You're exactly right in your description, it starts out as basic blobs of paint/value and refined until the forms emerge.
Art books? I've bought many over the years, all of which have gathered dust on my shelf and never served any real purpose other than a visually interesting form of inspiration and a way of looking cool to girls observing my bookshelf
Here's something to contemplate: You know Craig Mullins? If you don't, you'll most definitely recognise his work from FF The Spirits Within, Marathon, Halo and so on! Anyway... He didn't start drawing until he was 23, seriously! Just compelled to study illustration and learn forms. Shunned by the Art Centre lecturers and pushed towards other subjects he eventually ended up one of the best artists of our [digital] age. Inspiring, eh?
One of the drawings above was done over three layers so thought I'd save them out for you to see another step by step, side by side.
Sometimes I'll only use one layer and have nothing of any real interest to save out.
A comparison...
Everyone can use a pen to write? Everyone has a different writing technique? Yet it's still legible?(in most cases)
That's the way I look at it. Same applies to drawing. Look at LanceCrossfire, his work is lovely and refined with careful brushstrokes in the right place. I'm as messy as anything. What ultimately matters is value, shape, forms. How you achieve those are irrelevant but it's still nice to practice and take in all varieties of techniques to improve! To me, my way of working is just far quicker and more effortless. Everyone is different
Art books? I've bought many over the years, all of which have gathered dust on my shelf and never served any real purpose other than a visually interesting form of inspiration and a way of looking cool to girls observing my bookshelf

Here's something to contemplate: You know Craig Mullins? If you don't, you'll most definitely recognise his work from FF The Spirits Within, Marathon, Halo and so on! Anyway... He didn't start drawing until he was 23, seriously! Just compelled to study illustration and learn forms. Shunned by the Art Centre lecturers and pushed towards other subjects he eventually ended up one of the best artists of our [digital] age. Inspiring, eh?

One of the drawings above was done over three layers so thought I'd save them out for you to see another step by step, side by side.
Sometimes I'll only use one layer and have nothing of any real interest to save out.
A comparison...
Everyone can use a pen to write? Everyone has a different writing technique? Yet it's still legible?(in most cases)
That's the way I look at it. Same applies to drawing. Look at LanceCrossfire, his work is lovely and refined with careful brushstrokes in the right place. I'm as messy as anything. What ultimately matters is value, shape, forms. How you achieve those are irrelevant but it's still nice to practice and take in all varieties of techniques to improve! To me, my way of working is just far quicker and more effortless. Everyone is different


