wb21 wrote: ↑January 4th, 2023, 5:54 pm
Breaking my radio silence to chime in on what Eswube had been calling out recently...
I think this conversation (was planning to bring this up on the Falklands attack jet challenge) might just be the best time to reflect upon the current direction of Shipbucket's content creation. As much as SB needs to grow, improve, and evolve (with the most notable "improvements" being the more drab paint palettes and—eventually—more drab window colors), we all have to face the following realization, head on:
have we, for the most part, really gone that
far and astray from the firmly canonical standards of SB, with all that "outside the box/comfort zone" mindset, in the name of aesthetics and change? Did such idealism built a slippery slope for SB to become largely a shadow of its former self? And what kind of example are we truly setting to the newer, up-and-coming users who naturally look up to design trends set by more established ones?
At risk of being called out for usurping forum authority, I think that the more-or-less concrete solution to this situation... is some serious shake-up on how the community as a whole perceives and handles this new generation of content; that any instance of experimentation would have to go through the funneling filter of due process and consensus before being put into official, mainstream acceptance; and that what has been already accepted would have to be reassessed. That way, there would be at least some modicum of clarity and organization in the sea of differing styles and trends.
cheers—wb21
I think we need to face facts. Although the original SB styles and drawings are the groundwork on which this entire forum and community is built, no one can deny that the original drawings are basic and uninspired and this reflects in the stylistic rules and guidelines that have remained unchanged for over a decade. New artists have come to this platform and with them have come new styles that vastly improve the quality of SB drawings (both in SB and FD), even if they push the stylistic boundaries of what the original creators wrote all those years ago. Yes, maybe Shipbucket is a shadow of what it was in 2008, but can you really disagree that what it is today is not an improvement? You decry "drab paint palettes" and "drab window colors" but are these not far more accurate and higher quality than the incredibly over-saturated colours and bright blue windows of earlier drawings?
I think all artists on here follow a similar path - we all start with the most basic of drawings (basic over-saturated 5 colour palettes, bright blue windows, use of partsheets, heavy use of black lines, little to no advanced visuals etc.) inspired by the "original" SB artists, but we all advance over time and take inspiration from other (often newer) artists to form our own styles. Is the example you really want to set to new artists "don't pursue advanced, high quality drawing styles, instead stick to the extremely basic styles we were using over a decade ago when this drawing was in its infancy"? It alienates newer users who are willing to experiment and push the boundaries of what can be achieved with the format.
At the risk of sounding like an idealistic libertarian, is the solution not
less governance and assessment? Surly vigorous "due process and consensus" and reassessment is just going to further alienate those willing to push the boundaries of the format and its outdated stylistic rules with even more advanced and higher quality drawings? If the current moderators and forum leaders are anything to go by surely the only due process and consensus from them would be to throw out anything that doesn't conform to their basic, boring, and uninspired near 15 year old rules and regulations?