Happy Birthday to the King of Pop.
Vector Portraits! →
Sessions are blocks of articles, interviews, tutorials and content on a particular creative subject. Sessions are hosted around the Tuts+ network depending on where each article fits best. So for example web design posts might appear on Psdtuts+ or Nettuts+. This site is like a table of contents for each session. The aim is to provide lots and lots of mini courses on different topics! That way you can get a variety of knowledge about the creative fields. From here you might want to jump into our detailed Tuts+ sites to delve deeper into the technical aspects of creativity!
RSS Subscribers37,386Twitter Followers21,217Facebook Fans19,828Advertise Here
Creating a Portrait Using Only Four Colors!
Create a Sparkly Female Portrait in Illustrator
Quick Tip: Rapid Vector Portrait Process
25 Fantastic Vector Portraits
Modeling the Human Face in Illustrator
Creating a Dramatic Portrait with Chunky Line Art
Tracing a Vector Face From a Reference Photo
Create a Sci-Fi, Vector Portrait Made of Symbols
Featuring 25 Inspiring Vector Portraits
Using Stock References in the Creation of Vector Art
How to Illustrate Dynamic Hair Using Adobe Illustrator’s Paintbrush Tool
Create a Monochrome Portrait in Illustrator – Vector Premium Tutorial
Create a Backlit, Elegant Female Portrait in Illustrator – Vector Premium Tutorial
Creating with Vector Blends In-Depth Using Illustrator – Vector Premium Tutorial
Create a Male Portrait from a Photo Reference – Vector Premium Tutorial
Create a Blood Elf Inspired Portrait in Illustrator – Vector Premium TutorialWhat’s a Session?
Left Brain & Right Brain
NEW WEBSITE! →
Our new website is up and running! Check it out to get more information on admissions, academic programs, and student services at Bay College of California.
The 50 Things Every Graphic Design Student Should Know →
There are very few ‘firsts’ these days. Countless others have started studios, freelanced and requested internships. It can be done. #the50 Regardless of how good you are, there will always be someone better. It’s surprisingly easy to waste time worrying about this. #the50 College fosters a zero-sum mentality: that someone has to fail for you to succeed. In truth, another’s success doesn’t limit yours. #the50 If you don’t know what you want, then how can you pursue it? Having a goal defines an end point, and subsequently, a place to start. #the50 It takes more energy to start than it does to stop. This is true for physics, your career, and that idea you need to work on. #the50 To get into the industry you need just three things: great work, energy and a nice personality. Many forget the last attribute. #the50 Your self-perception is your most important asset. See yourself as the person you want to be and others will see this too. #the50 An online portfolio is the alpha and omega of your career. With a wealth of web services, there’s no excuse for not having a website. #the50 Never stop editing your portfolio. Three strong pieces are better than ten weak ones – nobody looks for quantity, just quality. #the50 If your work doesn’t excite you, then it won’t excite anyone else. It’s hard to fake passion for mediocre work – scrap it. #the50 People are lazy. If you want them to look at your work, make it easy. Most of the time employers simply want to see a JPG or PDF. #the50 Clients, prospective employers and potential clients gravitate to letters with handwritten addresses. The personal touch goes far. #the50 Avoid profuse humour or gimmicks when contacting studios for work, they’ve seen it all before. Get to the point, they’ll be thankful. #the50 This is not a necessary evil – a studio that doesn’t pay their interns (at least the minimum wage) is a studio not worth working for. #the50 Internships are a financial burden, but they are vital. They let you scope out the industry and find the roles that suit you best. #the50 A studio’s work can dip, as can its energy. Ignore this and be indispensable, the onus is on you to find something that needs doing. #the50 A good relationship with a printer is invaluable – they will help you save money and the environment. #the50 These places are invaluable resources of cheap and ready-made artifacts ripe for tinkering, re-decoration and re-contextualisation. #the50 It’s not unusual to complete several internships and not find ‘a good fit’. Try applying to a studio you hadn’t considered. #the50 Assume nothing. Ask questions, even if you think you know the answers. You’ll be surprised at how little you know. #the50 It will feel cheeky, but ask for things. Ask to be included in exhibitions, magazines, pitches – if you don’t ask, you can’t get. #the50 You learn nothing by being told how great you are. Even if you think your work’s perfect – seek criticism, you can always ignore it. #the50 The creative industry is a small world: it’s a network where everyone knows everyone else. Remember this before pissing someone off. #the50 A good intern will find their reputation precedes them. Jobs are nearly always offered on this word-of-mouth evidence. #the50 There’s a difference between being ‘merry’ and ‘paralytic’. The latter costs you your dignity, your reputation and possibly your job. #the50 There’s some truth in ‘it’s not what you know, it’s who you know’. Talk to people, send emails; at the very least sign up to Twitter. #the50 Take your work seriously? Then take your appearance seriously. Clients are more likely to deal with people who look like they care. #the50 Not only does this devalue the profession, but it makes you look weak. Even a ‘nice’ client will take advantage of this. #the50 If you really have to work for nothing, negotiate. Clients and studios have access to many resources that can be viewed as ‘payment’. #the50 Never sign a contract before reading it. Subsequently, don’t begin any job without a contract – you may have to write one yourself. #the50 Businesses are deluged with invoices. Make yours stand out with colour or shape and it’s likely to rise to the top of the ‘pay’ pile. #the50 Always push yourself to do your best. Logically, there’s no way you can be dissatisfied with ‘having done your best’. #the50 The onus is on you to make the client relationship work, not the other way around. If it’s not working out, ‘fire’ them as a favour. #the50 Limitations are invaluable for creating successful work: they give you something to push against. From this tension comes brilliance. #the50 The environmental impact of your work isn’t a fashionable consideration – as a creative, it’s your most important consideration. #the50 Always interrogate your brief: re-define the question. No two briefs should be the same; a unique problem leads to a unique solution. #the50 New ideas are conceived with no context and no measures of success – this falsely makes them feel silly, awkward or even impossible. #the50 Clients get in touch because of self-initiated work. Ironically, business is excited by ideas untouched by the concerns of business. #the50 Clients fear arbitrary decisions – they want problem solving. Have a reason for everything, even if this is ‘post-rationalised’. #the50 Clients often mistake ‘rough’ digital work for the final design. Show sketches for as long as you can, it makes them feel involved. #the50 You may think you’re right, but look at the client’s solution along with yours. Occasionally you’ll be surprised. #the50 Fight for superior solutions. Demonstrate your thinking to your client, take them through it – it’s hard to argue with logic. #the50 The creative industry is often infuriating, but not every argument is an argument that needs to be had. This takes time to learn. #the50 Being ambitious means you have to take on things you think you can’t do. Failures are unfortunate, but they are sometimes necessary. #the50 Regardless of who you’re working with, speak up if something’s not right. Take it upon yourself to be the barometer of quality. #the50 If a job’s going wrong take responsibility. It feels counter-intuitive, but responsibility means you can do something about it. #the50 You’ve nothing to gain from holding on to your ideas; they may feel precious, but the more you share, the more new ideas you’ll have. #the50 Good design is crafted from understanding the relationships between things. These connections can’t be found when locked in a studio. #the50 Awards look good on the shelf, but clients seldom pick up the phone because of them. Solid work encourages that. #the50 Take your work seriously, take the business of your craft seriously, but don’t take yourself seriously. People who do are laughed at. #the50 (Source:Jamie Wieck)

