Your First Sketchbook
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- Опубликовано: 5 янв 2023
- This is from a new free lesson from Drawing Basics here on RUclips! A beginner's guide to sketchbooks and paper with lotsa juicy info about paper types, texture, weight, archivability and most importantly, how to avoid the common mental pitfall of sketchbooking.
For more information on Drawing Basics:
www.proko.com/drawing
#art #drawing #shorts #shading #howtodraw
Wish someone told me this as a kid
Same
Same 🙃
same
Same
Me too
This is the single most important point of advice that I’ve needed about art. Took plenty of courses, looked up books and everything but I would get anxiety touching pencil to paper because I wanted it to be “perfect”. Thanks proko!
break up the empty white nothingness of the paper and see the infinite possibilities and power that you wield in your hands.
Oh yeah!! I know that pressure.
Same!! I still struggle with it a lot to the point I don’t draw as much as I used to anymore, but I’m slowly learning
And that's pencil to paper....FORGETTABOUT using ink.
Yeah, I need to untrain myself that every time I draw it needs to be perfect.
That's literally the phase I'm at right now. I almost got intense anxiety over it until I just told myself, "Dude. You can literally erase any mistakes. Just draw, doesn't matter if it's ugly, no one's grading you." I've been drawing freely ever since.
Sharing this mindset with you
@@violetafk8091 you've got this!
Same. As much as I like aesthetic, I don't have the skillset and techniques yet to make good layouts and all that. So I like to make what I like on a page pop out and move on. Also using my book as a wip for other projects is great. Like if I'm making a card for someone and they like waffles, I just went to my sketchbook to figure out the colors ajd technique, thenbdid the actual thing. It's great cuz now my book is filled a little more, and when I look back, I can see my thought process and journey. Looking at it as a snapshot of my mind and process is more fun that being all pretty. Even writing notes and stuff. It helped me overcome that hurdle
@@ggundercover3681 I feel this so much. Wanting to rush into the aesthetician I crave to create but not having the necessary skills for it. Just as you said, slowly and with practice, we'll get there. The journey and process of developing our skills is just as important as achieving our goals.
Same but I don’t think “drawing alot” really works without understanding. I’ve been going through more than 8 sketchbooks in the last couple months (beginning this year) and although there’s some improvement, I really have to take the time to actually learn rather than draw blindly.
I burn through my sketchbooks pretty quickly, and the looking back on them is absolutely wild. You really get to see how far you've come
How many sketchbooks do you think you go through a year?
@@HeavenAboveRtas around 3-4 ish a year. I can usually get through a 120 page A4 sketchbook in 3 months
@@241Cookies__ Good shit. Myself, around 2-3 120 page books, at least this year.
I usually draw the human body, and just looking back at my sketchbook 5 months ago, I can see the improvement. It's Insane.
I just started drawing tbh so the improvement Is visible and clear, but it's still so relieving to actually see I AM getting better. And to think of the future where I am accomplished and can draw what I like and what I see, It makes my heart warm. If that makes sense.
Bruh I got one with 100 pages, last week and I already filled it 💀
@@god.usopp2yearsago115 Damn. Tbh, nowadays I've been filling in books fast as well, because my drawings have been getting bigger and filling the entire page, while they only take on usual around 10 minutes...
By the way, in that week or so, how many hours did you usually draw in a session?... Of course, if you even time it.
Remind yourself that it’s better to have a sketchbook filled with crummy drawings than to have an empty one. If you still have difficulty buy a pack of cheep printer paper and practice on that.
Naww man drawing on printing paper is wack
Better is a cheap sketchbook
itd be hard to keep those papers around for the coming years though, and your early art is precious.
@@user-wc1sq3op7u what you can do is get a hard folder and put those papers into that one and have a soft folder for those drawing that you really hate at the time so you still keep them. Meanwhile you have the better drawings in the hard folder that becomes like a sort of sketchbook that you can add or remove pages from easily.
THIS THIS THIS!! This comment resonated with me so much right now with my art block because of my fair of ruining it. I always draw better on loose paper, I don't know why I haven't thought of just buying a pack specifically for my art!! Thank you so much 🤗❤️
This motivates me to start drawing again.
DO IT!
