Drilldown: CapGrads
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Determination and being honest with yourself is key—don't sign yourself up for a project that's too much to handle no matter how ideal it sounds. Choose one you won't grow tired of and can stay dedicated to through and through. (1) ·
Stick to what you enjoy, otherwise you'll never get it done. (1) ·
When you get an idea, make sure it's you—that it has a meaning to you—and make sure the people that see it know that is what you want to do in the future. (1)
I began building the structure of my future business: crocheting things to make people smile. (1) ·
I will be showing you different drawings of water and land animals. (1) ·
I wrote a few chapters of my fictional novel, as well as wrote out some notes for myself to help me imagine the world as I write it. (1)
I started with the intention to write the whole book, which would look somewhere around 20 or so chapters. I knew it wouldn't have happened in the end, but I wanted to set the end goal for myself. (1) ·
I was going to track my progress both in improvement of quality but also how my store had gone (thanks COVID). (1) ·
My proposal was a history of art and why people keep making it. (1)
Crocheting is a learning process—you have to have determination and dedication to improve and develop your own styles and preferences. (1) ·
I've grown immensely as a writer, both objectively and subjectively. I learned how to write and compose scenes of a narrative more clearly, and to make less mistakes and convey my image in better ways. The most important thing I gained from this project however, was better confidence in my own writi (1) ·
That art work has been going on for a while and art can change your view of it (1)
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