1. You are not the first.

2. There is always someone better.

3. Success is not a finite resource.

4. You cannot score without a goal.

5. Starting anything requires energy.

6. The path to work is easier than you think.

7. Have a positive self-image.

8. Get a clean, simple website up.

9. Curate your work.

10. Listen to your instincts.

11. Make your work easy to see.

12. Hand-write addresses.

13. Time is precious – get to the point.

14. Never take an unpaid internship.

15. Do as many internships as you can stand.

16. Don’t waste your internship.

17. Make friends with a printer.

18. Find your local D.I.Y. store and pound shop.

19. Be patient.

20. Ask questions.

21. Ask for opportunities.

22. Seek criticism, not praise.

23. Make friends, not enemies.

24. News travels fast.

25. Don’t get drunk at professional events.

26. Network.

27. Dress smart – look business like.

28. Never work for free.

29. Negotiate.

30. Read contracts.

31. Make your invoice stand out.

32. There’s no such thing as a bad job.

33. There’s no such thing as a bad client.

34. Embrace limitations.

35. The environment is not a limitation.

36. Boring problems lead to boring solutions.

37. New ideas are always ‘stupid’.

38. Do not underestimate self-initiated work.

39. Justify your decisions.

40. Show sketches, not polished ideas.

41. Work with the client, not against them.

42. Don’t always take no for an answer.

43. Pick your battles.

44. If you’re going to fail, fail well.

45. Be an auteur.

46. Take responsibility for failure.

47. Share your ideas.

48. Get out of the studio.

49. Awards are nice, but not vital.

50. Don’t take yourself too seriously.
Graphic design
(via weandthecolor)