Now I am motivated
Do it! Start drawing again. I did a couple years back and now I am painting both in acrylic and digitally.
Man I wish, perfectionism ruined it for me, I don't think I'll ever like drawing again
do it!! perfectionism is nothing in your sketchbook, go buckwild if it makes you happy
This was the sole reason why I’d give up on my sketchbooks almost immediately. Thank you. I wish I’d heard this sooner.
that’s why for my less serious pieces, i draw on grid line paper like notebook paper, it comforts me and tells me to not take it so seriously, it doesn’t have to be perfect.
Yeah lined paper is really good, especially since you arent just staring at a blank page then either, even if you only doodle in the margins
Pro tip: If you got yourself new sketchbook, and it feels too nice to ‘ruin’ (which for me it can, even though I buy the cheapest one that is fit for purpose that I can find), just go right ahead and scribble all over the very first page. Just absolutely destroy it. Bingo bango, it already looks like utter shit. Then when it’s got plenty of sketches in, terrible, decent, or otherwise, you can cover it up by sticking a title page in, if you want. Not necessary though. Especially when you’re just learning. Most of it really isn’t going to be good at all, and that’s totally fine!
Usually after I'm done with my drawing, sketches, character design I always wrote the date and year! So it'll help me realize how much did I improve each year?
@@mygod2529 Yeah, that’s usually what I stick over the scribble, which is why I do it on the first page. My last one was October - December 2022, so I decorated it with like pumpkins wearing Santa hats etc. I try to keep it on theme, and like you say, it helps keep track of my progress.
😂
I knew I'll get super anxious to draw on my new sketchbook so I went wild and crazy and drew all randoms which came in my mind and most of those were ducks ✨🦆
bingo bango?? bro u goofy
I only started drawing last year and it was digitally. Then I got some watercolors and a sketchbook to try traditional art and when I tell you I’m low-key scared of doing anything on my sketchbook bc I fear it’ll look horrible…ugh. I have to get over it at some point lol
JUST DO IT!!
Good luck! I don't know if this will help you or not, but this is not the only sketchbook in your life. Just imagine how good your drawings will be in the fifth sketchbook, the sixth, the seventh... You can track your progress later. I hope you succeed :)
It literally doesn’t matter if you make bad art. *No one will die.* Ironically this realization made me a better artist because I stopped putting pressure on myself
I used to draw in a cheapo sketchbook for pencil drawings and I also had this watercolor sketchbook that I was afraid to touch. One thing that helped me was using the watercolors on the cheapo super thin paper (I doubled up as well) so I got used to the idea of using the watercolors freely. And then I used the watercolor paper for swatches (or sometimes, I'd use them to freehand/sketch stuff) and then eventually I got used to water-coloring freely (but still using the swatches)
Comparing the colors to a digital thumbnail also helped me feel a bit better with feeling confident about a color.
Just go for it! Something I do that makes it easier to start a sketchbook is to just skip the first page and start on the second. I don’t know if it would help anyone else, but it certainly does for me!
Personally I cherish every sketchbook I get knowing I just filled my old one with drawings I can look back at one day and think "Look how much I've improved" just a happy feeling I get
Can you explain why that makes you happy? Cause to me; it just makes me angry and disheartened whenever I see my old stuff.
@@MikeMozzaroI get happy seeing how much I improved since those times, seriously though… sometimes looking at them does make me cringe somewhat 😅😅
During high school, life was kinda hectic, like every teen, countless quarrels with parents, confused in life in general. Keeping a sketchbook helped me easy my mind, I used to hang around at rooftops of different buildings in Brooklyn and draw whatever I was feeling, pages filled with stories from past, present and potential future. Good times.
I hope you still have at least some pictures of the drawings you made in that time.
