If you have ever felt a quiet sense of guilt for not sketching often enough, you are certainly not alone. Many people believe progress only counts if it happens in long, uninterrupted sessions. The truth is much kinder than that.
Very often, real progress begins with something far simpler. It begins with showing up to sketch, even briefly. A few minutes with a pen can be enough to steady your eye, warm your hand, and remind you why you started in the first place.
Not because you planned it perfectly.
But because you chose to begin.
A Quiet Sketch by the Bay of Fundy
During Week 2 of our 4-Week Sketching Experience, a sketcher named Renate shared a comment that quietly stayed with us.
She described herself sitting by the Bay of Fundy on a chilly December afternoon. Her sketchbook was open. There was hot soup nearby, kindly made by her husband, and a rare glass of wine at her side.
She was not chasing a finished piece.
She was not trying to impress anyone.
She simply felt proud of herself for showing up to sketch.
No pressure.
No grand plan.
Just a small moment she chose for herself.
Why Showing Up to Sketch Is Enough
There is something deeply moving about moments like that. Perhaps because they remind us that urban sketching does not sit apart from everyday life. It fits into it.
Every time you open your sketchbook, whether for ten minutes or an hour, you are quietly saying that your creativity matters. You are giving yourself permission to pause and observe.
Over time, those small moments add up.
Your hand loosens more quickly.
Your eye begins to notice shapes, light, and shadow more clearly.
You start to see colour and composition in places you once walked past.
That is progress. Even if it feels modest, it is real.
How to Keep Showing Up, Even When Life Is Busy
One of the most common questions we hear is this:
“If I only sketch once a week, does that really count?”
Yes. It does. More than most people realise.
Showing up to sketch regularly, even in short bursts, builds rhythm. It keeps your tools familiar in your hands. It keeps you connected to your creative voice, which can easily get lost in the noise of daily life.
You might be:
- Watching a recording quietly at your kitchen table.
- Sketching live alongside others for company and encouragement.
- Or picking up your pen for ten minutes before bed.
Each time you show up, you are strengthening the habit. That matters far more than the length of the session.
Live or Replay? Both Paths Work
Some people thrive on sketching live with others. They enjoy the shared focus, the gentle energy of knowing others are sketching too.
Others prefer the calm of a replay. Pausing when needed. Making a cup of tea. Rewinding a section. Working slowly and quietly.
There is no better option.
Both paths lead to the same place. You showed up.
Building a Sketching Habit That Feels Supportive
- Block the time in your calendar, just as you would any other commitment.
- Lay out your sketchbook and pens ahead of time so there is no barrier to starting.
- Make yourself something warm to drink, or something comforting if that helps you settle.
- Begin without expectations. You do not need to finish.
- Stop when you feel ready. Twenty minutes still counts.
You Are Already Doing More Than You Think
Ian Fennelly often says that the hardest part of sketching is not finishing a drawing. It is starting one.
Many people never begin. They want to, but life gets busy, confidence wobbles, and days slip past.
So when you choose to show up, even briefly, you are already doing something meaningful. You are choosing curiosity over perfection. Presence over pressure.
That is how confidence is built. Quietly and steadily.
One Quiet Win at a Time
Renate’s moment by the Bay of Fundy was not about skill or outcome. It was about choosing presence.
She made a small space for her sketching and allowed herself to enjoy it. That is where the real value lies. Not in the finished page, but in the act of beginning.
So if you show up this week in any form, live, recorded, short, or unplanned, take a moment to acknowledge it.
Those small, quiet wins are what help a sketching habit last.
And if you feel like sharing, let us know one small thing you have noticed in your sketching lately. Often it is the smallest observations that keep us moving forward.