How much am I supposed to pay attention to studies as a /beg/ I started drawing like a month ago I want to make progress as quickly as I can but every single video just feels like "draw a circle, then finish the rest of the fucking owl. Buy my course btw"I don't want to be hardstuck as a /beg/ but these studies just look impossible to even begin with
>>7949647The bare minimum of hours you need to draw on a daily basis is about two.Before you do studies, you need to be familiar with using a pencil to draw basic shapes and forms. Spend a week doing lines, another week doing shapes, and then two weeks doing forms. Avoid chickenscratch and focus on continuous line drawing.The point of this is to build up a visual memory of shapes/forms and lines so the next steps are easier.For studies:>gesture studies (for ensuring your drawings have energy)>blind/semi-blind contours (to make sure you spend more time observing as you draw)>use photographs to draw from (I recommend line--of-action as a great resource for begs)>find photo references or print them out, then break them down into shapes and forms>observe references, then hide them and draw them from memory, then take them out and draw as you look at them>do still life drawings of spherical/cuboid household objects as well as models and toys>flip your reference upside down or mirror it, and then draw it>do thumbnail sketches of comic covers, movie posters, shots from film and TV, etc>draw with your non-dominant hand>do negative space drawings
>>7949663>>7949647If this sounds like too much, don't overthink it. The goal for you is to get into the habit of drawing. Consistency is half the battle.Here's what I recommend after a month of line/shape/form prep:>you do some simple step by step tutorials from websites aimed at kids or from YouTube videos. This will help you with the basics of construction and perspective.>do blind contours and gesture studies of photos from line of action (or any timed drawing site for that matter)Then for studies of whatever subject you're interested in, just follow what I laid out in the above post. For my own regimen, it's something like this:>draw my subject from memory several times from various angles>collecting references, then doing some quick blind contours and gesture studies before breaking them down into shapes and forms>observing the references, then hiding them and drawing from memory (then drawing while looking at them)If I'm using a live reference, I incorporate the marker drawing on glass method from Drawing on the Right Side of the Brain and do lots of blind contours.
>>7949697>>7949663After you do this for a couple of months, you're going to move on to copying from fanart, pop art, and movie shots rather than just photographs of animals or people or landscapes/buildings. If you want to develop your style, pick a few artists to copy extensively and blend their stuff together.