This subreddit is reserved for those working through the lessons on drawabox.com, as explained here (which you may want to check out, as it's a free course that focuses on the core fundamentals of drawing). This post may be more suitable for /r/learnart or /r/learntodraw, but be sure to check their submission guidelines first.
For what it's worth, looking at your lists I would recommend that instead of separating them into now/later, you may instead want to separate them into "advanced concepts I'm interested in" and "fundamental concepts that aren't especially fun but are important" - then maybe split your study time into halves, and giving one half to something on each list.
Right now it seems like you're punting a lot of the foundational concepts to "later". While you should delve into the things you find interesting right now, it is important to understand that they're built on top of those less interesting fundamentals.
Uncomfortable
2022-04-20 18:15
This subreddit is reserved for those working through the lessons on drawabox.com, as explained here (which you may want to check out, as it's a free course that focuses on the core fundamentals of drawing). This post may be more suitable for /r/learnart or /r/learntodraw, but be sure to check their submission guidelines first.
For what it's worth, looking at your lists I would recommend that instead of separating them into now/later, you may instead want to separate them into "advanced concepts I'm interested in" and "fundamental concepts that aren't especially fun but are important" - then maybe split your study time into halves, and giving one half to something on each list.
Right now it seems like you're punting a lot of the foundational concepts to "later". While you should delve into the things you find interesting right now, it is important to understand that they're built on top of those less interesting fundamentals.