This might be a personal thing but I struggled a lot with blurry and messy paintings for a long time (up until recently!). This video explains it better than I can: And start with easy subjects (rocks, old trees etc). And small sessions is infinitely better than nothing. Missing a day here and there is OK but try building a habit. Try to draw some study from references (life/photos/both) every day. Just draw! It sounds so simple but this is the very basis. If you are a complete beginner, start reading and doing the exercises from the book called "Drawing on the right side of the brain". Well, I can give a few pointers on what helped for me at least. What i should learn in order to create beautiful and colorful digital landscapes? Lines, shapes, perspective, composition, color theory? For example i feel i'm not interested to learn how to draw human figure for now. I think this can be a good start path to follow, but sometime i feel lost and i would like some suggestions on what i should focus and give more importance, always related about landscape digital paintings. I'm thinking to follows also the famous lessons, drawing always with drawing tablet. My idea is to take this course, because i read the content and to me seems very interesting for who is approaching digital painting, considering also the price that for my point of view is very good (less that 15$). I will finish this course in one week and i have to decide what's the next step. Is good to take confidence with the main tool to use and i'm enjoying it. I have many doubts on how i should approach it, considering i'm in love for digital landscapes, and that's what i would like to specifically learn and paint.Īctually i started following a course on Udemy for Krita software, and i'm founding it extremely helpful. Actually i have a cheap but good drawing tablet (Huion new 1060 plus), and i'm approching this new great hobby. I read many topics related to the subject, and i got many useful informations thanks to Reddit. Hi guys, newbie on digital painting and drawing here. Question on how to proceed in the learning path Great videos on shading and drawing skin.I never finished the whole thing but the first few lessons helped me transition from drawing on paper to digital drawing. This course is the only learning resource I bought (on sale) (besides some drawing books my parents gave me when I was like 11).I actually only started doing digital this year. I think learning how to draw on paper before moving to digital art is critical, but that's just what I did.(There's other good stuff on that site too, I haven't read much of it though) this is a good article on how to use references. DO NOT feel bad/guilty/"cheating" for using references! Everyone uses references, even professional illustrators!! There is no reason you should have to try to imagine how to draw, say, a hand from some particular angle without finding a reference picture of that angle or taking a picture of your own hand.I think learning how to break things down into shapes will be what helps you feel like you could draw things from any angle. This is the concept that made the biggest change in my drawing ability when I first grasped it. Simple Art Tips is my go-to site for explaining drawing concepts to beginners.Ok so here are a couple of things I have used and some tips:
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |