I read a thing some years ago that went something like: "it's not about being smart, but about being interested." It really spoke to me, and it reminded me to enjoy the world, in all of its chaos and imperfection. Enjoy nature, cities, humans (good and bad), bad movies and worse music. Don't enjoy it for how enjoyable it is, but for the simple joy of the experience, good or bad. And when you are done, take what you can use, no matter how small the detail, and leave the rest behind. It's not always easy, but it becomes easier, and in the long run it becomes quite rewarding 🙂
@miriamrobarts3 жыл бұрын
Another thing I've heard can boost creativity is to not be afraid of being bored, or of doing nothing. When I was growing up, and people had to spend time waiting, there weren't phones to keep you busy. You could talk to someone nearby, or let your mind wander, or maybe you brought a book with you, but people spent more time less occupied. I think this helps your mind be more free to just wander, and I think it also helps create a sense of calm & peacefulness that you don't see as much in the world now. This frees up your mind and gives it the space to be more creative.
@TheSimonHxC3 жыл бұрын
Yes, all of this. Spending time without a screen or anything for that matter in my hands, while doing house chores, walking outside looking at things or whatever may be, lets your mind wander off to good places which in turn will spark some good ideas. Shame for me I end up forgetting about those cool ideas cause I do not have a pen and paper with me and think that I will remember about it when I get home. Silly me...
@miriamrobarts3 жыл бұрын
@@TheSimonHxC Well, if you carry a wallet, maybe you could see if you can fit a pencil stub (like one of those little golf pencils) & a folded up piece of paper in it, and you'll always have something to write on - or if you have a phone that has a notes app or recording app, you could try that. Good luck hanging on to your creative ideas!
@ZurditaDinamita3 жыл бұрын
Absolutely. I don't get the point of taking the phone and scrolling when I'm waiting for a friend, I prefer to look at the environment. There's a lot of things happening on a simple square: kids following dogs, dogs following birds, parents following kids... 😂
@SaintsCoAnime2 жыл бұрын
Yes ma'am it does in fact sometimes I love to walk home and listen to my music so my mind can wander and get creative I never had a an art block and I'm humbled and thankful for that ☺️✨✝️🙏🏾♥️
@miriamrobarts3 жыл бұрын
Have you heard of the grasshopper mouse - who eats scorpions?! The venom doesn't affect them & the mouse's body changes the venom into a pain killer, so after the first couple stings, the subsequent stings don't bother the mouse much and it can fight and kill the scorpion.
@fleurdelice53013 жыл бұрын
Omg thank you for sharing this, that's so cool, it would make a great superpower for a character, or even this mouse itself could be a character 😍 now i wanna draw it, you literally made my day ✌🏻
@shawnhollahan590 Жыл бұрын
I was in a creative writing class and I was taught an amazing creative prompt. The teacher handed out poems written in foreign languages. Mine was written in Chinese. We were to interpret the poem by looking at it. The unknown Chinese letters became hieroglyphics to my imagination and told a vivid story which I then wrote out. As an artist I found plenty of imagery to draw there as well. Draw what you see in clouds. In chewed gum blob on the sidewalk. the face in the knot on the tree. There are many images right in front of us.
@RinaArlingMedia2 жыл бұрын
I love that you are talking of the time sucking part of social media. I been feeling that problem for several years. Expanding the issue to all unwanted txts to mobile, emails. Every shop, service, people are pushing constant messages. World survived before without all these devices, sure there are things to learn from, but it consumes life too easily.
@Lunarbell13 жыл бұрын
One thing that I find can really help to kinda jump-start imagination is to whenever you direct your focus to the world around you or you notice something about your environment or whatever, start by entering the space of "what if" and go from there, for example "what if those trees were blue instead of green?" and then you have sort of laid a foundation for things to start building on that. And once you've laid a foundation, let whatever wants to build on it build on it without forcing it, cause it will come by itself if you just allow it to.
@AmentetAuris3 жыл бұрын
thank you. For me it was the tv watching where I noticed the big differences in how I was growing up and how my daughter will grow up. She will never know the "problem" of a show coming up that's boring or she won't ever use adverts for a pee break. I could see how very tired after a session of on-demand tv she got, where more episodes of a show or shows of similar style are offered at the end of an episode and she would be so mad when it was time to switch it off. I started worrying what it does to her brain and her imagination. So we switch on real tv more often instead and we coined the terms "binge watching" and "tv tv" for her to make a difference between the two types. You put it very good in words and helped me understand.
