finished ych - girl with flowers
by Baranorgi
Peace and friendship!
2 years ago
Finished YCH for 
I spent about a month creating this art, maybe a little less. And usually I was very worried about spending too much time creating digital art. It may take me a couple of days or several months, always in different ways and I warn you in advance how much time it will take to draw.
So, I was thinking about the fact that for customers this expectation may be too long and people are not ready to wait for months for one drawing. But.. Creating this digital illustration with a girl holding a vase of peonies in her hands, I suddenly realized why it is so important for me to maintain my pace of work.
When I first started drawing this ych, it looked COMPLETELY DIFFERENT. I'm not afraid to admit that the work used to be different and its vision was different, elementary, MY DRAWING SKILLS WERE DIFFERENT.. And, thanks to the fact that I allowed myself to rest and take breaks after each stage of creating digital art, I could analyze my own mistakes and immediately correct them.
As a result, when almost a month had passed since the start of work, I looked at the art and completely reshaped the girl's face, because I finally saw what was wrong.
And I finally became grateful to myself for allowing myself to rest in order to see the next day what I had not seen before and be able to change it. I finally realized that I've been drawing for so long only because I want to perfect the drawing so that when I finish it, I won't be ashamed of my skills.
I dedicate this post to every artist who worries that he paints for too long. Everyone has their own pace of work and this is normal! And I especially don't want to speak ill of those who are able to draw full-fledged art in a week or even less, because I'm capable of that! There were cases when I drew in 5 days.
The point is rather not to scold yourself for your pace of work, but to look for only advantages in it!
I hope that this will be more clear to customers now.

I spent about a month creating this art, maybe a little less. And usually I was very worried about spending too much time creating digital art. It may take me a couple of days or several months, always in different ways and I warn you in advance how much time it will take to draw.
So, I was thinking about the fact that for customers this expectation may be too long and people are not ready to wait for months for one drawing. But.. Creating this digital illustration with a girl holding a vase of peonies in her hands, I suddenly realized why it is so important for me to maintain my pace of work.
When I first started drawing this ych, it looked COMPLETELY DIFFERENT. I'm not afraid to admit that the work used to be different and its vision was different, elementary, MY DRAWING SKILLS WERE DIFFERENT.. And, thanks to the fact that I allowed myself to rest and take breaks after each stage of creating digital art, I could analyze my own mistakes and immediately correct them.
As a result, when almost a month had passed since the start of work, I looked at the art and completely reshaped the girl's face, because I finally saw what was wrong.
And I finally became grateful to myself for allowing myself to rest in order to see the next day what I had not seen before and be able to change it. I finally realized that I've been drawing for so long only because I want to perfect the drawing so that when I finish it, I won't be ashamed of my skills.
I dedicate this post to every artist who worries that he paints for too long. Everyone has their own pace of work and this is normal! And I especially don't want to speak ill of those who are able to draw full-fledged art in a week or even less, because I'm capable of that! There were cases when I drew in 5 days.
The point is rather not to scold yourself for your pace of work, but to look for only advantages in it!
I hope that this will be more clear to customers now.
207
Views
0
Comments
5
Favorites
General
Rating
Category
Sub-Category
Species
Resolution
File Size
Artwork (Digital)
Human
Unspecified / Any
1626 x 2266
3.51 MB
FA+
