29 Jul 2018, 13:51

Hi @leothejediartist welcome to the forum! Ok, first off, I'm no expert but am also a beginner trying to figure it all out on my own.
One of the things I learned early on is that just drawing without a learning goal in mind just kept me stuck wondering why I was not improving. So I started to set myself mini goals based on my weaknesses ,which to be honest is everything! I started with figuring out what are the fundamentals - cos I had a vague notion but not a list - I needed a list! Then I set myself a task to practice just that for a week or a month or whatever depending on how much I thought I was crap at it. Couldn't draw a straight line or a circle or an ellipse consistently when I first started - still do that practice every morning as a warm up.
When I started to get bored, I would pick someone who was good at line (like Jake) and copy their work for more practice, then try it on my own. Still not good at it and progress is slow but I keep adding more fundamentals to my learning mix and am slowly building my skills.
Before I stumbled on SVS, I learned quite a lot of stuff from youtube - Will Terry's channel has good stuff and Jake Parker's, also Bobby Chui has some good stuff on basics and Stephen Silver if you are into character design. So many options, it can be overwhelming.
As for books - depends what you are hoping to do - I realized I like the cartoony, style characters of animation and the watercoloury painting style of Beatrix Potter so I looked for books that could help me learn how to do things that way.
But my overall advice, for what it is worth, is don't just watch and read stuff without a specific learning goal in mind - what do you want to improve on this month . And be patient - it takes time for your brain and hand and eye to get rewired to work together for this stuff. I noticed periods where it seemed I just didn't get it and felt like an idiot - then suddenly poof! my hand was drawing the line I wanted it to draw and it seemed like magic. Then the next day I sucked again and had to start over.
Anyway, sorry for the long rambling post - good luck with it and look forward to seeing more of your work!