May 11, 2011, 05:25 PM // 17:25
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#3
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Furnace Stoker
Join Date: Dec 2006
Guild: [Bone]
Profession: Mo/
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This site! I started drawing here and still here and still learning a lot
I've been drawing for about 1,5 year now, think I started in about oktober 2009, got my tablet in december of that year.
I learned a lot from dA tutorials. Though I never really work following tutorials or some sort of 'draw-along-with-me'. I always get an idea I want to draw, then go try it. If I get stuck somewhere, I go look up how others do it. Sometimes I google photo's, sometimes I go to deviantart, sometimes youtube, and I have some artists I really like that I try to 'steel' the style of. For example for muscles I'd like to end like how Kekai handles them, where other artists on dA have very inspirational faces or hands etc. etc. So most of the time I tackle problem by problem, see where it gets me and how I manage.
And feel free to post some of your drawings here, I'd like to see them Plus I'm sure a lot of people here would be happy to give you advices along the way. Sometimes you don't see something is off, forgotten or whatever, and others see this. After you get corrected (perhabs a few times) you won't forget it anymore! I've found it really helpful to post my process of drawing here, I always got wonderful advices.
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May 11, 2011, 05:28 PM // 17:28
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#4
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Academy Page
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: belgium
Profession: W/
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a slightly more advanced site would be http://www.conceptart.org/
but as mentioned before only practise makes perfect
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May 11, 2011, 06:57 PM // 18:57
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#5
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Jungle Guide
Join Date: Apr 2009
Guild: Eon
Profession: Me/N
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Deviantart is a good resource site as mentioned. There are no tricks, just practice and draw from references/real people (the latter is recommended and said to be the best way)
Quote:
am curious to know as well how long it took them to get as good as they are.
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I don't think I am really that good yet but I have been seriously learning how to draw about a year and 5 months. Started Jan 2010 when I got my wacom tablet. Before that, I just mostly doodled and really didn't have any intention to learn.
(I am going to use the same characters in the sample pics. Just noticed I drew them at different points in my drawing evolution lol)
I haven't drawn anything since 2003 but I found my sketchbook and I started sketching my Guild Wars characters around May 2009:
Then picked up a pen tablet to try digital drawing last Jan 2010. I also started looking for tutorials in DeviantArt.
I practiced a little more , looking at so many tutorials and applying them.
I also decided to take Guild wars commissions.You can find my thread here and you can see from the first page how I evolved. Commission ideas and constructive critiques helped me a TON.
GWGuru has workshops. I decided to join the Halloween one and the Canthan one. I didn't get extensive critique on the Canthan one because I submitted close to deadline. But I got a ton of helpful critique for my entry for the 2010 halloween contest. Here was my entry (my mesmer):
Also keep in mind that there's no single tutorial that you need to follow. You'll have to tweak them eventually and personalize the methods on your own. At least that's what happened to me.
Just been practicing since then and continuing on learning. I still got a ton to learn but this is where I am at right now in the first quarter of 2011. (My personal rendition of my mesmer and ranger. I haven't drawn them in their guild wars version lately)
edit - also below are the subject matters that have been most helpful for me:
Anatomy
Value/Tone
Color Theory
I still have a few that I haven't tackled yet, like backgrounds and perspective.
Last edited by Ravenhawk; May 11, 2011 at 07:44 PM // 19:44..
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May 11, 2011, 07:09 PM // 19:09
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#6
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Krytan Explorer
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: USA
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I group the learning process into 3 categories:
1. Tutorials (find, and follow, tutorials on sites like dA and CA.org) - I don't do this very much.
2. Observation (analyze the works of artists you admire, see what makes it so admirable. learn from it.)
3. Experimentation (pull out that pen and just start drawing, see what you can do!)
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May 11, 2011, 07:37 PM // 19:37
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#7
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Academy Page
Join Date: Apr 2011
Location: Bucharest, Romania
Guild: Cursed Swords Of Blood N Steel [BS]
Profession: R/Rt
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definately deviantart.com It's best place to learn imo. when i joined i was a total noob... but now i improved a lot ^.^ plus u make a lot of friends there too :P
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May 11, 2011, 10:20 PM // 22:20
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#8
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Krytan Explorer
Join Date: Nov 2009
Guild: BhLd
Profession: E/Mo
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As a continuation on Ariias tip about the 3 categories;
You can mix them while you learn to increase your understanding. You can observe how other artists draw something and compare it to a photo reference, then you experiment with how you've seen others draw it and how it actually looks and ask yourself "why is it drawn like this or that, which lines or shadows should be emphasized?".
It's always better to work with real photo references or observe things yourself IRL, but in the beginning it can be useful to see how more advanced artists to to help you on the way.
For more tips, look at this thread:
http://www.guildwarsguru.com/forum/a...t10380408.html
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May 12, 2011, 02:21 AM // 02:21
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#9
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Furnace Stoker
Join Date: Jan 2009
Guild: [SOTA]
Profession: D/
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Practice is definitely the most important. Tutorials are awesome and all for figuring out the basics of how and why things work together - but simply reading tutorials isn't going to make you good at drawing.
Also, don't get discouraged if it takes you a while to get the hang of things. I know I tend to get discouraged when I'm drawing, because for every decent sketch/drawing/painting/etc. that I create, I have several failures, or drawings that I'm just not happy with. It happens.
And don't be afraid to use photo references! They can be very helpful for figuring out poses and stuff like that.
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May 12, 2011, 03:26 AM // 03:26
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#10
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Desert Nomad
Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: In a van, down by the river.
Guild: RED ENGINE GORED ENGINE GORED ENGINE GORED ENGINE GO if I know, ask Lynette.
Profession: R/
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Drawing on the right side of the brain- Betty Edwards
Loomis figure drawing- Andrew Loomis
Drawing the living figure- Joseph Sheppard
Drawing realistic textures- J. D. Hillberry
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