@Uratz2 жыл бұрын
There's some great Used book stores in New York City, as an Art student back in the days, I used to just go there and treat it like a library of books owned by previous generations of people who lived in New York city. These books were literally curated by people's tastes, especially in the Art Section you would find artists and painters never heard of. My fellow student friends would pride ourselves in finding rare gold Artists, undiscovered gems that are not "trending".
@remygallardo73643 жыл бұрын
Something I do as a mindfulness experiment and also a great source of inspiration for texture, shapes, colors, and in general an appreciation for reality is to go for a walk on some form of trail, in my city there's tons of good parks for that, and walk very slowly. I struggled to do this for a long time but eventually I decided to start trying to take macro shots with my phone and eventually this led to a passion for macrophotography in general. The amount of detail and things you can find by simply standing still at a bush or a stump or fallen tree that you'd have otherwise thought, "thats cool," and kept walking on is staggering. There's so much life, so many amazing textures and details, neat shapes that only nature would make by chance. No matter what kind of art or medium you're into you can find stories and elements that you can use by squatting down and staring for 30 seconds at what looked like an uninspired little bush. Just stop and stare. Turn a 1 mile long trail you can kill in 10 minutes into an hour of appreciation. It is so mentally refreshing.
@jccwell3 жыл бұрын
Feels like you're speaking directly to what I've been feeling lately. I find myself scrolling through Instagram and Facebook, without any emotion or connection to what I'm looking at. It's truly becoming more of a distraction and maybe even an addiction than anything.
@adamthorntonillustration92813 жыл бұрын
Thanks so much for this Jake. This should be shown at all schools around the world! It is so important. Your quote from Steve Jobs, especially the line "the reason why people were able to synthesise new things is because they've thought more about their experiences than other people", reminds me of a quote attributed to Albert Einstein: "it's not that I'm so smart. I just stay with problems longer". My fear for people is that, in our instantly disposable culture, people are not staying with problems. And this even extends to new terms such as 'the right to repair' obsolete or broken technology, worn out clothing etc. As a student of SVS, I am learning that I must stay with my problems, and failures, because if I don't then I will never improve as an artist and fulfill my dream of becoming a pro.
@greygubbins27183 жыл бұрын
Clicked for the cool art and punchy original title, liked for the Pizza Planet shirt, subscribed for the instant introspection and the anti-blah blah attitude, but I watched to the end because you're just a really chill dude and I can tell you have a mountain of passion for this subject. I look forward to being a part of your wonderful community for years to come.
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
haha, thank dude!
@2kBlueStreak3 жыл бұрын
Love this. As someone that grew-up before the internet existed, I too struggle with the "infinite scroll." With everything that has happened in the last 20 or so months, I've made conscious decisions to limit my time on social media. I spend more time in books, outside and working with my hands. I'm happier for it.
@patriciayoung32673 жыл бұрын
I found your channel through the "New to You" feature on KZbin. And Your advice is so on point for me. I was very artistic for most of my life. But I made a conscious decision to take a high stress, soul crushing job for the last 30 years for the sake of a financially secure retirement. Unfortunetly, this job really chewed up all my creativity. Now I have been retired for a year and I have been trying to jump start my artistic side again .I have been watching You Tube videos to see if that sparks anything, but I have been finding that the algorithm has been bringing up the same type vids over and over. After watching your video I am going to start carrying a small journal wherever I go. I used to do that and I would jot down ideas and quick sketches of things around me. I don't want to do what everyone else is doing, I want to do my own quirky thing. I just need to get my mojo working again. Thanks a lot for all the new ideas you have given me.
@tonyzotz60153 жыл бұрын
I feel scrolling is bad. I still do it, but I’ve noticed how toxic it is. When I’m feeling inspired I go through google and pintrest to find references but then I click on an image and it leads me to another image, and another, then another. Before I knew it I had spent almost two hours just looking at photos and artwork than actually getting anything done. Your video just helped me realize that and now I’m gonna do my best to fight that urge to just browse and actually draw
@BillyCrawshrimp3 жыл бұрын
For me, listening to a vinyl record that matches the mood of whatever I’m drawing at the time is incredibly helpful for this. It’s a similar thing to buying physical books, there’s something so much more immersive that comes with owning a physical copy of a piece of music.
@bocephus41 Жыл бұрын
Love seeing “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” playing on your computer in the background!
