Science can't explain it!
@Nezchan One great piece if advice I got was to get a ream of legal size paper and a bed table. I can tilt it up and draw well into the night, right until I fall asleep
@cypnk Yeah, I run into kids that are like "I wanna learn to draw, but I can't afford a tablet yet." Like seriously, if you're just starting to learn you don't *need* a tablet.
Get yourself a big pad of newsprint and a soft pencil and start learning 3D shapes. Doodle on anything. Learn to effectively make marks before you invest in an expensive piece of equipment that will just end up in the back of a closet if you don't stick with it. Buy that crap when you know you're hooked on drawing.
@DistroJunkie @Nezchan @cypnk take out the drawing-specific language and this is how I feel about all skills
@rook @DistroJunkie @cypnk Basically, yes. The problem with drawing (or writing or painting or music) is that it has the idea of "talent' wrapped up in it. And that turns a lot of people's minds off so they don't think "this is a skill you can learn", and that's a damn shame.
@DistroJunkie @Nezchan @rook @cypnk
There is an old saying I love: "Hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard."
@Nezchan @RussSharek @DistroJunkie @cypnk I should probably clarify that the thing I'd latched onto most is perception.
once you've developed your perception, the whole thing gets easier, whatever it is. and without that, it will certainly be hard forever.
@RussSharek @DistroJunkie @rook @cypnk
That's a good one. The myth of the "talented", "inspired" artist rising above is harmful to newcomers to a creative medium, because it holds up good artists as special and Not Like You. So if it doesn't come natural to you from the start, you might as well give up on it. Which is terrible.
If anything, all talent does is put you a little forward on the starting blocks, but you have to run the rest of the race yourself.