>>1490641You're getting down line techniques and picking up things through osmosis. My only thing is I'd say be careful of picking up too much from others. One of my biggest regrets now is that I have a hard time truly drawing like "me". Mind you it's a very metaphysical thing, and in the end somebody who really worked at it may end up right back where they would be if they just learned the proper ways, but I'll never know and before AI everyone had the same goal of reaching a certain skill ceiling and drawing like various artists they liked. It's why I think the book I posted earlier is so good now. I think it builds a solid foundation without telling you how to do to much.
Also, notes are a lot more useful when you aren't on a timer or trying to keep up with a speaker wondering what's important and what isn't (ie: what you'll be tested on). You can decide for yourself what info is vital and pause to take it down. It's huge. A lot of my art that I had become I had a HDD loss were absolutely covered in notes that I'd go over from time to time. School and life in general aren't geared towards people with adhd/add and because of that you come out of school thinking you're some big failure because you weren't properly equipped when in reality you just need a different approach to learning. (It's also hard to say if these issues weren't learned from a lack of needing to focus before getting into school as well as the detrimental effects of the cartoons we watched growing up. There's a whole slew of things that could be at fault, but eh, just throw a pill at it.)