@Starlight16803 жыл бұрын
Honestly just finding something (or, ideally, several somethings) that gets a creative flow going is nearly foolproof in my experience. Sometimes you’ll just have an of day where nothing works and you have to remind yourself that it’s fine to just do nothing for a while. For me, listening to audiobooks and music works best.
@jeanbenoitsoucie3 жыл бұрын
One technique that I love doing is writing down stuff that I find interesting and then randomly pick 2 subjects to see what idea it could spark
@miceforkfigs56803 жыл бұрын
This is the most interesting topic, not to everyone but as a fellow artist struggling with the same problem, it feels really "On point". Well presented. Algorithms have taken away all notions of randomness and do not recognize the human need for discovery that fuels artists. The purpose of Art is to see things in a new way and share that with the audience.
@xeviusUsagi3 жыл бұрын
The moments were I've imagined the most detailed and interesting things were when I was bored. Just a history lesson, or having an hardtime falling asleep or just waiting for a bus. I would just stare at the floor, or sky or way more often then I like to admit someone, and just enter my fantasy world. Sadly I can't bring any of it out since I can't draw, but! I'm training to hopefully one day be able to draw, just as an hobby, but a good one.
@mewtkeys3 жыл бұрын
that's wild. I think a lot of us have been feeling this online bombardment of mental space lately. in these past two years since the start, I have read fewer books and spend more time on social media talking to no one. I'm getting ready to delete non essential and be ready to network in real life. Go and meet people in real life. People aren't perfect and that's what makes it beautiful. It's good to hear from you, Jake. Cheers!
@ReaganLodge3 жыл бұрын
Great insights. I know for me what helps with rewilding my imagination or resetting my attention span is putting myself in situations where I'm FORCED to be bored and have to daydream and delve into my own thoughts or surroundings. Stuff like not letting myself listen to a podcast or music for a portion of a drive, or drawing in total silence for a while.
@jerseydevil26523 жыл бұрын
I just realized that you drew my favorite comic when i was growing up (missle mouse). It was a very plesent surprise.
@StudioHannah3 жыл бұрын
Jake, seriously, every video you release feels like it was made for me and something I’ve been going through at the time. But I can’t even tell you to get your spies out of my life, because the advice is too good 😆 I’m rediscovering my library of books about art history and museums, because they’re self-contained and curated very specifically. I’m finding inspirations in things I would never have found through an algorithm.
@TheThomaswastaken Жыл бұрын
KZbin's algorithm is successful in giving you what you like.
@creative_fey3 жыл бұрын
Another great video. I love that You have the Good the Bad and the Ugly playing in the background, such a great film.
@lorenoverholt81573 жыл бұрын
I found your Inktober prompts was s good exercise in researching and drawing topics that I wouldn't normally draw on my own. The process of interpreting a prompt was just as much of the creative process as drawing it. And I purposely avoided what everyone else already drew.
@PuppetMaster87073 жыл бұрын
I just love how he is wearing a Pizza Planet shirt and The Good The Bad and The Ugly is in the background
@samclark64653 жыл бұрын
I like a lot of what you're saying and I've been thinking the same thing for a long time. I actually dropped social media for a year and a half and only came back because I had found my creative motivation again and actually had stuff to share (where before it was just scroll, consume, scroll, consume, ...). I like your advice about going back to physical books, that something I've done lately. I just don't retain e-books the way I do after reading a physical book. Something that helps me with my creativity is listening to albums front to back, preferably on a physical medium. I bought a CD player last year and dusted off my old CD collection, got on discogs and bandcamp and added a few more since then. It's been nice, especially taking a chance on some artist I've never heard of. Sometimes I love it, sometimes it's complete meh, but it really helps me feel inspired. In a similar vein, I also really like watching TV shows on DVD, 1 episode at a time. The option's there to bing watch for a while, but it's so much harder to bing watch more than a few episodes at a time because once the disc ends, it kind of prompts me to take a break. Right now, I'm trying to keep a book at my desk while I'm working. Its so easy to jump on social media when I've got that 4-10 minutes between tasks/meetings, etc, but it never feels good. At best, I find something moderately funny, at worst I get sucked into an argument and put into a foul mood. Keeping a book around is a nice prompt that I don't need to read dozens of pages to make progress in a book. I can read a paragraph or a sentence at a time as I have spare time in the day.
