
I highly recommend you listen to his advice about the real world. This conversation comes from a podcast I had with Nick Huber from , about the importance of sketching for a designer. So keep up! You will also do your share of bad sketches! Like them, you won’t publish them on the Internet. 🙁 It’s because you have never seen all the series of bad sketches they did before!

That’s why when you see senior designer’ sketches, you say Wahh! And you are maybe drooling of admiration but maybe also feel miserable. There is no magic in sketching, we need to train, and redraw the same thing, again and again, multiple times to succeed. And with a maximum frustration as a rotten cherry on the top of the cake – because I would have wasted 3 hours on it (and missed my calisthenic class :P). If my expectation was drawing something perfect in one shot I would have failed anyway. But only YOU! As long as your sketches have meaning to you.

Make ugly doodles this sketch is full of imperfections but full of learning That’s logic, because the human is by nature in a perpetual learning process. TIP: When you draw wrongly and feel frustrated: Smile and tell yourself: “Whatever I will do better”. That’s why it’s a bit more awkward than the first. I completed both within 5 minutes! I drew the first on the left, then I saw I still have a couple of minutes more – so I did the second one is even more rush. I didn’t want to be late for my class, but I also wanted to draw that camera so bad with my speed technique. The sketch below is what I drew just before going out 3 hours ago. It’s now resting time, and I take a “few” minute to write to you. I just went back to my Calystehnic class.
