Homework

Once you've completed a lesson, one of the best ways to refine your understanding of that material is to help others by critiquing their work. After having done thousands of critiques and having improved immensely over the last few years, I can attest to that myself.

  • 250 Box Challenge

    dkb868

    This submission has been submitted for official critique
  • 250 Box Challenge

    Omertoso

    12:28 AM, Wednesday May 8th 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    Silence

    9:02 PM, Wednesday May 8th 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    huss77

    2:27 PM, Wednesday May 8th 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    ThinkTwice1020

    12:42 PM, Wednesday May 8th 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    Ma_Sa

    8:17 PM, Sunday May 5th 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    Bartalba

    7:34 PM, Saturday May 4th 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    dvoykin

    3:16 PM, Saturday May 4th 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    Kangaroo

    11:26 PM, Friday May 3rd 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    anyahch

    8:47 AM, Friday May 3rd 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    Itsuka

    4:11 AM, Wednesday May 1st 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    tamagaft

    9:22 AM, Tuesday April 30th 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    manasseh

    9:40 AM, Friday April 26th 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    jamzoltan

    5:29 PM, Monday April 22nd 2024
  • 250 Box Challenge

    Layman29049

    8:32 PM, Sunday April 21st 2024
The recommendation below is an advertisement. Most of the links here are part of Amazon's affiliate program (unless otherwise stated), which helps support this website. It's also more than that - it's a hand-picked recommendation of something I've used myself. If you're interested, here is a full list.
The Science of Deciding What You Should Draw

The Science of Deciding What You Should Draw

Right from when students hit the 50% rule early on in Lesson 0, they ask the same question - "What am I supposed to draw?"

It's not magic. We're made to think that when someone just whips off interesting things to draw, that they're gifted in a way that we are not. The problem isn't that we don't have ideas - it's that the ideas we have are so vague, they feel like nothing at all. In this course, we're going to look at how we can explore, pursue, and develop those fuzzy notions into something more concrete.

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