That would be a cool sketchbook to see.
even better: my first sketchbooks weren't even sketchbooks, they were those freebie journals you get at events which definitely encouraged me to plough through and use as much paper as I wanted
Lol me too! I'm pretty young so that actually what I'm doing rn
True.
same lol
same, except my first sketchbook was a composition notebook, so i didnt think too much about making the pages look perfect
I’ve found in personal experience that using cheap materials of a lower but still usable quality takes a lot of stress and pressure out of trying to make beautiful art. Since you don’t feel like you have to justify buying or using your supplies it just becomes about making art. Of course, you can also mix and match, like maybe using a slightly more pricey pen that you know you like on inexpensive paper. Ultimately it’s about following the fun.
the advice I needed when I held onto my first sketchbook for a year and a half while barely filling the first 50 pages
Omg saammeee
SAME SAME
This is probably the best art advice anyone could ever get
you remind me of an old friend of mine. she was the sweetest soul ): she was the first person to ever encourage me, instead of shunning my artwork, for simply trying. had I ever drawn or painted before? no. did she praise me to high heavens? she sure did, and bless her for it. I’ve met far too many people that shame me over sketches I get so excited to share with them, as if it was some art piece I had spent 20hrs on and called a “masterpiece”. it hurt a lot - to the point I completely gave up. looking back, these were sketches I created within a minute, and just from shapes I could makeout from my scribbles. words like these are much needed, and I wish every child growing up could hear this )): I know I wish I had
"Even your silly doodles" ((Shows up amazing page))
Btw thank you. I'll make sure I fill those blank pages even if it feels silly
Exactly! Most artist i know have this fear of someone seeing their beginning works. Even though this one is saying one thing but he can't commit to it, thus expecting us to believe he's born this way. I've seen his sketchbook tours. He talks about same thing all the while showing only later works! Even though if one has always drawn perfect human from the very start, we all know we'd struggled with drawing an apple at one point in our life. Show us that and I believe it would make for a better advice
@@rishabhmayank thats true, a lot of people will have sketchbook tours but only show their later or more recent work, or ones that are only a couple years old when they are already at a really good level skill-wise. Nothing wrong with that, but, I want to see a "10+ year old sketchbook" tour dammit! make me feel good about having crummy sketches too!! lol.
@@pokaay3163 Same bud! I can give ya my sketch book tour.🤣🤣 and trust me it's horrid. Specifically in the beginning.. OF EVERY SKETCH BOOK!! i
He did say even those would be “good enough to show people.” So he’s clearly still proud of them.
I lost connection from this channel for about 3 years and suddenly he appeared in my fyp, it's so good seeing him, he's shining more than ever before, i really appreciate you.
Glad to have you back!
you read my mind. I was so anxious to keep every page beautiful. It’s time to accept the truth. Thank you Proko
I used to do this and what helped me was to get a blank large sketchbook or a display folder to put my favourite drawings in so I still had a book to present my favourite drawings
I never really had this type of anxiety when I started out.
but seeing other ppls sketch books how clean and organized they were it would be filled with good/passable drawings compared to mine which is pure chaos, unrecognizable sketches, and only one good drawing for every 5 pages.
I started to develop that anxiety and it even lead to me almost giving up on drawing.
but now I'm glad that,
that shouldn't be the case looking back at all my sketches and how much fun it was to draw, that's really all that mattered just enjoying myself despite that mess that is my sketchbook.
Honest question: how was it fun for you? *why* was it fun for you?
You say you look back and realise you find it fun even though you weren't that good; how did you do that?
2 Sketchbook art tips:
1) Keep a sketchbook that you WILL NOT SHOW ANYONE! It keeps you from worrying about having to make everything look perfect if you know nobody will ever see it anyway.
2) Before you start a piece, scribble on the page. You won't have the burden of needing every line to be perfect if the page is already imperfect.
Thanks for these 2 tips.I appreciate it.
Questions to each;
1) How does that work? Even if no one else sees it; you see it. And why wouldn't you be wanting to show everybody everything you do; what's the point of drawing if you aren't?
2) You mean like the entire thing? Or just like... a corner? Cause the only way I can see tha advice working is if you literally just ruin the entire page, but then I don't know how you're supposed to know if your doing it right.
@@MikeMozzaro, answer to each:
1) Most people try to do everything perfectly (even their practice/studies) because they're worried about what other people will say when they see it. But it's better to do many passable drawings as opposed to doing only one perfectly.
Also, most of my drawings I don't show to anyone else... I draw because I like it, not to please others.
The need to share everything you do is a pretty modern concept. People can't even cook a meal without seeking validation, but even the greatest painters of all time have unpublished art that was only discovered after their deaths.
2) Why would you think you have to "ruin the entire page"?
