Hello from Melbourne
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@JeanW welcome back! What did you get passed the frustrated resentment phase? I'm an absolute beginner and often struggle with so many things that keep my drawings from turning out the way I had envisioned. Not being stuck in an 'i'll never learn it mood' and fear of failure is an ongoing struggle. Happy for you that you've found your love of it back. Looking forward seeing you develop your work!
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@Chantal-Goetheer @Chantal-Goetheer Thanks so much Chantal! I think the key is to be patient and not to be too tough on yourself - I've been trying to do that. I think it's wonderful that you've taken it up as an adult. It's a bit like learning a language I think - things start to make sense and gradually you can get your point across more easily. Just got to trust that over time what we're imagining in our head will come out more clearly on paper or the screen. Jake said something in one of our zoom sessions which stuck with me 'the magic is through hard work.' I'm looking forward to seeing your work evolve too!
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Welcome! I read through the entire thread and everyone here echoes so much of what I am experiencing as we all have our own inner battles and experience setbacks... I can say for sure this community is the best I've seen and I've grown so much since joining SVS last February, I will tell you the most important thing is to not give up. Jake is right, the hard work is the key. I sleep and breathe and fume over illustration. Not a minute goes by where I'm not thinking how I can try to do better, communicate what I am feeling and to demonstrate the fundamentals from where I stand and I hope to be the best I can be. That's pretty much the nuts and bolts of life for us as artists, in the sea of incredible art, to be unique yet honor our own masterpiece in the making. It's not easy sometimes, yet I have found in the last week how much I appreciate this forum and the beauty of each one here, even though I can't personally comment on each post, I see how much value is here.
Anyway, a long reply for you Yes get your IG going, if you can... it helps to have an ongoing evolution that's somewhat visible for your own observation and also understanding the value of networking and collaborations, as long as I don't rely too much on it IMHO... that may change with the speed of tech so a website I feel is important too! This one I am working on and is an ongoing project...
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@ArtistErin Thanks so much! All such good advice and ideas. IG - yes, absolutely a good idea. So far I only have one new finished piece - the Kamari piece. Otherwise it's all just sketches but I should start it up with that one piece and go from there I guess. I have a website for design and illustration although the illustration is very old and I'm no longer sure it's what I want to show.
Small problems though! -
Hi Jean, I’m from Melbourne too I’m out in the east, in the Dandenong Ranges. I’m finding it difficult to have anything constructive to say on the topic unfortunately — because I’ve been making art now for so long — but one thing come to mind.
I loved the quote from Jake you shared, “The magic comes from hard work”. And I can attest to the hard work, having spent the last year trying to bring my work up to a professional level. I would just temper that with — it’s supposed to be fun Looking back, I think the only way I’ve been making art consistently for the last 15 or so years is by playing, basically. Playing with different mediums, different techniques, different substrates. I think getting the balance between hard work and play right is important. Those fundamental courses are great but I’d sprinkle in a few “just for fun” courses too. The fundamentals are like eating your greens There are so many out there. I love SVS but look on Domestika and Skillshare too. You can get a few really cheap (I don’t know how the content creators on there make any money!) And then there are nerdy art things that I love doing, like making watercolour swatches or mixing a mixed media limited palette grid or researching pigments and what mixes you can make with them! This is what I find fun but obviously for you it might be something completely different. Honestly I’ve gotten so much joy from spending hours and hours doing these simple things — even writing about it makes me happy
Welcome to SVS Jean Hope you enjoy this beautiful day (finally!).
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@Katherine Hi Katherine! I'm also in the outer east, Croydon. To explain it a bit more: When I took up graphic design, I just stopped drawing. I just focussed on learning new design skills and building my design career. I had some sad/mixed feelings about leaving art/illustration dreams behind but I'd been working in admin for some time to support the illustration and graphic design offered a creative job with steady income. Once drawing/painting was no longer a habit, I became so rusty that I found it hard to get enjoyment from it, was dismayed by what I was producing. Eventually it turned into a pretty big block! But art has meant so much to me, like all of us here, that I had to bring it back into my life.
Funny thing is I feel like I've matured into some wise old owl or something during the CB Pro course because I'm finally a lot more chilled about it all. Just enjoying learning and discovering drawing again without the heavy expectations and judgement. Which is the whole point of it all. Jake's phrase about hard work I found more reassuring than anything. A little nod to myself 'keep going, you'll figure this tricky part out' or 'don't worry, it's not what you want it to look like, but you'll get there, just persist!' Lee also had a great line about doing the absolute best you can (for a finished piece) at that moment in time. Give it your absolute best shot. If you've done that, that's all you can do. I love that too. Kind of freeing and challenging at the same time.
The good thing is that now my design career is solid, I'm pretty quick at it - just get the design work done and then I'm free to get back to the illustration, which makes my day so much more fun, much more deeply rewarding. I'm doing a fair bit of looking at wonderful illustrations, watching YouTube videos on painting in Photoshop, systematically trying out Photoshop brushes, SVS Learn course stuff, whatever takes my fancy! Thanks again for the nice reply and suggestions. Beautiful day! Walked the dog early to avoid the heat
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Hello! I actually have a similar story. Before 18 I was drawing or making 3d art rather consistently. At 18 I had to decide what to do with my life and went into sciences and programming. 14 years later, I decided that I couldn't continue living without doing everything I could to become a all-round illustrator that could draw anything.
So it's been 1 years and 9 months that I draw consistently, ~4-7h on Thurs, Fri and Sat, and 1h otherwise. My progress has been chaotic because I had no idea where to start and I wanted to learn everything! I have tried so many different online resources, I failed at so many things, I got so many wrong turns and missed a lot of shortcuts I am sure. But I realised that there was no way around it, to try to become a all-round illustrator was going to take longer than to specialise into one topic (e.g. drawing female faces, drawing muscular males, etc).
My greatest achievements is that 1) now, drawing is part of my life again and 2) I have a better idea on how to improve and how to organise my learning.
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@Geoffrey-Mégardon Great to hear from you. Yes, very similar. It's funny how pleased it makes me to hear that you are now drawing. I had almost given up - was trying to be content with a relatively pleasant life where I really wasn't following my deeper creative dreams. Eventually I realised it simply wasn't enough. I wasn't at all content about it! Now I just want to improve as much as I can and see where it takes me. It's great that a lot of us are on this journey together.
EDIT: I've just realised that we did the CB Pro course together? Is that right?!
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@Jean-Watson yes, this is right Nodragem is my discord name!
How are you doing now? I am trying to work on a portfolio, now that all the Christmas and New Year things have passed. -
@Geoffrey-Mégardon Hi! I'm well, thanks. Back doing my design work and fitting in illustration study when I can. I am currently working on an illustration commission - got it a bit sooner than I was anticipating and so it's taking a fair bit of time!