Sunday, 7 April 2019

Doing your own 365 One Sketch A Day Challenge - a few tips


It’s not impossible that you may be thinking about embarking on our own 365 day one sketch a day challenge. If you are, then here’s my advice and tips, based on my own. 

·       Set out your round rules before you start. Obviously the big one is that you have to make at least one completed sketch every consecutive day of the year. But then there are other things to be considered. Does it have to be in a particular medium? Does it have to be from life or can you use a photographic reference? For me I allowed as broad an interpretation as possible, probably as a recognition that the challenge is hard enough as it is without narrowing the terms of your challenge.

·       Decide whether you are going to post your pictures online. Obviously I’m going to say that I think this is a good idea because I did it. But there may come times when you’ll need all the help you can get with motivation to complete your challenge, and having the need to post something online can help with this.

·       Think seriously about what you’re going to do on those days when you either can’t find the motivation, or the time to make the kind of sketch you’d like to make. As the great John Lennon said, “Life is what happens while you’re making other plans.” You might want to make sure that you always carry an emergency pen/pencil and piece of paper with you in case you’re stuck somewhere on business or whatever. Several of my sketches were made with a work biro on whatever scrap of paper I could find. On days such as this you have to get in the habit of actively looking for that ten minute window when you can make a sketch.

You might also want to think about what the simplest and quickest sketch you could make if all else fails would be like. I always told myself that if I had to I would allow myself to make a stick man sketch one day (only 1 day mind you). Thankfully I never had to, but if it had made the difference between keeping up the challenge, and failing on one day I would have done it.

One thing I didn’t do which might actually be helpful to you is to compile some prompts – maybe a couple of dozen, for you to use on days when inspiration fails.

·       Seriously consider joining a sketching group on Facebook. Sketching Every Day, which I joined in late July, provided me with a daily prompt (which I didn’t always follow, but was a great source of inspiration for sketches), another forum for displaying the sketches, and a source of encouragement and support.

·       There’s nothing intrinsically wrong about sticking with what you know and what you’re comfortable with. However you might like to think about using your challenge as an opportunity to push yourself out of your comfort zone, and try media that you’re not comfortable with, or which are totally new to you. I love using an ink sketching pen, and I think that it’s the medium I work best in. However I also produced sketches during the challenge using graphite pencil, biro, direct watercolour, acrylic, watercolour pencils and coloured pencils.

·       Keep an eye out for opportunities to tie your challenge into other challenges. The 30 day direct watercolour challenge took care of the month of June, for example, and Inktober took care of all bar a couple of days of October.

·       A year is a daunting amount of time. So although your overall goal is reach a year, do it by setting yourself medium term, and even short term targets. Start off by seeing if you can manage 7 days, just one week. When you’ve completed that, then set a new target of a fortnight. Then stretch it to a month. Once you’ve done a whole month, then you’re already 1/12 of the way there. Once you get to 37 days you’ve completed more than a tenth. Keep breaking it down into short achievable targets and you’ll hopefully find this helps you stay focused.

·       Don’t throw away the sketches you make. You might not love all of them, but each one represents a step on your journey and has its own value for that if for nothing else.

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