« Reply #9271 on: October 19, 2016, 05:33:28 AM »
Discouraged by my technical deficiencies as an artist, but determined to improve!
You must be BRAVE!
I must deploy aspie perseverance!
Combined with an aspie eye for details.
I had a go at that for a while (a few years, in fact). A friend of mine (who was a professional artist) gave me some really good advice: work exclusively in monochrome at first, so as to focus on the patterns of light and shade, then bring in the colour once you've masterered that (or as near as you can be arsed).
Apart from that, getting your work looked over by a trained artist , on occasion is really, really, really helpful. That saves endless agony trying to work out where you're going wrong for yourself.
That sort of depends. I prefer pencil but that's because I don't have the patience for anything else, but some people seem to have a natural talent for colour and so you could learn about proportions and light in colour just as easily as in black and white.
But for people without a obvious choice in that department, I'd say the advice is sound. I'd also add that it is a good idea to learn about the technicalities as early as possible, from anatomy to perspective and so on.
God, the technical stuff is a big barrier. I haven't gotten much better since grade school really.
I was advanced for my age, but I've stalled. I hate feeling incompetent, so I avoid doing things unless
they're easy to master. That's going to be the great regret of my life unless I get over myself!
Logged
"I'm finding a lot of things funny lately, but I don't think they are."
--- Ripley, Alien Resurrection
"We are grateful for the time we have been given."
--- Edward Walker, The Village
People forget.
--- The Who, "Eminence Front"