Loish Finding Your Style Booklet
Loish Finding Your Style Booklet
I hope you enjoy this booklet, and that it will help you on
your path to developing and strengthening your own skills
and artistic voice!
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What three things inspire you most as an artist? This can be anything from an artist, to a game, movie, style, or
something you’ve seen. Try to be specific.
How can you get your style to be closer to how you want it to be? Think of 4 different actions you could
do to achieve that. Try to make these as specific as possible.
For example: make studies of my favorite style, improve at color.
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comfort zone
What is your creative comfort zone? What do you love creating, what comes easily to you?
uncomfortable zone
What is outside of your comfort zone, that you’d like to become better and more comfortable with? What would
you like to bring INTO your comfort zone?
Don’t be afraid to retreat to your comfort zone if you feel the need to draw for fun or indulge in your favorite
subject matter. When you’re feeling bored or stuck, look at ways that you can move outside of your comfort zone
and challenge yourself to learn new skills!
Describe your own creations in the most objective way you possibly can. Avoid any value judgments.
E.g. I make drawings of female characters that are colorful.
Reflect on your creative strengths. What are you good at? Circle a few from the list below or write down a
few of your own.
Revisit your objective description of your own work, and rewrite it, this time describing your own
creations in a positive way.
E.g. my drawings are joyful and fun to look at.
For some, this might feel weird to do at first. Try to make a habit out of complimenting your own art and noticing
your strengths! The more you do it, the more you’ll gain confidence in your own artistic voice.
goals
Write down some goals you’d like to set for yourself moving forward. What are some goals you can tackle in
the coming months or year?
areas of study
If there are any specific things you want to work on, write them down here. Try to be specific. Having a clearly
defined area of focus leads to greater improvement!
ideas
If you have any ideas for future drawings that you can work on, write them down here.
On the next page, try this exercise again, but with subjects of your own choice. It can be anything, from objects
in your house to animals or model poses.
Grab the tool that worked best for you and make a more detailed version of the same pose. You can also add
decorative elements to it to push the movement further.
Pick one of these moments. How can you use it as a starting point for a new drawing?
On the opposite page, make some initial sketches for this drawing. You can use it as a starting point for the final
piece, which you can create using any medium you like!
On these pages, make a few quick sketches with light and loose lines. You can draw them from reference or from
the imagination, as long as you try drawing in a loose, light way. Don’t worry if it doesn’t look perfect right away!
Your lines will get more confident over time.
Once you’ve finished the exercise, reflect on your improvement. What are the main areas you’ve improved in
since your first sketch?
For this exercise, use this pose as your starting point. Next,
on the opposite page, try drawing this pose in the style of
one of your biggest inspirations.
After that, use the next few pages to do studies of drawings,
artists, or styles that inspire you.
Once you’ve done this, draw the same subject again, but this time heavily stylized. You could try a really cartoony
version, or a really simplified version. Try to divert from realism in your stylized sketch.
Use the next few pages to try a few more exaggerated styles, and see how far you can push the sketches in different
directions beyond your comfort zone.
03 // Sketch some types of people that you’ve never drawn before. For example, a different culture, age
group, or appearance from what you normally draw.
06 // Use the remaining pages to draw a few other things that you’ve never drawn before – have fun!
Whatever you do, just remember that artistic growth is built on experimentation, playing around, and trying
things out. Every drawing we make, whether it’s our strongest piece or our silliest doodle, is a part of that
journey. Allow yourself to explore at whatever pace and in whatever way feels right to you!