Thursday, February 27, 2014

10,000 Hours - Art

This sketch took about 5 minutes and is only about 3 inches tall.
I'm exhausted and not full of good words to write.

Suffice it to say that I feel like practice is paying off and that I need to keep practicing.

To that end, I will keep doing the following:


  • 10 30-second gesture drawings daily
  • 1 daily drawing from RedditGetsDrawn
  • One page of any drawings I want to draw in any style














I'd also like to get better at proportions so I'm going to add to that list:

  • One daily "how to" body/face/eye/nose/ear/etc tutorial.
  • Watch a drawing video tutorial daily.

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Brillig

I recently went on a quest to learn Lewis Carroll's Jabberwocky. I took it stanza-by-stanza, broke it down, and actually memorized it pretty quickly (in about a week) with quite a bit of work on my end. I was dreaming in nonsense words, waking up with the words "tulgey" or "frabjous" on my lips.

I still practice the poem just about every day; saying it once in the morning to make sure it has a firm home in my mind. I'm sure that, eventually, I'll stop having to say it every day but until I'm comfortable I'll still repeat it over and over.

Memorizing the poem made me proud. It's been a while since I've really worked my brain like that; it was nice to know it still works!

Now, because I've felt that brilliant pride, I've decided that I'd learn another poem. Laura mentioned that she's always wanted to memorize Robert Frost's The Road Not Taken so I'm being a jerk and taking her idea.

Interestingly I find that my brain wants to jump right into Jabberwocky as I try to remember and recite the first stanza of The Road Not Taken. It's like my brain is accessing the ability to memorize things but since I've only actively used it on Jabberwocky recently it goes right to that, forgetting its original goal.

I don't know. It's just strange. Meanwhile I'll be over here, resting by the Tumtum tree in uffish thought.

Saturday, February 22, 2014

10,000 Hours of Awesome - Music

I either made an awesome decision at 5 AM this morning or a REALLY awesome decision at 5 AM this morning.

On top of trying to learn guitar, and improving my drawing skills, I'll soon be learning the keyboard as well. I'll be using Synthesia to help me learn just like I'm using GuitarBots (and hopefully soon Rocksmith) to help me learn guitar.

Awesome decision, or REALLY awesome?  You decide!

Thursday, February 20, 2014

10,000 Hours - Art

Something kind of interesting happened this week.

One of my daily to do list items for the past few weeks has been to do 10 30-second gesture drawings, using Quickposes or Pixelovely. On Monday I found myself sighing as I went to do the exercise, questioning whether or not it was even worth it. 30 seconds was barely any time and besides it's not like this exercise was actually making me any better at drawing; it was just a waste of five minutes. Maybe I should try a few one minute gesture drawings instead of 30 seconds?

I decided that I'd do another day of 30-second-long drawings and I hit "start." I sketched out the first pose quickly, then filled in a little bit of detail. Then a little more detail. Then a little more. Then I looked at the timer to see if I had somehow hit the wrong button. 2 seconds left.

The next model was the same; the thirty seconds seemed to stretch longer and I filled out more of the figure than I ever had before. This continued for all the models I drew. The thirty seconds seemed to last longer and I felt like I was capturing more of each pose.

Strange. It's like practicing every day actually pays off or something. I guess I'll keep on going with this pointless daily exercise.

In other news:

Noses suck. It seems like noses are almost impossible to draw with lines (aside from just detailing the nostrils a little and leaving the rest blank) and you need to use all shading to define a nose properly. I hate them.

I hate them almost as much as I hate hands. Almost as much.

Monday, February 17, 2014

10,000 Hours - Guitar

My fingers hurt.

Typing this hurts. Especially every letter that I hit with the fingers of my left hand. Did you know that the letter "E" is the most commonly used letter and that you type it with your left hand? I am now acutely aware of this.

I've practiced every day this week except for the one day I stayed in bed so sick that I couldn't keep water down. I'm giving myself a pass for that day and I don't even feel a little bit bad about it. Aside from that day, I've been picking up the guitar in just about every moment of free time to practice my chords and my note reading.

I'm using a very old lesson book (Deluxe Edition Guitar Self-Taught Ed Sale Radio's Wizard of the Strings c1952) and playing around on Ultimate Guitar to see if there are any songs that I can play yet using chords or tabs. The book might need some updating; maybe something newer would be better, but it's what I have on hand and it's working just fine right now.

I wouldn't say, overall, that it's going well but I'd say that there has been progress. For some reason I expected to be able to play something cool by now and have it be recognizable, with relatively quick switching between chords or notes and no real mistakes. Not anything complicated, of course, but something simple and straight-forward.

I might have been a little ahead of myself in my head. That's okay; I'm always a hopeful person. I'm able to dial that back a bit and just take victory in the little pleasures, like figuring out that to switch between an Am chord and a C chord all I have to do is move one finger, not pick up my whole hand and place it back down.

By this time next week I have three main goals:


  • Be able to read all first-position notes on sight
  • Feel like I have made actual improvement switching between chords (smoother, faster)
  • Finish Lesson Book One (and find new book)

Thursday, February 13, 2014

10,000 Hours of Awesome - Art

Color is not my best medium.
This last week I've really focused on shading. I've done a bunch of other drawing as well but shading was what I wanted to get better at. I practiced continually, several times a day. Supposedly you need to practice things to get better at them, what's up with that, right?!

