02-03-2010, 03:28 AM
I've ALMOST been guilty of this.. I say I'm interested, but the closest I get to "I'll buy it", is "I gotta' go check on funds".I leave it open, but I won't commit until I've committed.I definately see that all the time, and always feel some concern that an artist get's all kinds' of rave comments about how perfect the work is, and how folks are gonna' snatch up the product, only to discover later that maybe 3 have sold.It's bad because I've seen where an artist was on the fence about making a mold of a sculpt, and once they get inundated with requests, they figure.. alright, I'll spend the time and money.. it looks like I'll be able to recover it.Or where an artist is looking for feedback, and doesn't get anything except how "perfect" it is, and then get's torn apart later when a major detail that everyone was originally cool with, is suddenly the main factor that everyone mentions as the reason why they won't buy one.No one expects anyone to commit and pre-buy something that's in a sculpt stage, but the thing to do is not commit until you're committed, and don't rave about how perfect something is unless you feel it IS perfect. You think you're doing them a favor, and being nice, and to a point you are, but in the long run you're killing them and denying them the oppourtunity to grow as an artist.I usually pm the new artists with a warning about folks trying to be overly polite, and lately, there's also been progress, in terms of folks pointing start-up artists towards learning something about anatomy and stuff. Sometime the "artist" doesn't respond well to that, but at least folks are being more honest about it these days, and personally I'm glad to see it.