>you havent drawn for a week
>improve anyways
>>2956517
>been drawing every day for a year
>barely improve
>>2956517
>play trombone
end up better at drawing
None of these things are surprising. Sometimes you need a break and that helps far more than grinding does. Also, doing different kinds of art makes you think about all of them differently.
>>2956517
It's one part not seeing your own work daily and thus not being too harsh on yourself and one part study not always being about practical drawing and about literal study. You can visually study something and learn from it without ever drawing yourself, and can remember to apply that knowledge naturally as you do draw the next time.
>>2956670
This is how I've improved, I barely even draw but I read so much about drawing and my head is filled with knowledge now
>just think about drawing
>make it
>>2956517
I'm really harsh on myself when it comes to my work. And this also happens to me. I don't understand why.
>>2956670
I do this extremely often to make up for the fact I draw less these days and I'm still improving very much
>post your work
>>2956517
>Watch porn all day instead of drawing
>anatomy improves
>>2956549
You should get out of your comfort zone more.
Or you're breddy gud already, so you won't have significant improvement.
You only improve when you draw with thought. Paint with thought.
"Doodling" makes you worse.
>>2956517
The power of the spark, OP. We are blessed.
>>2957046
>"Doodling" makes you worse
I doubt that. It may not improve you, but make you worse? Anon, please.
It would only make you worse if you had previous experience and were studying art and then abandoning it. And even then it wouldn't be the doodling that made you worse, but the abandoning of proper pactice.
Shitty redline btw.
>>2957046
"doodling" is good for composition and QUICKLY understanding what you are naturally drawn to in art (subjects, shapes) helping define your personal approach and therefore define you as an artist