i am an artist but yet i have not improved much in the three years of drawing.
so is working hard worthless? is talent the key. being born with talent. :P
or do you need talent and to work hard. i dont have talent so maybe i should give up.
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#Offtopic
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just do what you love to do
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Work smarter not harder
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Talent gives you an initial boost, but working hard can make up for that if you have no talent.
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1 commentaireFor drawing... it's kinda confusing. You need to actually want to get better and love doing it rather than forcing yourself to do better. If you aren't enjoying what you're doing, it's going to be hard to get better.
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1 commentaireNo it's just some have to work harder than others. Don't give up.
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3 commentairesTalent and hard work accentuate each other.
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3 commentairesWork smarter not harder
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3 commentairesYou have to work hard in the right ways.
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With natural talent you can be above someone who works hard but working hard is called that because someone works to improve. If you find you have talent in something you should work to improve it, otherwise those working hard will learn things you haven't and be able to beat you. So no, it's not worthless. It's just not always visibly useful in the short term. Or so I've found.
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"Hard work beats talent when talent doesn't work hard."
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1 commentaireYou need a better teacher
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23 commentairesBoth. Natural talent oftentimes leads people to become complacent and slip up. I enjoy the liberty of talent in areas like philosophy and politics, but I'm naturally disinclined when it comes to hard work.
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1 commentaireAlways take the easy way out if you get the same results. Working hard to impress people is stupid. Because in reality, nobody gives a shit.
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3 commentairesModifié par Obi Wan Stevobi : 1/11/2014 10:00:55 PMNatural talent is largely a myth. [url=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IIDLcaQVMqw]There are no miracle people[/url] born with fantastic abilities. If you see someone that excels at something, it's because they practiced and improved.
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1 commentaireBoth but I have seen examples of success happening solely on the merits of Hard Work and Talent. Went to school with a guy who showed no interest in art, but somewhere after graduation and College he took up animation and landed a job on the Simpsons. Left them and studied abroad in various art schools and is doing well all on the merit of hard work over natural born talent.
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Nothing is worthless, mortal. Unless we were talking about Uwe Bowl movies.
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It's called hard work for a reason.
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3 commentairesI dunno.. All I know that you can do is just keep trying. I do the same! :p I've recently watched a lot of vids from Swoozie. He draws fun stuff, and apparently he's a pro Dead or Alive gamer. He's funny, draws funny cartoons and is actually good at it, has lots of fun stories, has gaming tournaments which he can earn money with and has loads of friends and interesting people he meets at things that he goes to. And he's popular on Youtube and whatnot. He's got somewhere where I can only dream of to be! And that makes me kinda jealous and sad. But not only of him, also of Cyanide and Happiness and many other great artists. I just hope to reach a point in the future where I am famous with my drawings and other things, and that I get to know a lot of cool people and go to things around the world. *drools* But right now I am just sitting here, trying to draw.. And I just.. I think I suck at it.. And I have no great knowledge about how everything works either with all this complicated computer stuff. Usually I just do something random whilst drawing and hope for the best. I have no idea how to make animations and videos of games or anything. All that file shit you need to know is just confusing! @____@ Look at me! Just rambling! Dis is ugh who? No this.... >_>
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If you suck, yes. If you don't, no.
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2 commentairesIt all depends on yourself, what do you consider "improvement?" making something more detailed? A circle more circular? Improving your own art shouldn't be about making it more like another artistic work, but it should matter about how you feel about what you are creating, and why. If you want more detail, use more tools, take more time, if you want more detail, sketch out ideas and find something that works before applying it to the main piece. Nothing is worthless, the real question you should ask yourself is [i]"How far am I willing to take this?"[/i]
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The only thing that talent really affects with drawing is how much time and effort it takes to draw something. Given enough time, one less skilled could draw something just as awesome as the most talented artist.
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[quote]i am an artist but yet i have not improved much in the three years of drawing. so is working hard worthless? is talent the key. being born with talent. :P or do you need talent and to work hard. i dont have talent so maybe i should give up.[/quote] I don't even know anymore.... *leaves website through swinging doors*
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1 commentaireModifié par Ttasmmv : 1/11/2014 8:24:44 PMNot all practices are equal, and so if you find your practice ineffective you should seek tuition by one who's practice is deemed effective. Ones own dedication can trump others natural talent.
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No. Practice makes perfect. If you're good at something, continually practice at it and get better. If you don't, people who have been working harder to get better will surpass you.
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1 commentaireGo away