POV-Ray : Newsgroups : povray.off-topic : Boundless talent : Re: Boundless talent Server Time
4 Sep 2024 05:15:41 EDT (-0400)
  Re: Boundless talent  
From: andrel
Date: 8 Jul 2010 16:36:31
Message: <4C3636D2.3050200@gmail.com>
On 8-7-2010 9:03, scott wrote:
>>> Actually, no, that's not quite true. I learned why drawing is even hard
>>> in the first place: because humans see things as 3D objects, not 2D
>>> figures. And that means that when you try to copy something, you take
>>> the 2D image, mentally convert it to 3D, and then try to convert back to
>>> 2D by hand... which doesn't work at all. The solution is to directly
>>> draw what the eye sees, not what the mind interprets.
>>>
>>> Of course, I still have *no frickin' clue* how to do that.
>>
>> I've spent the occasional time trying to learn to draw as well.  There's
>> a difference between taking one class and spending *years* honing a
>> skill.  Itzhak Perlman, for example, is a world-class violinist.  You
>> don't seriously think he doesn't spend several hours a day practicing,
>> but just gets up on stage and performs without any preparation at all,
>> even with his decades of experience, do you?
> 
> I read somewhere (don't remember which book now) that you need 10000 
> hours of experience in something to become an expert.  Apparently if you 
> research many "experts" (including famous sports people, business men, 
> artists etc), almost all have surpassed the magic 10K hour mark.

that would be about 5 years (250 days a year 8 hours a day)?
Does that also work the other way and 10K hours implying that you are an 
expert?


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