When you draw guide lines, they're hardly ever visible by the time you finish the piece. Just draw some light scribbles on the page. 🤷♂
@@RtAtelier Can't really comment on 2) since I don't actually know what you mean by guidelines so I'll just focus on 1)...
what do you mean by "you draw because you like it"?
I keep seeing people say this, but I genuinely don't understand how you can enjoy doing, well: *anything* if you aren't doing it to show other people and having them respect what you've done.
@@MikeMozzaro, that... sad.
I draw, I play instruments and I have many other hobbies that I enjoy doing; most people don't even know I do them.
You're basically saying that you can't enjoy doing anything unless you're able to show it off and get approval from others. If you were alone on Earth, there would be nothing that would bring you joy.
Your happiness is solely dependent on other people. That means if you wanted to do something (draw, for example) and others didn't respect it, you'd stop...
Needed to hear this, getting back into it for animation purposes and it’s really easy to be hard on yourself, especially if you compare. I learned to treat drawing like a plant you need to take care of rather than a competition with myself.
I love this, I got the advice in art school to not be precious with it, but for years since I have still struggled with being precious, wanting to make the most beautiful and original artworks. It made me procrastinate all the time and for years I stopped drawing. I recently started it up again a month or so ago, and finally have managed to take the pressure off myself enough to keep doing it and actually enjoy it!
Also, don’t be afraid to reuse pages. I have so many pages in sketchbooks that are empty or almost empty because I treated it as precious and didn’t wanna “ruin it” with a drawing from a different day than I started with.
I really needed this. I hardly touch my sketchbooks because I literally don't know what to draw. If I just draw whatever small thing randomly pops in my head I'll be doing a lot better.
I think that's a good idea. I have also started allowing myself to 'copy' various art styles and subject ideas and do them in my sketchbook using different mediums (think abstract pattern and mandala art, flowers in certain styles, etc) just to make my own version. Then at least I've made something and had fun, and it can help me develop my own ideas/skills/style. Even if it's 'easy' doodle-style art or something
If you dont know what to draw try sercing for those month challenges (ink-tober,mer-may itd). It gives you something to draw everyday. Doesn't have to be big like those influences make it l, just something to motive you to draw and use your creativity each day. Once you creativity starts it'll gradually get you motivation you need
where has this advice been all my life? Thank you, Proko.
I gotta admit, you made me feel a lot more confident with it! Why did such a short video change me so much-
Honestly, post it notes are a lifesaver for me in my sketchbooks. You can use them to cover up mistakes, cover spots where markers bleed through, and they come in a bunch of fun colors and shapes. Sometimes if I don’t want to carry my sketchbook out of the house with me, I’ll just keep some post it notes and a pencil in my pocket and doodle in that. Then if I have any drawings that I really like, I can stick the post it in my sketchbook. They’re such a nice tool to fill up empty space too.
I think sketchbooks are a grade tool to learn drawing for there ability to put them away and ignore them for ages, they are good to see progress and to get motivated. Also if you dont like it, the putting it away thing still works.
Nice video btw
This advice is far more valuable than people realise
THIS OMG. i still catch myself trying to be super careful on that first page of each new sketch book, and i always have to remind myself that its not all that important, and that I'm just doodling!
I fill out half my sketchbook, then I go back and fix the messed up pages. Carry on with my sketchbook once done and then go over the entire book.
It helps me be less stressed about my sketchbook’s appearance knowing I will later fix it :3
I recommend to write the date your drawer a piece!
off topic but i see that flag in the background of your pfppp ok i was just gonna say “i like it” but that felt weird but what i just said may have been weirder.. IDK HOW TO CONVEY THIS BUT YEA I SEE IT AND ITS COOL🧍
i needed this two years ago. i remember tearing out pages of my sketchbook just because it didn't look "perfect" and as aesthetic as other artists online.
