Practice Makes Perfect…
- Categories: Galleries, Manga
- Date: Jan 10, 2011 09:06 JST
- Tags: Artists, Character Design, Comparison, Illustration, Image Gallery, Moe
The 10 year progress charts many Japanese artists have lately taken to creating demonstrate perfectly the adage that “practice makes perfect” – and provide more than a little encouragement for aspiring artists to hang in there and keep practicing, as mastery may be as much a matter of perseverance as of talent:
Some of the artists featured clearly started their charts at a high level of skill, but even here modest improvements are evident, along with some quite interesting changes in style.
Others have risen from crude doodlers to popular artists in the same period, though elsewhere certain notable cautionary tales abound as well.





































































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Dead or Alive Ero-SFM Doubly Dirty
Flying Witch “Cute But Boring…”
Phantasy Star Online 2 Phantastic: “What About the West!?”
Shounen Maid “A Fujoshi Delight”
Terra Formars Live Action Web Drama Announced
Dragon Quest Heroes II Quite Monstrous
KumaMiko Lovingly Innocent
Aqua Onahole Parody Hopefully Moist
A-Size Classmate Profusely Petite
One Day With Maria Raunchy & Romantic
The Reject Demon: Toko Chapter 0 Raises Its Voice
Hai-Furi in Troubled Waters
Star Fox Zero “Pandering To Kids!”
Kiznaiver Shares Its Pain
Love Live’s Koi ni Naritai Aquarium PV “Will Sell Thousands!”
Skimpy Kataigou Figure
Ellen Baker’s Illustrator: “Keep It Clean!”
Bullet Girls 2 Goes At It From All Angles
Sword Art Online: Hollow Realization A Real Grind
Koutetsujou no Kabaneri Immensely Gruesome
Goddess of 2ch “Another Bathing Beauty!”
Tantalizing Hestia Cosplay Busts Out
Kashiwazaki Sena Cosplay Pure & Innocent
Minami Kotori Casino Girl Cosplay Takes No Chances
Shimakaze Cosplay by Ema Sakura
Harley Quinn Cosplay by Miyuko Colorfully Crazy
Sonico Ero-Cosplay by Yuka Hoshikage Super Sexy
Kasugano Sora Bunny Girl Cosplay Absolutely Admirable
Goddess of 2ch: “Barely Legal Beauty!”
Highly Yuri Tenryuu & Tatsuta Cosplay by Garo & Usagi
My drawings like a crap right now, but seeing this motivates me :3
Then you have to practice about 10 years.
look at pic 49...he was good from the start lol
and rofl at pic 11
1st pic... 2006 snapshot.... upper right corner......................................................
SEPHIROTH!
A decade of my life... thats a quite a sacrifice.
Those who just watched the Ah(Oh) My Goddess anime from 2005 or later should look at volume one of the manga. Has more of an impact for me compared to these images. It'd be interesting if Oda gets a bump like this, but I'll gladly ignore it since it'll probably ruin his work pace. Toriyama is sort of like Nishimata, but it hardly matters if you're printing moola.
I imagine a lot of those artists had other responsibilities to take care of…unless they are NEETs or Hikikomori. If you dedicate a good portion of each day to learning how to draw then just replace the 10 years with 10 months.
Real effort.
This is a nice change indeed.
If I end up with no work after studies I think I might pick up drawing. :O
From trash to quality work. Hardwork really pays off. It feels better after seeing this.
Yeah it GMH
Just like watching a caterpillar morphing into a beautiful butterfly... and fap fapf fap fap :P
No. 51 Evolution of Kemomimi
What's the deal with No.37? It looked good from beginning to end?!
I FEEL INSPIRED!!!
I actually could do something like this but I haven't got 10 drawings from 10 different years & no one would probably ever want to see them anyway so...
But no, these are some talented artists, too bad a decade is far too much of ones life to put into simply getting better at drawing, but is definitely worth it if 1 should decide to do such a thing, this reminds me, I should really get to drawing that Kitsunemimi I planned to draw a month or so ago...
I actually could do something like this but I haven't got 10 drawings from 10 different years & no one would probably ever want to see them anyway so...
But no, these are some talented artists, too bad a decade is far too much of ones life to put into simply getting better at drawing, but is definitely worth it if 1 should decide to do such a thing, this reminds me, I should really get to drawing that Kitsunemimi I planned to draw a month or so ago...
Awesome article. Sankaku, you've made my day!
However... It seems some of the charts are for teh LOLs... ^^;;
My two-years-old second son managed to build his first lego robot today. So it means he would be able to make the prototype of RX-78 in ten years, no?
too much pratice for too much perfect
Hand drawn style != Computer drawn style
Then so be it.
my drawing skills are pretty good, but since i'm color blind they will never get good in color. i still color oceans purple and grass orange sometimes. lol. manga will have to be the way for me.
@TheBeast
Apparently I also have partial color blind for blue and cyan, which actually not bothers me much, above all I still prefer monochrome and detailed art
don't forget, ahego = win
It's nice to have this change once in a while
I think ZUN needs to be on here :3
I want to see Tony Taka's and Ishikei's progress charts.
me too ^.^
PIC NUMBER 11 MAN! He/she draws better than me from the start
I wish my progress was like this. But instead of getting better, it gotten worse....
uhh....
i wonder how the beginner (manga) artists lived through 10 years without good salary.