@malosprime49103 жыл бұрын
What helps me is to watch old movie form the 80-90's, action cartoons with character development and reading 📚 bronze age comic books. They help when I'm stuck with some ideas 💡 but it's more of making a visual library in my head when I'm writing ✍ or drawing.
@minhaj_khan3 жыл бұрын
Love your wisdom, Jake! I find learning different subjects helps, like biology, psychology, history etc. Especially now that I've been out of school, I have to seek information deliberately
@josephlynch45323 жыл бұрын
Loved where you took this, Jake. It's so valuable to step off the algorithm train and actually observe where it had been taking you (most likely in circles). A lot of your alternate strategies rang true with me too - I stopped using Twitter a few years ago, but still have a few artists' likes pages bookmarked - browsing them specifically I can still feel in control, and it's finite. Another thing that's been an important rewilding for me has been foreign language film - not only are they usually set in very different cultures to mine but they often come from completely different storytelling traditions. I am frequently amazed at what a story can be that's outside of the European/American model.
@noahmanwaring63043 жыл бұрын
It's uncanny that you seem to pick the timely topics that really resonate. I don't know how you are doing it, but this is what I needed to hear. It has occurred to me that you might actually just be part of the algorithm?
@BeingBendsen3 жыл бұрын
SOOO nice that you're posting more regularly againg! 🙌 I'm really enjoying your talks! Thanks for sharing your thoughts about "rewilding" and unplugging the algorithm inspiration 🙏
@beanmachine003 жыл бұрын
I rarely comment on anything. But I'd like to say thank you Jake. This was something I really needed to hear today. And it's an important conversation. And moreover, it's refreshing to hear people having more of a discussion about ideas like this. Philosophy about artists and how we can experience the world is an important and something I personally feel there is a void for, that should be filled. For me, this was a good message at a good time. So thanks amigo.
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
Thank you JC!
@fallenhoenix12553 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad I found this video. Thank you for the added perspective. Finding things that genuinely broaden my perspective has become a rare treat the older I get... And I don't think it's just the quarantine.
@BlightVonDrake3 жыл бұрын
I'm surprised. I thought this was going to be another "social media bad, end discussion" video, but I feel like this is a much more intelligent approach. Social media is a tool, and it's up to you to use it right. Find the weird stuff, and approach it openly and non-judgmentally, rather to examine someone else's perspective in a healthy manner. Good video, very openminded as well.
@digitalswordplay3 жыл бұрын
This really struck a cord with me. Thanks Jake, I would have to agree that reading a physical book is a great idea. Also when you’re in the passenger seat of a car with your wife or significant other. Put down your phone and just absorb what you see around you as your partner drives. You’d be surprised sometimes of what you see in your local community. :)
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
Absolutely! That's a great idea.
@crios83073 жыл бұрын
Today i had to concept some creatures in ONE WEEKEND. So, I grabbed my oldest animal book, and without looking for wolves, lions or other "cool" animals, I just went with the flow. Random info often bring the best stimuli, and only after the brainstorm i start "rendering".
@Karlettto893 жыл бұрын
hey Jake! Thank you for the video! I left social media entirely for those same reasons. I now only browse specifically when I need reference and inspiration as if I were at a library. It helps to search something specific rather then being fed by the algorithm.
@TheDreamSyndicateArts3 жыл бұрын
It's also a matter of finding "nutritional value" in art. You can look at your favorite contemporary artists, but it's likely to be much more fulfilling to find-out what artistic influences they were taking in and study their work.
@bones23jones3 жыл бұрын
Just purchased the book. Looking forward to it.
@MattHalpain3 жыл бұрын
Awesome mech snake ! I am a hobby artist myself. I have a 6th gen. iPad with Apple Pencil. I have been drawing physical art (non-digital) since I was a kid. 2018 I got my 6th gen. iPad and I have been also drawing digital art since 2018.
@InkSpots3 жыл бұрын
This was great. I've noticed lately that a lot of new children's book artists all have a very similar style. I was having a hard time telling them apart from each other. The art is very good but all the same. So it seems like they were all being fed the same inspiration and seeing the same art.
@JuleSan_jk3 жыл бұрын
Very good question!! I really agree and today it feels much easier to get a step further through inspiration from printed magazines too, for example, one which represents tattoo-studios with their best works from over the last year. Some interesting subjects out of social media scope - it reflects some kind of "Zeitgeist" what the clients are living in and of course there were some sweet decorated milk-packs, too. But the few felt like an strong real inspiration what me leads to sit down and draw it as an exercise. My eyes had the chance to calm down and enjoy the process from referencing again. In social-media it's like a nightmare because the scrolling is an never-ending story until the brain say: overload and rest please.
