So I figured that I'd use Sunday as a bit of a weekly digest, as I'm trying to keep my browsing time down for productivitys sake.
Drawing in public - part 2.
I'm not really sure what's changed in me since I last commented on it, but I really don't feel any problem drawing in public now, I don't know why. So I'm using my travel time on trains and buses now to do a little drawing here and there when I fancy it. Quite varied sketch pages but it's a nice little doodle. If the journey is long enough I can do a whole page. So that opens up a bit more avenues for me to get exposure and practice as well.
I've been focusing on core skills again with a larger focus on copying/studying than I have been doing over the last year. I'm doing all sorts of clothing and body studies, hands and shoes and so on. I'm not quite doing as many WIPs as I would like, considering my huge backlog.
WIPs - I have been focusing on linearts this month so far, and I've done 16, of various levels of quality and styles. Picking a standard for my linearts as been a little tricky, especially as my older WIPs are a bit lacking in details and accuracy as well. Here are three different styles that I have tried out: (click to enlarge)
Very high detail - I've used quite a high level of zoom and taken my time to add the details. This resulted in a high quality line piece, but the original undersketch had proportion issues that show through, so overall it was a bit of a waste of time to process it at this high of a level. It's my longest lineart at 31 minutes.

Very sketchy detail - I figured since the previous one was really sharp that I might as well use my older WIPs in a bit of an experiment, especially the ones I don't care much for, so I tried a sketchier inking style, at a much lower zoom. The overall quality was pretty low, and a thicker brush would probably have suited this style I think. It was certainly a lot faster, which is a key factor for me, but not at such a loss of quality.

Medium, careful but quick - I tried to combine careful and quick, into a similar drawing feeling to how I resolve my sketches, and the result was basically a good quality, as long as you don't zoom in much. which in most cases, especially a standard level piece, is probably the most desirable level. The line quality was a lot better, but I didn't spend so much time on it. It's hard to compare to the first one as there was less time consuming frills, but I think it was a faster style. I didn't zoom in as much as I did for the first one. Usually I count how many times I click zoom in, to make sure I'm working at the same sort of level for each piece. The top one was 4 times, and this one was 2 times. So for the time being I'll probably try and keep this style up as it's fast and good enough detail. As I get to my better WIPs, I might increase my quality to match.

I've processed 66 WIPs this month so far, and spent 49 hours drawing in GIMP. so I'm quite chuffed so far, although time isn't everything, it's something. And I'm on target for 100 in a NORMAL month!
My average continues to rise which is great, here's my usage graph again. "Consistency" is how many days I have drawn in the last 30, divided to fit the scale. So a 5 means I've drawn every day for the last 30 days.
Weekly average is staying strong just above 3 hours a day, and the monthly average is still rising to match. I've not been this active for quite a while as you can see.

I didn't realise how useful a daily schedule was, being that I am quite motivated and draw quite a lot normally (my weekly average spikes a few times at more than 2 hours a day, so I'm not lazy by any means), I didn't think that it was possible to draw even more. But a fortunate rebalancing of the schedule and looking at my actual statistics made me realize that I was nowhere near my maximum performance (which I kinda guessed). I'm still nowhere near my maximum, being that I don't spend ALL my time drawing, and I do spend a bit more time than I would like in organizing my art, generating statistics, programming little apps for me to use, and finding more reference images of every kind. But I would put my productivity at at least 35% now.
I'm very pleased with how my new workflow is going, that of having lots of semi-finished GIMP files, and adding a bit more each day until they fill up. I generally don't do the same ones each day, usually just 3 or 4 study ones, and then some WIP ones as well. My daily sketch survival actually takes up the most time per item at the moment.
I've got 49 canvasses at the moment, and I'm trying my best to not let it rise any higher, otherwise I wont even be able to finish each one in a single month XD.
I have changed some up a bit, and combined some into a single file. Like I had hats in a separate one for a bit, but combined it with the normal clothing study one.
Another dangerous game I have been playing is having a file for drawing new sketches, which are casually inspired by my own older sketches. It's really good at generating new sketches, "unfortunately", as I'm trying to not make so many new sketches at the moment. But it's a lot less stressful knowing you can just open a file up, do a bit, and close it wherever you're at. Whenever I hit a WIP I dont fancy working on, I just close and move on to something else. Then later in the day, I'll have a eureka moment and know what to do with the sketch, and I can carry on.
I also said previously that I would cull my WIPs by about 10% at the inking and colouring level. I'm increasing the range to include every level of WIP now, so up to 10% of my WIPs will go into a "Dropped" folder, and not be counted in my remaining counts. I've got so many, and I'm improving so fast now, that I'm more ready to take on the better ideas and not keep focusing on my worst sketches for "practice". Of course I'll still keep them around just in case, and for trying out new styles with perhaps.
This also helps to account for the fact that at each level the time to process a piece increases, so I can't process as many linearts as I can finished sketches, for example.
Assuming I do cut out 10% at each level, this is how 1000 sketches would make it through to the end.
I'll probably increase the cutoff to 20%, or probably something like 50% eventually

also also, my WIPs are not (and have never been) the main output that I plan on generating. They are like my main regime that keeps me fit, but there's a lot of other art that I want to make that doesn't fit into the WIP scheme that I currently have. Fanart, homage styles, manga stories etc.
And I think that my open-canvas workflow is suited to creating a new page of sketches in different styles, and then finishing them off in the same canvas without putting them into a WIP folder, similar to my daily sketch regime.
Did you know that my daily sketches are all done in the same file? well now you do :P

In short (yeah right), I've got a lot of plans, I seem to be incredibly lucky with how my path has gone so far, I'm incredibly ambitious, and I'm currently incredibly productive. Roll on 2020 I say. I suspect I'll crash within 3 weeks :P