Why does this happen? My hypothesis is that reality is complex, so we try to guess through a series of strokes what we see. These strokes are made with a certain confidence—they aim to capture just the essential (the big shape). And by not detailing all aspects of the sketch, we allow the brain to fill in the gaps. In other words, it's a combination of being relaxed and keeping it simple. I believe that the more we advance, the more information we feel we must make clear, increasing the chances of mistakes and adding pressure on performance. So, what do we do about it?

It's a matter of time before you become skilled enough to keep the magic your sketch has while refining your artwork. This is the case with professional artists, and the answer is practice. But in the meantime, try what I often do.
My execution isn't always clean or refined because I don’t redo my sketches. When I aim to capture something from imagination or reality, I spend a few minutes guessing through strokes. Once it feels and looks sufficient for understanding at a very rough level, I start to refine in the same layer.
Often these two processes—sketching and refinement—don’t split. Only when I really like a very simple sketch do I duplicate the layer and start refining on the new one, afraid I might lose that thing I liked (which I often can't define). In most cases, it’s just a curved shape, whether from lines or brush strokes.
Here are some other things you can also do:
Render less – Only push detail where it serves focus or mood. Let corners or areas beyond your focal point stay gestural.
Study why your sketch works – Before moving on, write or reflect: what makes this sketch feel alive? Form? Angle? Flow? Preserve that on purpose.
Use sketchy strokes in finals – Integrate looseness into your process. Let some lines stay visible. Sometimes I like to do this with shape silhouettes, as a way of pushing dynamism through clean strokes.
Stop earlier – Practice finishing at 70%. Let go before killing it. Now, what might 70% mean in this context? Hard to say. But every 30-minute to 1-hour session, duplicate the original layer before you keep refining. Then turn on and off the layers, comparing with the previous version. In case you like your earlier version more, ask yourself why—and try again. Sometimes it's not really about time, but about noticing something you like in the current state of the artwork. That’s often a good moment to either stop or duplicate.
I hope this helps!

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Ramon Nuñez
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