@richbailey819 Жыл бұрын
The section on social media algorithms feels right on the money. They're great at showing you things you already like, but not so good at showing you things that are new. In gaining control of our media feeds and experiences we've largely lost the joy of finding something unexpected.
@MuffinMachine3 жыл бұрын
I have been wondering how to break away from the algorithm and then the algorithm suggested this video on how to break out of the algorithm. I believe that at this point most people see, and even accept, that social media uses the same mechanisms as chemical addictions, such as nicotine, for example, to keep us locked in. Where I think the observation is incomplete is in how these mechanisms are not adding anything to our lives other than the fear and discomfort of their absence. I am delighted to find these suggestions on ways to get back to our pre-addicted selves. Thank you for sharing this and the original article.
@onsab1233 жыл бұрын
That quote hit me, great video JP.
@speakersr-lyefaudio68303 жыл бұрын
When I have spare money, I’ll get the book. I like your art
@thejollyjawbreaker3 жыл бұрын
It is always a good day when Jake uploads a new video!!! ✨✨✨
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
Wow, thank you!
@peanut34383 жыл бұрын
Something similar (rather, re-worded lol) to the Steve Jobs quote is a lesson I learned a few years ago, from some random KZbin influencer class ad or something. It was talking about some remix strategy for content ideas. Over time I built on the lesson a bit so this isn’t the original lesson I learned: Human creativity isn’t actually CREATE-ivity (as in, we can’t possibly make something from nothing). It’s more like remix-ivity, or mixing things together to make something “new” that’s actually just based off of preexisting stuff. Once I learned that, I became a bit more aware of things to get inspiration from. A few things to try out are taking two completely random/different things and trying to mash them together somehow (warning: very few of these are likely to be good ideas lol, but I did get a good one from three things I enjoyed that happened to be similar enough/workable enough to blend) (also this particular exercise just got me started in “connecting dots” and I don’t really use it much nowadays, so take it for what it’s worth), carrying a notepad and pen with you and writing every idea that pops in your brain (even the bad cringey ones) and later on you can go back and re-read your unused ideas to get inspiration, and, if you have a day to waste because this will definitely eat your time, going down a Google/Wikipedia rabbithole with looking at different kinds of animals and their adaptations (or whatever topic you’re interested in). I recommend Wiki over Google because the links are on the webpage without algorithm shenanigans and it’s easier to rabbithole through. Also, be bored. The advice in this video is much more refined and helpful; I just wanted to share this in case it helped someone a little. God bless you!
@RobinAWhite3 жыл бұрын
This was totally not what I was expecting by the title, but great!
@kirstymca3 жыл бұрын
Years ago, doing an all-nighter, I listened to documentaries on the radio (BBC). I learned all kinds of fascinating things about boxing and butterflies! Now that there are podcasts, and you can choose what to listen to, I would never think of listening to either topic.
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
Yes! This is exactly what I'm talking about.
@KossolaxtheForesworn3 жыл бұрын
"The most valuable human resource requiring conservation is our own consciousness and mental space." *Pull that shit up, Jamie*
@elypso_3 жыл бұрын
Been thinking about this concept since you posted your newsletter last week. My internship involves designing UI/UX for 3D experiences and it's so different to what I'm used to, but it's been extremely fun and exciting. I think part of it is because I haven't been glued to social media looking for inspiration, but rather looking at real world, 3D, and weird things
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
Very cool. Glad you're doing this internship!
@jasontucker17603 жыл бұрын
Such a great post + drawing Jake! Keep up the amazing work man. God bless-
@GabriellaBalagna3 жыл бұрын
Another golden motto to strive for. Love these types of videos.
@thedigitalnoodle40213 жыл бұрын
Amazing Jake, this is so important. You've been such a positive influence in my journey as not only as an Artist but as a human being.
