Bad Art Habits Are Spiking Now
You film yourself breaking 5 "bad art habits" in real time by doing a timed before/after redraw.
Most "bad art habits" are actually invisible systems (how you start, when you zoom, what you avoid), not “lack of talent.” The twist: you’ll prove one tiny rule change fixes more than grinding.
- Screen record (or overhead) of a 10-minute sketch “your normal way”
- A second 10-minute sketch with 1 habit removed
- Zoom level indicator / canvas flips / layer count / undo history
- Side-by-side comparison + a quick viewer poll: “Which reads clearer?”
They leave with a short checklist of habit swaps they can copy today, plus the one change that gave you the biggest jump.
SIGNAL
"Bad art habits" is trending in Art & Creative today, which means people aren’t searching for inspiration—they’re searching for a diagnosis. Early edge: publish a proof-based “habit teardown” before this turns into generic advice compilations.
CREATOR ANGLE
Make it a lab, not a lecture: “I’ll do my usual drawing… then remove ONE bad art habit and see what changes.” Pick habits that are visible on camera:
- Starting with details before big shapes
- Zooming in too early
- Never flipping the canvas
- Over-outlining everything
- Endless noodling with no time box
Your differentiator is the evidence trail: timer + side-by-side + one sentence rule for each habit.
Packaging options (pick 2):
1) Title: "5 Bad Art Habits I Had (And The Fixes)" (thumb: two sketches, label "Same time")
2) Title: "Stop These Bad Art Habits In 10 Minutes" (thumb: big red "ZOOM" crossed out)
SHIP TODAY
Format + length: 6–8 min teardown with a 30s Short cutdown.
Hook line (say it on frame 1): "I’m going to prove which bad art habits are actually ruining my drawings—using the same 10 minutes twice."
Film it like this:
- Record Sketch #1: 10 minutes, your normal process, timer visible.
- Identify 1 habit you did (show the exact moment).
- Record Sketch #2: same subject, same time, but enforce one rule (e.g., “no zoom for 5 minutes”).
- Put both sketches side-by-side; point to 3 concrete differences (readability, proportions, values).
- End with a copyable list: “Replace X with Y” in one line each.
Don’t do this: vague “you should practice more” motivation—no one can film that.
Everyone wants better art. Fewer people want receipts.