if you love vibrant character art, playful pinups, and a mix of polished pieces plus behind-the-scenes sketches, their Patreon can be a really rewarding place to land. What sold me early on was how consistent the creator is with visual quality — those rich colors, clean linework, and confident anatomy show up in almost every post. But more than just the end products, it's the extra bits that matter: process gifs, layered PSDs, work-in-progress shots, and the occasional tutorial-style commentary that make me feel like I'm getting a peek into their artistic brain rather than just a gallery dump.
On the value side, tiers matter a lot. If you just want access to high-res downloads of finished pieces, the lower-to-mid tiers typically give you that and are usually priced pretty reasonably compared with commissioning or buying prints every time a new piece drops. If you like seeing how art evolves or want assets for studying technique, the middle tiers that include process files and PSDs are excellent. The higher tiers sometimes offer direct interaction—commission slots, critiques, or personalized sketches—and those are where you need to decide if the price matches the reward. I personally found the mid-tier sweet spot: I got both the finished art for my wallpaper folder and the WIP files to dissect for my own practice, and that felt like a solid trade for the monthly cost.
Community perks are another big plus. 'Cherry Crush' often runs patron-only polls, early previews, and a Discord where fans share fanart and tips. That sense of clubhouse camaraderie turned a passive follow into an active hobby for me. Also, the creator tends to archive content well: older exclusive pieces stay accessible, which means your subscription continues to feel like it has cumulative value. A couple of caveats though — check how often new content arrives. If the creator posts once every month and you’re paying top-tier prices, it may feel thin. Also, not every patron needs the
deepest, most revealing process files; some people are just after high-res prints and a couple of bonus sketches. For those folks, a lower tier or subscribing for a single month when a big drop is announced is a smart move.
In short, if you appreciate decorative character art, enjoy seeing how pieces are built, or want a friendly creative community, 'Cherry Crush' Patreon is worth trying for at least a month. My personal habit is to subscribe when an artist announces a major update or series, flip through the backlog, grab my favorites, and then decide if I want the ongoing perks. For me, the mix of polished art, usable study resources, and a warm fan space has been totally worth the subscription — it feels like supporting an artist whose work I genuinely enjoy and learning a bit along the way.