How to Train Your Eye in 10 Minutes a Day

Most people think they need hours to improve.

You don’t. You need better attention, not more time.

If you can train your eye for 10 minutes a day, you will improve faster than someone painting randomly for hours.

Let me show you how.


First: what does “training your eye” mean?

It means learning to see clearly:

  • shapes instead of “things”
  • values instead of “colors”
  • angles instead of “features”

When your eye improves, your painting improves—even if your hand stays the same for a while.


The mistake most people make

They jump straight into a full painting.

Too complex. Too many decisions.

So nothing really improves.

If you only have 10 minutes, don’t paint a portrait.

Train one skill.


The 10-minute routine

Do this once a day. Keep it simple.


Minute 1–2: Observe (no painting yet)

Look at your reference.

Ask yourself:

  • Where is the darkest value?
  • Where is the lightest?
  • What is the biggest shape?

Don’t touch the pencil or brush yet.

Most people skip this—and that’s why they struggle.


Minute 3–6: Block in big shapes

Forget details.

Draw only:

  • the big shadow shape
  • the big light shape

Think in 2 values only: light vs dark.

If you get this right, everything else becomes easier.


Minute 7–9: Check and correct

Now compare your drawing to the reference.

Ask:

  • Are my angles correct?
  • Are my shapes too big or too small?
  • Did I simplify enough?

Fix it.

This is where the learning happens.


Minute 10: Stop

Yes—stop.

Don’t keep going.

The goal is not to finish a drawing.

The goal is to train your eye.


What to use for this

Keep it simple:

  • pencil or pen
  • small paper
  • any reference (photo, portrait, still life)

You can even repeat the same reference for a few days.

You’ll start seeing more each time.


A powerful variation (do this 2–3 times a week)

Use a limited palette mentally or in paint.

For example, think in terms of the Zorn palette:

  • light warm
  • light cool
  • dark warm
  • dark cool

This forces your eye to simplify color into relationships.

That’s what painters actually do.


Why this works

Because you’re isolating the skill.

Instead of:
“I’m trying to paint everything”

You’re doing:
“I’m training my eye to see clearly”

Small, focused practice beats long, unfocused sessions.

Every time.


What you should expect

At first:

  • your shapes will be off
  • your values will be wrong
  • it will feel slow

That’s normal.

After a few days:

  • you start noticing mistakes faster

After a few weeks:

  • your paintings become simpler and stronger

Not perfect. Stronger.


If you only remember one thing

Don’t try to make a good drawing.

Try to see better.

That’s the real skill.


For your next session

Set a timer for 10 minutes and do this:

  1. Observe
  2. Block big shapes
  3. Correct

Then stop.

Do it again tomorrow.


If you do this consistently, your eye will improve.

And once your eye improves, everything else follows.

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