The ONLY art advice u need from RUclips. When I was a kid I used to dump sketchbooks with only a few drawn pages but came to realize that a good piece comes after a few bad ones.
ive thrown away some of my oldest sketchbooks, but im thinking of keeping mine now, it's almost finished
I draw nonsense and dumb stuff in some of my sketchbooks and practice drawing anatomy and other stuff in it especially drawing thumbnails for an art project or character design,
exploring tons of possibilities in the sketchbook is one way to have a fresh mind and improve faster,
thanks for the very helpful advice many people really needed it.
me sitting here like 11 yr old me didn’t just go head on with (frankly childish) fanart after getting my first sketchbook like there was no tomorrow 💀
I’ve been trying not to put too much pressure on myself, I’ve come a LONG way as a self taught artist and I’m ready to start a site
I'm on book 11 and this still helps to hear. Thanks a ton!
good advice, i have a “just for fun” sketchbook that i use to practice with different parts of the bod
and the occasional funny looking doodle that i draw in
to draw good takes time, and while I know im not quite there yet, i know that i will be there at some point in the future
This is exactly what I needed most in this moment, been struggling with art because I am always so ashamed when it comes out not as good as I’d like, but the only way to get better is to keep drawing and not be afraid to have lots of ugly drawings 💪
How do you stop being afraid?
@@MikeMozzaro kind of a leap of faith, you’ve got to let yourself appreciate your failures. Know that every drawing you do will boost you towards being a better artist, even the ugly ones. I’m sorry if I can’t be of much help, but remember that everyone improves at their own pace and ugly drawings are part of the process
@@mojonel And no advie on how to get into that mindset? Cause honest I just look at my ugly drawings as proof that I'm moving at the wrong pace when other people are doing it right.
@@MikeMozzaro honestly I don’t have much advice for that, it’s kind of something you have to come into yourself. I can assure you that your ugly art doesn’t mean you’re not improving or moving in the wrong way. Every artist improves differently and at different paces, so don’t sweat if it takes years to become comfortable with your art. Best way to improve is to watch videos to learn anatomy, color theory, rendering styles, and find art styles you like and attempt to mimic them until you eventually start to fall into your own art style.
@@mojonel Annoyingly easier said than done...
tbh: I actually don't know what I'm more jealous of sometimes; the fact that people like you are good at art; or the fact that you have this mindset that I don't know if I can ever truly have.
this is exactly what im suffering from , ty for telling me that others deal with the anxiety too
This is so true!!! Nobody has to see them and even if they do, it'll be really inspiring to see how hard you're working to get better. I honestly find it more inspiring seeing an artist struggle with drawings than to see it almost perfect. Idc, I would love to see wonky hand drawings and trashy proportions. Keep practicing no matter what for yourself.
This is why i love proko educational content with humor and dynamic it dosen't get long and boring even the demos or 1 or 2 hours podcast videos,etc it's always fun to watch and entretaining
My art teacher poured his coffee onto my new sketch book and said that if I fill every single page with doodles before the end of class that I'd get an instant A.
Me when the sketchbook cost $20: 😀
It took time for me to accept this. But the more I DON'T worry about it, the more I am loving it!
I had a friend in my junior year of high school that always told me “No artist makes bad art, people are just judgement” and I agree. Art is meant to come from the heart, it’s a way to express yourself, and everyone is different, all our art can’t be the same, and always just keep going you won’t get better without practice.💕
Something else that can help with gaining confidence to draw in a sketchbook is to start cheap and work your way up. Even just doodling something from the Dollar Store (or a cheap sketchbook that's easy to get on sale at your local art store) can help prevent viewing your sketchbook as too-fancy-to-draw-in.
Even with some of the fancy sketchbooks I have, I've often come back to using a ballpoint pen or pencil with cheap printer paper quality materials sometimes. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Exactly!
Couldn't agree more with this 🙏
I have like so many sketchbooks now from all the way back from highschool and there's some really ugly stuff in there from different points in time. Sketching away is so relaxing tho.
I love this because he gives real advice instead of just saying to practice
Yes! I've noticed that whenever I'm not overthinking it and just drawing for fun, my drawings come out looking way prettier than I expected and when I do overthink it, they're bad (or not as good as I wished they were).
This is something I really needed to hear lately. Thank you.
I took to drawing on napkins, paper towels and on a white board to avoid getting too attached to my drawings. It pushes me doing this to draw for fun. And to think, really think about what I'm doing when putting the idea down.
