Is it right to rewrite a first draft if it's story isn't finished yet?
it's what i do
it's why i've never finished anything
>>7712926
(well, not exclusively why)
no
don't do it
just power through and finish your story then go back and revise
>>7712924
It better be.
I wrote book, 447 pages.
Then decided to change small but critical detail at the beginning.
I am now at page 13 of a compete rewrite, that is borrowing a lot from the older draft.
>>7712924
>tfw wrote a large a large portion of a story while up for almost 96 hours straight.
>tfw haven't gone back and read it yet
I'm a bit worried to see what happened desu.
>>7713233
this guy - no revision, no editing, one big long scroll, wild as fuck and free
>>7713265
But first draft of anything is always shit, aight?
>>7713265
Vision and ability - if one is missing wait before you write. Or at least dont expect what you write to be good.
>>7713373
Horrible advice
You should always get started first and let an idea grow. Then revise.
Your way will just lead to anxiety
>>7713305
It's usually shit relative to how the final draft will be. It's not as though you would intentionally make changes for the worse.
>>7712924
Only if your first draft is written by hand and you make edits when you're typing up sections of it before you've finished the whole thing.
>>7713381
THIS is horrible advice.
>let an idea grow
Obviously, try writing anything of length without developing the idea as you go. I am saying if you start without vision and without at least an idea of the story you want to tell you will usually get a disjointed and abstract mess.
You should have high standards in your art.