Mindset / Workflow - A
> Start a canvas with a structured, thoughful sketch
> Spend hours and hours, days, weeks on a piece, do long-ass elaborated works
> Care about the current project you work on, don't want to lose it
> Have an idea, an image in mind; try to lay it down on canvas
> Hit the canvas with thoughtful, slow, almost perfect, strokes
> Ctrl Z and erase every third strokes, work on multi layers, at least five
> Think that abstraction tends to ruin a piece
> Try to use as few brushes as possible, usually work with one or two
> Try to show good anatomy, values and perspective their work
Mindset / Workflow - B
> Start a canvas with a quick, rough sketch
> Spend 4 hours top on a piece, do "speedpaints"
> Don't care about your project, could dump it anytime
> Try to see an image, an idea through the smudge you put on canvas
> Hit the canvas with quick, random, yet, somewhat "stylish" strokes
> Rarely Ctrl Z or erase, work on few layers, often just one
> Think that abstraction is beauty in a piece
> Try to use as much brushes as possible, work with most, if not all of them
> Try to show good colors, designs and storytelling their work
> Which one relates to you the most ?
> Which way is the best way to learn, improve and git guud ?
How about work flow c
Spend all their time pontificating about inane shit instead of practicing or working for the sake of believing they are some sort of deep complex soul who thinks they see the world and art in a revolutionary way without realizing that different situations call for different work flows and most artists can do both when they are exposed to different mediums.
>randomly start painting shapes based on no sketches whatsoever
>play around until something interesting happens
>for 20+ hours try to make it work as a piece