How do you start with drawing?I know the main progress is just practicing over and over, but what are like, the actual starting places?
Look for an artist you look up to or a manga you really like, try to replicate the style that is appealing to you without tracing it.You failed? Try again.Try cutting the body into shapes that can help you guide your lines.You failed? Try again.Use references and guidelines to support the structure of your drawing.You failed? Try again.Draw along with people and learn by immitation and feedback.You failed? Try again.Keep drawing until you feel more and more comfortable.You failed? Try again.
Little bit of tracing, but thats okay when youre starting out, right?
finished this like an hour ago but i forgot to uploadopinions? is this good for a first time drawing?
>>799725Yes, you did a good drawing. What are you drawing next?
>>799716look at the sticky on /ic/. the first 10-15 pages or so are gold and perfect. >>>/ic/
in a nutshell, you start by using a reference.You should notice the proportions / relations while copying a few drawings, and develop a set of guidelines for construction. for example, you can usually fit an eye between the two eyes. You do like a million of these proportions, until you can construct an entire face and body in a way that is approximately correct.Please note proportions are like baby training wheels, if you were good you wouldn't really use them (though you probably should at least know them.), its only because ur beg you think about it constantly. Nothing you draw focusing on proportions is gonna look good. The part when things actually starts to look good is when you draw normally and focus on actually trying to make it look good. Most people are only taught to use reference, and yes reference is essential, but the ultimate goal of every animu/cartoonist should be to be able to make an entire drawing without using any references, you should be able to draw a cute girl (or whatever thing you're autistic about) from the front, the side, and a 45 at least from memory. While ref is a big part of being a beginner, learning to do without refs is where a lot of magic happens that actually makes you good. It forces you to understand things properly, because you literally can't draw without a ref unless you remember and understand the object enough. Its also practicing your direct practical application of your method, like its actually just very good, thats what I found when I did it anyways. I always draw without refs now constantly.Don't draw without a reference right away, baby artists need ref milk. If it doesn't feel like you're learning much from the references anymore, its a sign you should start doing no-ref. it sounds daunting but its actually quite fun to learn, i personally love it, its worth being brave for, not something you should sleep on.
>>799717So I have a question. I have an art style that I like, but I don't know how to create the same brush style in order to copy it.
>>800126Do you have an example you can post?
>>800135(technically AI generated, but I've seen art like this from people)https://files.catbox.moe/72ou69.png