (Dreaming Neko if she still kept her OG name) was a beginner. She started the year prior (and for what she has, it's not bad for a beginner at all and she's improved since then too). Meaning not only did they make fun of someone who just started getting into art, they were so insecure they had to attack her for something NOT RELATED TO HER. The fact they had to make fun of her emotes to degrade her is exceptional.
3. The apology is an underrated shitshow. Not only did the guy fully blame it on the GF he was simping for (despite totally letting her run her mouth instead of telling her to shut up) he broke up with her, gave a "I'm sorry for what I did" speech and then basically loss 5k followers. The guy was almost at 10k and he loss 5k followers while Neko got 20k in just a few hours. All that work for nothing. All that effort and for what? To deal with some beginner artist who isn't even a threat to you? Who you know wouldn't be able to defend herself? Absolute ass.
The sad fact is the art world is over-saturated. Anyone can learn to draw. Meaning that a lot of these pretentious assholes have to drag people down to get even a shred of notoriety.
To get somewhat back on topic, I've discovered that some small group of artists are anti-tutorial. Meaning they hate all tutorials in general, which is nuts. Like, I get not liking some (e.g. tutorials that don't explain anything and just show pictures that don't mean much) but I'm talking about people hating tutorials OUTRIGHT because they have the be the most "original". Worst advice I've ever seen.
OOoohh I remember this shitstorm. I'll try my best to fill people in with some interesting facts, but essentially this was huge for a short time (like all things on social media).
1. Surprisingly in THIS particular clip, while the GF is being cringy egging him on. From what others have mentioned this is NOT the first time he's done this. It's just that nobody clipped it or cared to clip it to share it at the time. Former friends came out to say that they were shocked to be ridiculed on stream meaning who knows how long he got away with this shit but no one was popular enough or cared to say anything.Guy deserves it for being stupid enough to share his shitty views on a (former) 9k streaming platform in which ANYONE can clip things easily.
2. The girl they made fun of (Dreaming Neko if she still kept her OG name) was a beginner. She started the year prior (and for what she has, it's not bad for a beginner at all and she's improved since then too). Meaning not only did they make fun of someone who just started getting into art, they were so insecure they had to attack her for something NOT RELATED TO HER. The fact they had to make fun of her emotes to degrade her is exceptional.
3. The apology is an underrated shitshow. Not only did the guy fully blame it on the GF he was simping for (despite totally letting her run her mouth instead of telling her to shut up) he broke up with her, gave a "I'm sorry for what I did" speech and then basically loss 5k followers. The guy was almost at 10k and he loss 5k followers while Neko got 20k in just a few hours. All that work for nothing. All that effort and for what? To deal with some beginner artist who isn't even a threat to you? Who you know wouldn't be able to defend herself? Absolute ass.
The sad fact is the art world is over-saturated. Anyone can learn to draw. Meaning that a lot of these pretentious assholes have to drag people down to get even a shred of notoriety.
To get somewhat back on topic, I've discovered that some small group of artists are anti-tutorial. Meaning they hate all tutorials in general, which is nuts. Like, I get not liking some (e.g. tutorials that don't explain anything and just show pictures that don't mean much) but I'm talking about people hating tutorials OUTRIGHT because they have the be the most "original". Worst advice I've ever seen.
I just noticed some irony to all this:I wouldn't be surprised if they are kind of people that have an mental breakdown at the thought that someone said their art reminds me of this. Also I don't get the mentality anyways because all art is inspired by something even if it's subconsciously and not to mention just because something is original doesn't mean it good you can make the most unique character ever but if its shit people won't care.
A bit late to this, but I think this bad advice applies to art schools too. I remember being told that the only success as an artist is to get into Cal arts and then get picked up by Disney. Apparently even SCAD wasn't good enough.Some other bad advice I don't think I've seen tackled a lot here yet is "You should work at Disney/Disney is the only way to get a job in art/animation"
This fucked me over so hard when I was a young and dumb. I half suspect that the term was coined by some artist gatekeeper."If you screw up, just pass it off as a style"
I really hate this mentality that rewards half-ass efforts.
Obviously, you can draw from your imagination if you're doing non-representative art, if you're working in a style that doesn't demand realism, or if you've drawn so much from observation already that you "know" what the thing you're trying to draw looks like. I've never heard anyone say "never draw from imagination" except in the context of giving instruction to art students - and in that context, it's actually good advice, since the point of being an art student (leaving aside cynicism for a minute) is to get good, quickly.Never draw from imagination
This is true when it comes to art sessions like figure study, but an artist should not solely rely on reference every time they draw. The imagination is a muscle that constantly needs to be flexed if you want to be an independent artist. The imagination also relies on memory and you need to train your brain to memorize things like anatomy.
They have every right to tell you your art is shit. You're under no obligation to listen and do better, and it's even possible that their opinions are shit and your art is fine - but an audience pointing out flaws and potential improvements is all part of what happens when you put your art out there for an audience to see. It's called "critique".Your art would be so good if you just drew in this style...
This one is pretty simple in terms of, well, I can draw whatever the fuck I want however I want. If something comes off as too cartoony or realistic for you, it doesn't matter because maybe that's exactly how I wanted the art to come off? That and if someone doesn't pay me to draw a certain something, they got no right to tell me make art the way they want it to look.
This is a straw man. Nobody - or at least, nobody I've ever encountered - has said that "there is no such thing as originality" and meant "artists all draw like everybody else". Obviously, not every artist is going to bring the exact same set of styles, influences, and perspectives to their art.There is no such thing as originality.
Did Frank Frazetta become famous because he drew like everybody else? Name your most favorite famous artist, because if artists never had anything to set them apart from everyone else, then you shouldn't have a favorite at all. I think lazy fucks use this excuse to pass off copying art styles as real and acceptable art. It's acceptable for practice but that's it.
Thinking doesn't actually "waste brain cells", so I wouldn't worry too much. Please, go ahead, remember some more.There's a lot of other shit that I've heard but I don't feel like wasting my brain cells to try and remember them all.
Painting from life and from imagination should complement each otherim going to bump this thread because heck u
also never draw from reference. you should never know what your subject should look like and should instead draw from your imagination because its always reliable