>>29176
shit dude, this is too much for me, i'm reading this in a catatonic state; i do enjoy improving a lot, and i try to keep at it more and more, i like to vary up poses, try new angles, taste a bit of everything per say (which, again, can be reflected on my art) and i don't try to draw the same pose multiple times unless i'm running low on ideas or the pic is basic, what i'm trying to get at is that when i improve, i try to keep myself up to that new level i've achieved, sure, i reached it in an unorthodox way (i literally just sit down and think "i wanna try this out" and just do it by eye and instinct), and though i'm glad people buy art from me, i guess this makes me understand why there was a piece i always felt was missing, why i spent a couple years feeling like there was something wrong, like the shape of the heads, or the proportions of the torso or the way the butt connects to the thighs.
thanks anon, i'll...keep this in mind, i have some comms on the backburner so i think i gotta churn those out before i can get to try this out, but...fuck man, i just feel like my entire world is upside down.
>>29181
i totally agree with you anon, in fact, it's something i've always done, i know my style is super simple, and i like it that way, not out of stagnation but because as of late i've been really happy with the content i've been drawing, i used to look at my old art and think "this doesn't fit, this needs to change, that goes, this stays", i fixed a bunch of self-created issues like drawing necks too thin or torsos being super long, or hell, drawing constantly mirrored and then trying to apply a 3/4ths turn camera angle way back in the day, that's why i keep trying new poses, settings, lighting and the stuff of the sort, i think stagnation breeds lazyness, and then the ego comes to reap what's left.
i will personally agree on one thing, i do think that drawing anime is like selling your soul to the devil, but not in the sense of "haha i'm the best artist ever now", but rather hinging on the fact that you're kneecapping your creativity to learn a bunch of hyper specific rules and end up drawing something that is going to be conventionally appealing, and eventually you're just gonna be another raindrop in the sea, and that's something i've learned in my architecture classes too, how learning the rules to something is going to limit your creativity, instead, you have to learn the basics and then pull back before you get too comfortable with the shit you're doing.