@ev1lbolt174 Жыл бұрын
I remember when I was a kid, I was combining ideas of subjects that I found interesting even though they had no link together whatsoever, and it gave birth to some really interesting ideas. At the time I was really tripping at concepts that came from the sea, warriors, technology and greek mythology and quite possibly dragons. A god that can transforms into a sea dragon? Poséhydro (mix of poséidon and hydro), a sentient machine combined with coral? Corobot. A Shark Samurai? Sharkurai. An atlantian with a cyber with a cybernetic tail that can transform into a fish tail and legs for when he goes on land? Aquamarine (I couldn’t find any clever pun name at the time so I just gave it the name of a rock that I found pretty). Honestly making wild ideas up isn’t about being smart, it’s about loving what you do and inventing reasons to make those ideas combine together. Smart peoples will combine things that make sense together and will make them have sense together. Creative people will combine things together that have no link whatsoever and invent the link. If I said anything that remotely inspire you, feel free to share, be wild and passionate!
@arnouthpessoa3 жыл бұрын
So much gold here!
@kingmasterlord3 жыл бұрын
oh cool I've been working on this exact thing
@rattybabby2 жыл бұрын
A much needed video and topic, thanks!
@tj76813 жыл бұрын
Had to subscribe just because you're such a truthful artist, and awesome with art !
@ZurditaDinamita3 жыл бұрын
The "unfollowing" point is something that I was considering for a time. I follow around 700 artists, being like 100 my IRL friends/mates, and even when I really like all that 700 accounts, it's obviously impossible to consume all that art. Furthermore, some days ago I needed to note some of my "art heroes" from memory, and I just wrote like 15-20 artists. Are they my favorite artists? I don't know, maybe, or maybe they're just the more memorables. But it was really surprising (and somehow refreshing) seeing how 700 persons were summarized to 20 by my brain.
@WantedHerocom3 жыл бұрын
Fantastic artwork and skill my friend. Love it.
@annabianka3333 жыл бұрын
Man !! the best talk i,m hear ever . Thank you. D
@massa_art Жыл бұрын
This is very valuable, thanks for doing these videos. Earlier this year i decided to start an art channel on youtube in order to reignite my forgotten passion for drawing (not a professional artist).I was on a hunt for examples of art channels that deliver value on a personal level that goes beyond the craft or profession (eg tutorial channels, Proko..), and not pure entertainement (eg Jazza, Gawx). Took me a long time and i was starting to think there aren't any, so I'm sooo glad i found you!! Subscribed ❤ and bell on 🔔
@bethanypyles40723 жыл бұрын
Great thoughts and suggestions, Jake! I actually avoided using Pinterest this year during Inktober for similar reasons. Relying on mostly books, magazines, photos I look from life, and weird ideas in my head was hard, but produced some very interesting results.
@brandtwoods3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for this Jake, this has definitely given me a lot to think about.
@Isaac-ph5co3 жыл бұрын
i always get a little apprehensive when thinking about how to notice things we dont notice often because the first things we think as exemples of things we dont see are not gonna be that unobvious, understand? but for him to write about that and actually have something that is news for me he also have to have been similar in my ignorance in a way. it is weird, but i will check the book out
@geoffreynelson64133 жыл бұрын
This was really great, Jake. Thank you.
@charlottejglaze3 жыл бұрын
Great thoughts, thanks for sharing! I find listening to NPR has given me a lot of random topics I’d never thought about before. Traveling to new places also can open up a lot of new ideas.
@Chris_M_Romero3 жыл бұрын
I'd say this kinda works, I mean, a couple months ago my brother started insisting that I buy Red Dead Redemption 2, and this became a back and forth for a couple weeks talking every day about it, until I got convinced. I didn't like westerns before that and oh boy... a whole world opened to me. The west was so full of mythology and mysteries that it could pretty well be a fantasy world of its own. The conflicts between settlers and natives, between americans and mexicans, the outlaws, the lawmen, the hidden treasures, the discovery of new lands, new resources, new ideas. What a great era. But, at the same time, west fiction has everything I like about fiction, I like horror, I.E. inspired me to write weird west fiction. I don't think it would work with any new subject that comes my way. For instance I never liked mafia, narcos stories, they're so mundane... I never liked spies and war stories either for the same reason. Very few sci-fi stories really catch my eye, mostly those that work with supernatural elements at their root, like Dead Space. So, the new interest kinda has to have some overlap with old interests for it to really spark the "imagination" trance. IMO.
@EyekooDrawsStuff3 жыл бұрын
Great video, Jake. I think this is such an important thing to consider, thanks for sharing your thoughts. Really dig that intro as well.