You have things mixed up. First you draw till your craft is good enough to be published, then you try to make a living out of it. Not the other way around.
Wow, this is nice!
This article really encourages me to practice more!
Thanks SanCom!
Human potential is limitless, it's beautiful to see learning displayed so perfectly.
I kind of had the same level of mid-speed progression of artistic skill as well. Though I kind of started on a higher note since gradeschool since I was the only kid mixing colors before many other kids.
And man, even though I have some confidence in my skills, I am TERRIFIED of born-naturals. You can tell some of the artists just had a ton of potential starting out of the gate. Maybe even scarier, those who improved drastically just astounds me.
That is a load of bull. Your art reflects how much you devote yourself to it. Everyone has the same initial potential. It's all about how much time and effort you're willing to invest into your craft. Of course, influences matter a whole lot too. But I believe there's no such thing as talent or born-naturals.
That's not true, I'm pretty sure a natural talent for drawing exists. I've known a kid of around 12yo that could draw really beautiful portraits, even though he didn't especially train or practice for it.
Though of course, people like that are in the vast minority.
...
But yes, talent is only one thing. Real drawing prodigies are probably rare, and most of us that want to acquire some decent drawing skills will have to rely on practicing.
It could be someone inclined to art as one is to music or are simply quick learners.
Take this story for an example:
In my freshman year i drew almost as in seventh grade (bad but still better than). Worse I was a repeater due to illness. I hateed how my art looked. So near the end of the school year I noticed no change as i drew almost every day. Before summer vacation, I sat in a classroom with a stack of paper in front of me and drew. When I finished my drawing of my first charcter (My Mary Sue at the momment) I noticed the change in the eyes, the detail in clothing, and the body proportions were better (but still needed work)
I knew a crtic and his friend. The critic made me feel bad as he would compare his talent to my hard work. His friend also had the critic on his case. The friend and I practiced and helped eachother and got better. The critic though talented felt he no longer needed to improve and quit.
Long story short: talent exists, but you need to practice no matter how far you are of others.
This kid's natural talent for drawing is likely the ability to really _see_ things as they are instead of how the brain perceives them to be.
I'm gonna go ahead and guess that this kid's good drawings are portaits, still lifes, aka drawings from life. And, if some of them aren't, he's likely using heavy reference.
Part of what it means to become a competent artist is to develop an "artist's eye" and "see things as how they really are". It's difficult to put into words, but I'll try.
For example, two people are given the task of drawing a stack of CD's. One is a beginning artist and the other is advanced.
The beginning artist would likely draw the stack of CDs one by one, meticulously lining the edges of each CD. As a result, you get a stiff and awkward tower of CDs that probably looks more like a badly drawn building.
The advanced artist, on the other hand, would recognize the shapes and forms from the stack of CDs, picking out clusters of organic shapes to put on paper. He'd take into account negative space surrounding the stack of CDs and by the end of his drawing session, he'll have an accurate rendition of the stack of CDs that would have feeling/thought and thus be interesting to look at.
The kid is obviously in the 2nd camp.
However, what most of the people here on this comments section want is to draw from imagination, draw with little reference, caricature (as anime/manga simplifies and exaggerates anatomy) and that is a whole different battlefield and I'm sure that 'naturally-talented' kid you talk about would have a difficult time with that.
I think a lot of these are from artists in their twenties, so the worst of their drawings are during child/teenage development.
Not too true. From about 10 years old onwards, inexperience has practically no correlation with age.
Looks like practising my crappy drawing skills might actually pay off some time in the future :D
And THEN I will create my own Kuroneko... :3
11 is very adorable.
It was easily the best one. Made me laugh. :)
Draws better than me by far. T_T
thats one hell of an article ^^ thx artefact
I'm still on the level 1.
Hope I'll move from this spot,because I am too lazy :P
hmm not sure what to think...
This actually discourages me as it seems like it will take forever to draw that well
@viewtifu1
don't be discouraged. if you have a good teacher and practice almost every day you can cut that time into about 2 or 3 years. in fact, when i was really serious about drawing about 6 years ago i was better then than i am now... lost my touch i guess. eh, drawing doesn't pay the bills, i am focusing more one the writing. hope this helps.
Lolno. There's no way you can cram 10 years of practice into less than a third of it. It'd be cool if that was possible though.
anon@3:05
you are right about condensing 10 years of hard practice. i will give you that. but the intensity of practice and the natural talent can compensate for the time. i will use a reference on this page to help illustrate my point.
picture #1 from their first picture is about what my drawings looked like when i started. after 2 years mine looked better than her year 10 pictures, minus the color.
after about 5 years my pictures looked like #33 2009&2007 pictures. not quite photo realistic, but you knew exactly who it was without needing a hint.
oddly enough the only reason i got into art in the first place was so i could draw cool lowrider cars like all the cool kids in class. i still cant draw cars without looking at them.
grid drawing helps you see what is there rather than what you think you see. this will also help with details.
We don't even know how much the artists displayed in this post practiced in daily basis. So, it's stupid to assume it's impossible.
Practice is important, but drawing mindlessly will never let you improve in the same rate as someone who can experiment new styles and learn from their mistakes. A good tutor also helps.
Besides, learning how to draw is also something closely related to one's ability to perceive objects.