15 May 2024, 17:43

@matt_gallagherrr Thats a rough place to be in, where you have thrown everything you have at it, and the pros (clients or critiquer) say “nice rough draft, excited to see the finish!” But it happens for everyone who wants to be serious in art, and you are approaching it with the humility to fight through it and figure out “finished”.

There is a creative podcaster named Andy J Pizza who goes into this a lot on his podcast because a similar moment was the turning point for him. He graduated from college and immediately got approached by his dream client, but when he sent in the finals they said “these roughs look good, excited to see the finals”…..
he had to go on a journey after that. He talks about it a lot, but here is another episode that i would recommend

Something that really helped me when I was struggling with this question at the end of college was this quote from artist/teacher robert henri (i read it in this book The Art Spirit, which is a collection of the advice and critiques he gave his students) he said something like: “if it isnt finished in the begining, in the sketch, it will never be finished”

Its daunting, but also comforting for me to think i need to spend 98% of my effort getting the base correct “finished” completely worked out, setting myself up to be able to really finish the piece.

Another thing that really helped me when working on my own first dummy after college (my own manuscript) was to go to the library and pull like 20 childrens books off the shelves at random and then read/study/absorb them all. At that time was trying to figure out how i could make the finished spreads (fully rendered ones) look like they were done. It was a style question really bc i want to draw flat characters but i cant get away from perspective and realistic lighting in the environment and it always felt off for me. In looking at so many books i found an artist who somehow managed to do it beautifully and he has been my north star ever since.

When i submitted that book dummy to the scbwi critique event they told me (everyone) i like the story, but i cant tell if i like your art…..

That was so helpful for me, because it gave me an idea of how dialed in my first dummy has to be since i havent published a book before. Right now (1 year later) i am working through another pass at that dummy so i can submit it to publishers who allow unsolicited submissions.
In the time between then and now i took time to do some self discovery, a master study of that book i found at the library (my north star), and i made 13 coloring pages involving my main character and his family and friend. That has been the biggest help because i got practice drawing him and now i have a pretty good idea when ive got the face wrong and how i can fix it.