Then, when I draw on loose paper or in a sketchbook, I'm more relaxed and comfortable with drawing whatever ends up in my sketchbook.
this is such a great idea! i'll be using this thank you :)
That’s why I always keep the first page blank I always go back once it’s filled and do the best I can on that page it truly shows how far I’ve come
Nobody could have explained it better, so you know, the best thing to do is to forget about the result and feel free, in your skecthbook there are no good results or bad results, only steps towards improvement, happy new year to all! I hope your art reaches the stars
I like your comment
sigh... I got into this video far too late..
I'm on my third sketch book.
And yes, I did treat my first one ✨preciously ✨ That I even hide it somewhere that I don't even remember. 💀
My second one is still with me and I treated it completely opposite from the 1st one 💀 from thick to thin, and got many scribbles cause of my younger siblings.
Now I'm on my 3rd sketch book, I'm treating it in a neutral way.
A journey of learning, It was a fun experience.
After filling a sketchbook, I always cut out and paste my work into 'multimedia collage books'. Layering pieces I adore with simple sketches always looks fantastic, and then I have a "sketchbook" which is more of a portfolio to show off. I collect stickers, stationary, and pretty/sentimental scraps of paper for it too! It's like a visual journal, one that looks more like those beautiful "zero mistake" sketchbooks many artists post.
It also saves a LOT of storage space over time! 😅
This is amazing advice, and I think it is applicable to most styles of art not just sketchbooks! Im getting into miniature painting and looking at it this way gives me much more confidence
Ladies and gentlemen, this is the reason why we can't fill out those pages in our sketchbook 💀🙃 Wish I've heard of this advice sooner.
The waffle house has found it's new host
The Waffle House has found it’s new host
Oh my god bro
Ahh hell nah bro wtf men
This is seriously some great advice for aspiring artists like myself. Props to you. 🤘
I'm so happy that I'm hearing this right before starting a new sketchbook after flling all my old ones with anything but sketchs because my first art teacher always told me to not focus too much on sketching.
In the end it didn't help me at all so I'm happy to hear this right now
The Waffle house has found it's new host.
The Waffle House has found it’s new host
omg, I just bought my first sketchbook yesterday, thank youu!!
I number mine! Highly recommend doing that but also adding when you started a sketchbook and when you ended it. I wish I had done that😅
I've never heard this advice before, but was always given similar advice that "practice makes perfect" and "better to draw something terrible than nothing." It's a sketchbook for a reason, because you're sketching out ideas and not everything will be perfect since some are likely only going to be preliminary designs
Best advice ever. I even buy just standard notebooks to draw in because I know I can always buy more
i was surfing through internet how to make my sketch book beautiful... but dude, u opened the portal of reality 💀
i watched this video awhile back, and it got onto my fyp again. this has made me make my art so much better and it doesnt feel scary to draw anymore! i couldnt recommend this more!!!
Glad to hear it!
That's What I have been searching for THANK YOU A LOT
This was actually kind of a relief yet, especially the last sentence 😭 I was honestly wondering if I was wrong to just be scribbling out crap on my pages with the occasional fully colored character(s). That last sentence and seeing that pile of sketch books was like a weight lifted off of me
This was the best advice I’ve ever gotten, thank you so much!
Draw like water is a saying that’s helped me when I overthink or start rushing a doodle
Love to see your first and latest sketchbook
Thanks for saying I can't draw something beautiful yet, I'm still fighting myself over letting go of my anxiety and worries of not being able to draw good. But I think after not drawing for about 6 years old due to my worries, it's time to finally let myself enjoy the process of learning how to draw
I’m a eleven year old artist and I’m really glad I heard this! I’m a perfectionist when it comes to art but this made me realize, it’s fine if it’s not the best and cleanest art. I’m still learning! And this took a lot of weight of my shoulders. Glad I heard it now! :)
Took me awhile to finally throw out some of my old sketchbooks. It was amazing though when I finally did it! I never enjoyed looking back on some of those old drawings, and it was just a hoarding thing because well, i thought you should keep any and all art, then I learned that no, i dont have to keep them if i dont want them
Literally so liberating !!
I learned this when i got into journaling. I watched a few videos, and one tip was to use a pen instead of a pencil. This caused me to be a bit scared when writing because i didn't want to mess up. But over time, i learned not to care. Now, when i draw in sketchbooks, i dont have a problem.