@theartofjayden17613 жыл бұрын
A good thing to help rewild your imagination is, I think, watching the news 2-3 times a week. Just to see what is going on in the world. Beyond the little scope that is your social media account. And try out new social media platforms too. Where you don’t have a whole algorithm built for you yet. Also you can make a new account for a fresh start. I go to (comic)bookstores too every week
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
Great ideas!
@JacobShepherdEngineer3 жыл бұрын
I had just realized that my social media was giving me the same type of content and nothing seemed new or creative. Very timely.
@senorzepeda3 жыл бұрын
I got something out of this. Great stuff to take my mind back 🙏
@efrainjesusuntiverospizzar49553 жыл бұрын
Great design as always,i like that not only You draw a charcter,You also give piece of advice that it is useful in life,no matter where we are,or what nationality,that really helps in Many aspects,good Luck, greetings from Perú 😺
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
Glad you appreciate that. Trying my best.
@sethharuzi63833 жыл бұрын
Hey Jake! Would you ever consider doing a Drawings Book Bundle Set?
@peanut34383 жыл бұрын
I think I happened upon a gem of a video and a gem of a channel :0
@alkorngrigA413 жыл бұрын
Gold.
@shogun-k78mster3 жыл бұрын
Thank you jake it was really helpful and also recently buyed and read the missile mouse book 1 it was so amzing thanks for the video and comic
@rdqsh3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video
@owls65143 жыл бұрын
Did you know that there is a kind of sea snail that lives on the edges of udersea volcanos. It has a shell made with iron and can survive temperatures of up to 750° centigrade. (That or ferrenheit, i cant remember)
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
That is amazing!
@arianadeleon98053 жыл бұрын
another way to rewild is to study another language, once you experience a new culture in the intimacy of its own language you can discover incredible things!
@deepikagoswami6133 жыл бұрын
Thank you sir
@krishIyer233 жыл бұрын
I'd love to see a video on the topic "how to find your story trust"
@bloodrunsclear3 жыл бұрын
Me, reading the title: Cool! Actually watching the video: Oh…
@brenroseartsoul67133 жыл бұрын
Awesome video Jake!
@dawski853 жыл бұрын
Great video! Arstation is great for looking for inspiration.
@enriquejrmartinez58203 жыл бұрын
Great video!
@DanMackison3 жыл бұрын
How did you go from the sketch to the surface you drew on with the felt tip pen? Drawing directly on a printed sheet of paper? Paper on a light box? Something else?
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
I printed it out.
@peckerdecker3 жыл бұрын
Interesting video. Thank you for suggesting a book _Gwelf The Survival Guide_ ("gwelf" artwork reminds me of _wind in the willows)
@justforfunflowers80013 жыл бұрын
Happy Hanukkah Parker.
@radar5363 жыл бұрын
Nice work!
@dantierandbalogh3 жыл бұрын
Thank you for articulating so perfectly, what I think, most creatives are feeling online these days!👌D+B
@kyletwebster3 жыл бұрын
Jake, this is a timely video! Great thoughts, here.
@jakeparker443 жыл бұрын
Thanks Kyle!
@asimovstarling88062 жыл бұрын
I look at pinterest and other places and search up the kinds of things that I imagine and make, and usually I come up with the page that says "No results" then again I spent my youth without the internet, I was raised in the woods, raised on films, records, and books that spanned from the 1920's to the early 2010's. every genre. nothing was off limits. unfortunately I can't say that I'm skill at art. my parents burned my art for 30 years. I have made all kinds of interesting races and mechanical objects, including mechs made entirely out of flesh and bone in a feasible way, robots of human size and weight that were actually human enough to pass, in every way, and these are just the ones I figured out how to do in real life. most of what I've made will never see the light of day because it was burned the day I made it.
@spicymeatballs2thespicening2 жыл бұрын
Wait wtf why would they burn your drawings, that's borderline evil
@asimovstarling88062 жыл бұрын
@@spicymeatballs2thespicening Because to them, if it wasn't of a real thing, such as the bible, or events from such, it wasn't worthy of existence. Mother's a far right pro trump fundamentalist christian and dad's a catholic.
@konosanimations3 жыл бұрын
Such a great video!
@konosanimations3 жыл бұрын
There's nothing as a refreshing as watching a video that has unedited talking, with all the pauses included in a sentence, not trying to overload you with information so that your attention span of 5 seconds doesn't click away from the video!
@veggiedragon10003 жыл бұрын
Me seeing something gross and orange: is that a Garfield?