Showing all 14 replies.
>>
>>
>>
>>7932443
>Draw a bunch of boxes at different angles
>ask:
"Was that easy for me, or kinda hard?"
>If kinda hard:
>Draw more boxes
>if easy
>Do something else
It's not complicated, drawabox pitches you really grind lines and boxes, if those are a struggle for you, they're probably both worth your time, even if you don't go with drawabox to practice them.
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: 1583092280455.jpg (536.9 KB)
>>7932424
Assuming you want to learn from a course in the first place (your post is vague).
The first question one should ask before taking up a course is: do I like the instructors work? If you do, then by all means, look into it. Pic related for reference of Irshad's work.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
File: loomis.png (351.1 KB)
>>7933111
>>7934551
>do I like the instructors work?
Understated advice, more generally Your work will approximate whoever you study +- a bit of personal taste and you fucking it up.
EG picrel, If you draw a lot of loomis, you're gonna get loomis-like results. Is that good? If you're a /beg/ probably, if you're trying to draw sexy porn, probably not, if you like his style, definitely.
Study stuff where you're like
>FUCK if I could draw like that I'd be so happy
because you're gonna be drawing like that
>>
>>7934551
You should take all advice here with a grain of salt as you cannot verify their artwork. However, in my post I was specifically referencing public facing art courses.
I've noticed this when browsing art subreddits. Go into any subreddit thread for people looking for advice, and go into the post history of people dishing out said advice. You'll quickly realize that a lot of the time, the people who give out advice draw like absolute garbage.