Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Same here. For quite a while i've been a bit aimless with what to draw and sometimes how to even do it. But in this case you either try to look for inspiration or you set yourself a schedule to draw steadily so you don't get rusty. Variety is also important in many regards as well as getting out of your confort zone.I've been very disinterested in my art as of late. Outside of assignments, I don't really draw or try to learn anything new. Over the years, all the joy of art making has just been sucked out of me. I feel like I'm regressing skillwise, like I can no longer retain vital information regarding anatomy, color theory, or even lineweight. My interest in painting is dead, my digital art is shit, & I hate opening up my sketchbook now. It doesn't help that all I see online is either ai slop or gooner slop or professional work or topical fanart. I post, get two comments (one guaranteed from a bot) & maybe 10 likes. I know the number doesn't matter & I never cared before, but damn. I just gotta keep going, I know. Just ranting, I guess.

Pinterest is greatDoes anybody know a good source to get reference images? Like for stuff like armor, clothing, weapons, everyday items, vehicles etc something which has a bit of everything so I don't have to look up different things on different places.
Looking at your examples, I’m afraid that your measuring method is wrong. That’s why you find it hard. When I was taking classes drawing from live models, we were told to pick a unified distance and then base all the other measurements on this. To establish the baseline. In a portrait, the easiest is to measure the nose length, it’s usually a third of a face ( not always, but roughly it is so). From there, you just compare it to the other distances.Didn't expect this to be so hard, basically working on measuring and correct placement but dam doing it with just pencil is torture, I envy people who can easily do measuring. Although its better then my first attempt so there positive
View attachment 8898837
View attachment 8898854

Will add on to what @HerbertWest said, portraiture is hard but trying to draw attractive women is Dante Must Die mode hard, so I think you're making it tougher on yourself than it needs to be. Same goes for drawing children.Didn't expect this to be so hard, basically working on measuring and correct placement but dam doing it with just pencil is torture, I envy people who can easily do measuring. Although its better then my first attempt so there positive
View attachment 8898837
View attachment 8898854

That’s a pretty common train of thought for an artist I think. Try to find an honest answer to these questions:not really related to anything in the thread particularly, but lately ive been feeling so empty in regards of art, but now i think ive realized it was twitter and fandom culture all along, always forcing myself into "finding my niche" and doing whatever is trendy right now to get likes from gay perverts onlineive now started deleting and privating some accounts, although theres things i cannot take off the internet its fine for me i guess, seeing how people react to artcows made me realize that i dont want to end up like them and also made me want to take myself and my craft seriously.
perhaps once i finish uni (in fuckass 6 years) i could make a decent portfolio and get a job as a character designer or something
I remember having to do a charcoal self portrait back in high school and I hated that shit.View attachment 8906353 View attachment 8906366
More charcoal practice. I've found that doing a quick smudge after the initial blockin helps make using dark tones less intimidating. Still experimenting to find paper with enough tooth to get the best effect, though.
I don’t think the source photos were too hard to draw. Regarding Lines and proportions. Shading and values, yes, I agree, not good. Model photos often have diffuse lighting to be flattering and don’t make the best source to learn from.Will add on to what @HerbertWest said, portraiture is hard but trying to draw attractive women is Dante Must Die mode hard, so I think you're making it tougher on yourself than it needs to be. Same goes for drawing children.
Especially the first photo you have, glamour shots like that intentionally have very little shadow to avoid showing age, so you have less information to help you when placing the eyes and nose. The bottom one is a little better since it at least has some shadow.
But I would definitely recommend trying to draw some old or even 'ugly' people. You'll learn more about the underlying shape of the face that way. It also helps you to be more confident; Drawing someone with a conventionally attractive symmetrical face makes even small mistakes obvious and it becomes very easy to hyperfocus on them.
At the end of the day it's the overall structure that matters. And don't feel bad, noone can measure easily from the start unless they're a human printer, and that still doesn't make them an artist.

