Stop being a lazy fuck and work on your art, animation and storytelling skills so you can get into the industry

Stop being a lazy fuck and work on your art, animation and storytelling skills so you can get into the industry

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I'm trying, Batman, it's just that I feel not very confident about my skills right now!

if you work hard you will be confident

Trying to draw humans

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Something about it reminds me of short films made by college students that'd play at festivals in the 90s

My confidence seems to boost when I find myself in a groove, but I feel stuck in a rut and so does my confidence.

Think of if you fail. Imagine the future where you give up and never get into the industry. You should be terrified of that idea if animation truly is your passion.

Drawing humans has always been hard for me. That face was the best I got from following advice from /ic/. Started drawing around Jan and only recently checked out the board.

for me, I'd say I'm best at drawing humanoid characters but my anatomy's kinda shit so that's what I've been working on.

>get into the industry
I have integrity, I will not sell out!

This.
Is getting into the industry really worth it? A lot of creators seem to lose any personalty they had when they join it.

Tried drawing some model's

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How do I work on my storytelling skills, other than by sitting down and just writing whatever comes to mind?

Whose talking about selling out? You want to get good so that you can make something you'll be proud of amd everyone else can enjoy.

From what I can gather, it's less about your skills and more about how good you are at communication and networking with people, both of which im terrible at. I can barely keep in contact with my friends.

>anatomy's kinda shit so that's what I've been working on.
artistsnetwork.com/art-techniques/beginner-artist/drawing-anatomy-for-beginners/ I followed this and my humans improved by a margin

Thanks, I'll check it out

>work on your art, animation and storytelling skills so you can topple the industry
The industry is shit and needs to be fixed. Only you can do it.

Reading. And there's plenty of videos on YouTube about storytelling. Try looking into Filmento to start out.

I don't know if that wavering sense of confidence ever stops. I've heard of long-time professionals still having bad days where they just kinda forget out how to draw or nothing seems to be working. Imposter Syndrome is persistent.

Take solace in the fact that the feeling comes and goes, and over time, the self-doubt becomes less and less frequent. But steel yourself, because it'll eventually come back. And you'll only have yourself to get through it.

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So where can I work on my storytelling?

>get into the industry
But I'm not a trans black woman

yet.
God might just cast some black woman to play you

>so you can get into the industry
But my dream is to live in a cheap state and live off of seven porn commissions a month.

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Any and every waking chance. Day off today and I'm working hard on my comics

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Not a big fan of this one but whatever, also college has been keeping me busy, that plus anxiety/stress has been keeping me from drawing more. God i hope this corona shit will be over soon, i wanna go back to drawing cute axolotls without having to worry about having to do a shit ton of homework or the world literally burning

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Great!

So I have this wacom for some time now but I've never extensively worked on it, I find it awkward to moving from pen and paper to it. Are there any tutorials about how to make the transition?

You just have to practice. Digital feels different and in my experience never quite the same. I still draw pencil and paper as well as digitally.

Getting started on a digital piece is always harder for me but polishing it up easier. Also harder together smooth lines on digital compared to pen and paper.

Anyway just practice. You can't tutorial your way out of the weird transition but once you've done s couple pieces itll get better

But Batman, Im too depressed, can you give me uplifting words plz?

Try and doing drawing exercises that you would usually do on paper, also dont be afraid of using correction when actually drawing

To those who study it, how do you approach learning the human anatomy?

The dream

>114580185
First thing I've drawn in weeks.
I'm a nurse so I actually got more work than usual.
Super frustrating pprocess as a result, but it's better to light a candle etc.

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