06-12-2015, 05:27 PM
That's a relief to know! What I'm trying to find is a good compromise between what I'm comfortable doing and what you guys considerĀ as acceptable art skills, so knowing that I can use an eraser and different stroke styles certainly are two big steps in that kind of direction.
Now then, here's what I scratched out based on those realizations. The one on the far left is another sketch I drew today, while the central one is that same sketch altered in a way that looks a heck of a lot better. Are you guys pleased with this style for sketching Paper Mario parts?
By the way, I tend to zoom in on these parts to give myself plenty of room to make broad strokes. It's a little hard to do that without making a mess, so I was thinking of maybe doing unrelated images on the fly to practice bigger strokes. Since they tend to be very messy at this point, you're mostly going to see a bunch of unconnected lines and sketchy circles and ovals instead of any specific images. Is that fine?
Now then, here's what I scratched out based on those realizations. The one on the far left is another sketch I drew today, while the central one is that same sketch altered in a way that looks a heck of a lot better. Are you guys pleased with this style for sketching Paper Mario parts?
By the way, I tend to zoom in on these parts to give myself plenty of room to make broad strokes. It's a little hard to do that without making a mess, so I was thinking of maybe doing unrelated images on the fly to practice bigger strokes. Since they tend to be very messy at this point, you're mostly going to see a bunch of unconnected lines and sketchy circles and ovals instead of any specific images. Is that fine?