Please never draw again./thread
Your dragons are pretty awesome!I would stick to touching them up tbh.Good work
Thanks.My current project is a dragon that will have armor plating with the nailed together design from the helmet, some spots with scales showing, and some parts of the dragon will have the design that was on the knife blade. It will be the most work I ever put into a drawing. Already got a couple hours on it and not very far.
How about this: you keep drawing like a boss and I'll stop drawing before I go blind from the shame.We good?We good.
Your turn.Anyways, keep working Cowpie. Take your time with the drawing, too.
Keep putting one foot in front of the other and you'll get there! Although, what I might reccommend you try, is taking a look at something out of real life, or a photograph, and seeing if you can copy what you see.I think for a lot of people who want to draw, there's this allure to draw what they come up with themselves. But the thing is, very few can ever do it at the start. They don't have the right skills and comprehension to take what they see in their head and copy it out onto whatever media they do it with, without it looking off.However, that doesn't mean the approach you're taking is wrong. Everybody has their own way of doing things. I remember a girl back when I went to school, she loved dragons. And everyday without fail she'd draw pictures of them. And, naturally at first they weren't very good, and she got a lot of flak from people.But I saw something she made a few years later and let me tell you, those days spent drawing like an obsession worked for her. She is damn good at making cartoon characters and she's refined how sharp she is with a pencil that she can take a cartoon and make it look like the creator drew it themselves.So, so long as you keep it up at a reasonably steady pace, you'll get there. One foot in front of the other compatriot.
I've never tried something that I see... I will try that.
You just need to practice.My eighth grade drawing had several hours spent on it and that's all I could do.Now I could probably do it in 20 minYou just need to practice your skill to get good
OP is 5
I remember a quote from somebody a while back, very relevant to drawing."You need to know the rules to break them."This is very relevant in fact, because no matter what you make, you first have to understand how something would work in reality. And only then once you have a thorough understanding of the rules of real life, can you bend them as you please.