Advice for Young Graphic Designers
posted in Entrepreneurship, Freelancing, Logo Design, Networking, Productivity, Web DesignEarlier today, my company received an inquiry on our contact form from a 14 yr old simply asking for some feedback on three designs that he has created. I am always more than happy to spend time helping others , especially younger designers just starting out and I am impressed by this 14 yr old for simply sending us an email and asking for some basic feedback.
So, I thought I might as well share my response to him with you, and it may end up helping someone else similar to this 14 yr old that emailed my company.
The three pieces you sent are quite impressive for a 14 yr old (for any age really). You obviously have a natural artistic ability and this is vital to being a good graphic designer. You can only learn so much but you need that intrinsic ability to know what visually appeals and works for the look you are trying to achieve.
It is important to learn how to combine your creativity and natural artistic ability with the business aspect of being a graphic designer. As a graphic designer, you also play a large role as a marketing professional, and you need to learn how to apply your art and design skills to the business world. This is vitally important as this will allow you to make a living from your craft. I know many designers that are extremely creative but lack the ability to use that creativity in a business / advertising environment.
Professional graphic design is all about communicating a message as powerfully and memorable as possible. If you become a professional designer, you will have clients that have messages (products , services etc) that they need to communicate to their market through advertising, and it will be up to you to figure out how to use your design skill and knowledge to present that message in the most effective way possible.
Another piece of advice is to always continue learning and expanding upon your skill set. Never settle for the knowledge you have at any point. Always strive to learn more.
Some other recent posts that I have published that provide advice for young designers are "50 Reasons Why You Will Not Make It As A Freelancer ", "What Not To Do When Designing a Logo " and "Most Important Thing I Would Tell A Design Student "
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Great post. Even greater hearing you helping and encouraging younger aspiring graphic artists. Considering the tools we have available now a days, there will definitely be a burst of amazing graphic design in the next few years as younger professionals move into the work force.
Great post.
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It is very kind of you to take time to help out an aspiring graphic designer. Your advice must have given some good feedback to the artist.
ilike2flash’s last blog post..Dynamic mask in Actionscript 3
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Presumably you said something specific about the designs as well? At the star of the post I thought we were going to get to ooh and ahh them
kristarella’s last blog post..Stuck in an iPod ad
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Hey Brian,
It’s good to see you also take time to respond to enquiries, no matter the age etc. