Drawing

My Journey
Through years of drawing, I’ve seen how consistent practice has shaped my skills and my confidence as an artist. What started as simple sketches has grown into a much stronger understanding of form, proportion, value, and color. Each piece has built on the last, teaching me how to control line, develop depth, and create more polished, intentional work. Moving into tools like alcohol markers pushed me even further, helping me refine blending, shading, and color control in ways I couldn’t before. This journey has also taught me to trust the process, especially the “ugly phase” that every piece goes through. I’ve learned that early stages often look awkward or unfinished, but pushing through that stage is what allows the work to come together in the end. Over time, I’ve become more patient with revisions and more confident in problem-solving instead of getting discouraged. Years of practice have turned drawing into a true strength, allowing me to create work that feels expressive, refined, and fully realized.
My Hands







Portraits




I Started drawing when I was very young. It was usually copying movie covers and other art, sticking with a simple line art style, just getting the details of the piece. Then I started to experiment more with other pencils, practicing shading, depth and perspective; all of which were self-taught. My very first piece that had real depth and shadow, was a portrait of Batman that I did in 2020 during covid. Covid was a good time for this passion of mine; it gave me time to work on my technique, and improve my skill.
How it Started

These two pieces mark my transition into working with alcohol markers, where I focused on building smooth gradients, bold contrast, and controlled shading. I wanted to start with a piece that was still close to my black and white gray scale style. So I did a piece on Starscream using subtle value shifts and selective color accents (like the purple Dark Energon crystal and red details) to create depth and focal points. In the second piece, I leaned into stronger saturation and layering, using the red and green of the helmet to create a vivid, high-impact focal area against the dark negative space. Together, these works show my growth in blending, color control, and using markers to create clean, graphic forms with depth and intensity.


To Other Mediums