I used to draw so much, now that I've done it for a while, i have a routine drawing schedule. I draw one complete art piece in the evening
Thank you for the adviceee ❤
i'll really take this into account, i'm a starter and many times i get overwhelmed with messing my sketchbook, thanks
thanks, i was needing this to advice me on art, i use my old agendas and books from school to draw, so i dont need to worry about needing to make them precious :D
Thank you… I’m 62 and started drawing g four years ago… I draw a lot, but lately I’ve been getting depressed at being unable to capture the face I’m trying to portray. I get close, but I just can’t ‘stick it’, unless I use a picture, measure carefully, etc. That makes it easy. But I want to see something or someone and draw it. Like it is.
Thanks i was just starting a mini sketchbook!♡
Things I learned about keeping a sketchbook:
1) Size matters. My go-to now is a pocket sketchbook. Before, I had these huge sketchbooks that I never filled, and I hated them for all the empty space. Even now, my pocket sketchbook is crowded. That's the way I like it. Go with the size that feels right to you.
2) If you don't like a messy sketchbook, but also want it to look orderly, pre-plan the layout. I use a comic book style in mine. I draw the boxes and then fit anything I decide to draw within them. It keeps everything nice and tidy. (I'm like the kid that doesn't like their food touching, but with art. Lol)
3) Learn while you draw. We can all tell what we need to work on. A sketchbook is the place to try new things. I've been using pen only in my pocket sketchbook. It's been teaching me to think about what I'm drawing before I draw it. I'm also learning more about Values and Shading. Learn while you play.
4) If you're OCD (like I am) about bad drawings, you can redo pages. A page is never completely ruined unless you tear it out. There are methods to fixing bad pages. The post-it note method, gluing a piece of paper over it and drawing again, using the previous drawings' lines as part of the new drawing. I've redone many pages in my sketchbook. There's no permanent mistakes in art. Get creative with it.
Keep drawing everybody! It's not just for show if you don't want it to be. Just draw for yourself and draw what makes you happy. 😊
I made a drawing that at my skill level I would consider beautiful and to reduce the stress I took the absolute goofiest photo known to man of it and it helped a lot
I just bought a couple of new sketchbooks and have started a new ritual. The first page, I draw the silliest thing that immediately comes to mind. Really helps my expectations when I open it up and the first thing I see is a scratchy drawing of aliens abducting a cow.
A tip I saw. If ur having anxiety because of the blank page. Scribble on it then draw on it
The fact that i’ve been doing this for 4 years MAN i really needed to hear this thank you
Just bought one on a whim because I kept seeing doodles and sketch's on IG and thought I'd give it a go. I've started just doodling and assigning each page a "theme" like plants or faces and Its been fun so far, anytime I think of something too draw I can draw it down and eventually surround it with other similar drawings and hopefully end up with a book full of fun collages
He’s spot on with me treating every page like it’s precious 😂. The thing is, I feel for me it’s not about perfection but rather getting the most value out of the book lol, so that’s y I feel like every page should be a spectacle
Thanks for saying that! I needed to hear this!!!
This is something I had to figure out over the years. I use to want all my drawings to be perfect and that really took away from me just enjoying drawing. I’d get a few good 1’s in a sketch book and then have a page I’d mess up on and it legit use to make me not even touch my sketchbook again after that, but now that I’ve gotten over that hump it’s better and Ik even if I make something I don’t like there’s always a chance to learn from it or go back over it and change things. Most important thing to do is draw every day. Even if it’s something simple and eventually you’ll see your art look the way you wanted. I say “wanted” loosely because as an artist we always see something we could’ve changed, added or just something that needs some more
Mann…That’s really needs to hear every artists…so quality content PROKO🖤✨
Thanks Proko! Now I can draw on my sketchbook with ease and comfort!
It's so true. Don't judge your ideas before you've had them.
Just wanna say this and your hundreds of other videos have really helped me instruct my grade level students a lot more. The middle grade students especially struggle with crippling perfectionism so I’m gonna use this tack with them today. ❤
I'm happy it can help! Good luck with the teaching!
Did it work? And if it did; can' you try and explain it to me how to overcome pefectionalism?
The perfect message to drop on my feed, thank you !
You are 100% correct, I have so many drawing pads that are filled with art.