I'm particularly proud of the bottom sphere in this first picture here.


Noses, ears, and hair; my ancient enemies!











 I hate drawing noses.

And ears.

Aside from that I'm relatively happy with this picture here. After I drew it I decided that I wanted to play around with color a little bit and I like how it came out for the most part.

I'm particularly proud of the shading around the eyes in this picture and the proportions being mostly correct (except for the ears, ignore those!).
Please ignore the dancing cyborg.










 Some more shading work. I have a long way to go but I'm working on it. I think finding simple objects and drawing them quickly, then really focusing on the shading should still be a large goal of mine in the following week.

Shading is what makes a drawing look realistic, even if the lines aren't that great. It's a neat little trick to make a someone "meh" picture look cool, but only when done right.



I'm actually pretty happy with his nose.









One of the resources I've been using is Reddit Gets Drawn. People put pictures of themselves or family or friends, asking the community to draw them.

This is the first picture I put there that got a compliment. All the others have either been ignored or (rightfully) critiqued.

My heart skips a beat in my chest every time I post something up there; I know I'm new and that I have a very long journey ahead of me but I want to contribute too!

I pick a picture that inspires me every day and draw it. Most times I just quietly shrug, shake my head, and don't post anything but so far I've put up three of the portraits I've been happy with.

The one I colorized above is one of the other ones I put up; I didn't get any feedback on it and that's okay! I just assume when I don't get feedback that people are following their mother's advice, "If you don't have anything nice to say, don't say anything."

I'm watching a video on drawing every day and reading as much as I can. I then try to take those skills from the videos and put them into practice or at least keep them in mind as I draw.

It's a slow process but I'm seeing progress. I like that.

For next week:
~One "Reddit Gets Drawn" portrait per day
~10 30-second gesture drawings per day
~Watch one "how to draw" video each day
~Find nose tutorial

Monday, February 10, 2014

10,000 Hours - Music

A friend of mine loaned me her guitar a few months ago and I had every intention of learning to play. I had books all ready to go, time set aside during the day (Lois' nap time), and I was going to learn.

The first time I tuned the guitar, the high e string snapped.

It's taken me this long to buy a new string because I'm a procrastinator, even when I don't mean to be one.

Now that it's repaired, however, I've been practicing every day for a total of four days.

That's not a lot, but it's a start!

I'm taking it really slowly. Right now I've practiced the G chord and the C chord, switching back and forth between them and having the ability to put my fingers down correctly without looking at them. Whereas with my drawing I jumped in whole-hog and started trying to draw really tough things, I think doing that with the guitar would be a mistake; slow and steady is the key.

That being said, when I'm playing around I do enjoy going to Ultimate-Guitar and playing around with the sheet music that has tabs. Tabs are a way for people who don't know how to read music to easily and quickly learn to play a song on a guitar; the format's very intuitive and it's neat to be able to recognize a tune pretty quickly. Right now I'm most enjoying Dust In the Wind by Kansas. I can't play more than the first bar but it's still fun!

In the mean time, I'll be over here, hitting G, C, G, C, G, C over and over and over again. Maybe I'll get adventurous and throw in a D now and then. Whee!

Thursday, February 6, 2014

10,000 Hours - Art


I wish I had more to report here.

My big goal was to draw hands in the past week and I did that. I drew over 50 hands, ranging from 30 second drawings to full on not stopping until I was done drawing, drawings.

I still don't feel comfortable with hands (except maybe when they're balled up into fists - those are easier). They're awkward things at best. I know that if I just keep practicing I'll get better; I'm just getting used to the fact that I need to practice in order to get better.

As for making a watercolor drawing?

The first one I made, I used the wrong pencils and washing it with water only made a wet piece of paper and a very confused me. It took me a while to figure out how I had messed up.

The second one I made isn't even worth discussing at this point.

I think I may need to get better at drawing before I really start branching out into color. I need to learn shading, so that will be my focus this week.

My goals for the next week:


  • Draw 50 feet
  • 10 30-second drawings each day
  • One 10 minute drawing - focus on shading
  • Read about shading techniques

Tuesday, February 4, 2014

Early Riser

A long time ago I did a weird sleep experiment where I got up very early in the morning after going to bed fairly late. I made sure I got the six hours of sleep that my body tells me it needs to function well but I was going to bed by 10 and getting up at 4 in the morning.

Well, I was insane. Nobody wants to be up quite that early.

That being said, I am trying to make the transition to waking every morning between 6:00 and 6:30. Right now I'm on target with waking between 7:00 and 7:30 even without my alarm and today I was awake at 6:22, 8 minutes before I had set my alarm.

Why?

Truth to be told, I don't have a set good reason for it. I know getting up early means that I'm usually more productive but getting up at 7:30 seems to have been accomplishing that just fine for the past few weeks. I know that getting up earlier usually helps keep me in a better mood during the day but see the previous statement for why that doesn't matter.

Maybe a part of it is that I'd like an hour to myself? The little one wakes up sometime around quarter after seven most mornings or 8 at the latest. That means 2 mornings out of 5 I can do my showering, shaving, medicine and what-not as soon as I get up. On those other 3 mornings I have to wait; often until 11:30, which is her nap time.

Wait.

What that means, I realize as I write this, is that I want to wake up early so that I can take a shower.

Holy crap.

I'm a grownup.