![]() ![]() This never happens to me, because I have more ideas in my sketchbooks than I have time to draw them all. ![]() You can then develop these ideas on the subsequent pages, and you’ll have that entire creative process always available to you whenever you want to look back on it.Ī lot of young artists often whine how they “don’t feel inspired” and “don’t know what to draw” and they need to look for inspiration outside themselves by looking at other people’s art. Inspiration strikes at the oddest moments, and you need to honor it and note it down. ![]() Sketchbooks are convenient because they’re in a bound book format, and you won’t lose anything like you might if you had loose papers all around. The only caveat: you actually need to have your sketchbook with your in order for it to work (more about that later). The reason is quite obvious, I’m a visual person doing mostly visual stuff and noting things quickly with a sketch is the most efficient way for me to record the idea and understand what I meant by that later on. Sure, there are many ways you can store and keep track of your ideas especially with cloud services (I wrote a post about storing & managing your ideas), but sketchbook is still my #1 way. Now, what’s so special about sketchbooks? Here are my top reasons why they’re awesome. I got another mini spiral bound one to carry around with me at all times. I found a very cheap notebook with crappy, thin paper and that was my first sketchbook. This continued into college and I figured I might as well carry clean papers around to draw on, instead of using my class notebooks.īut after a while I figured keeping track of all the loose sheets of paper was hard, and I should really get a notebook where I’ll store all my clever ideas and doodle like there’s no tomorrow. But I always doodled, especially during boring classes so my notebooks were always full of creepy creatures, organic patterns and women wearing fancy dresses. How I started using sketchbooksĭuring high school I wasn’t much into drawing and painting, so I didn’t have any art supplies. Probably a lot of what I’ll say here may be relevant for the digital medium as well, but I don’t have experience using the iPad or GalaxyNote or Surface or whatever, so I can’t be sure. I don’t use tablet computers, and I wrote about the reasons why in my post Why I still start all my design work on paper. This post concerns old-school, traditional paper sketchbooks. In the end I’ll also share some tips how to get the best from your sketchbook practice, and I’ll show you a video of my sketchbook flip. If you’re hooked up on sketchbooks like me, then you might want to share this post with your friends who haven’t caught the bug yet :) ![]() If you already have a sketchbook but frequently forget about it, I hope this will encourage you to spend more time with it. I hope that in this post I will give you enough reasons to finally start using them, and of course even if you don’t consider yourself a visual creative, sketchbooks are a lot of fun! I’m a huge fan of sketchbooks and I’ve been an active sketchbook user for the past 7 years, so I’m very passionate about this subject. Now on to the subject… I’m positive that every visual creative could benefit from a sketchbook Mind Patterns – The Sketchbook Project 2013.Month Of Fairies: Final week, sketchbook flip video & lessons learned.Sketchbook flip video: Sketchbook West art show.3 video sketchbook tour compilation: Watercolor & mixed media.Messy recycled mixed media sketchbook tour video.I hope you enjoyed the video! If you’d like to watch more videos like this one, here’s a few (the newer ones are in much better quality): ![]()
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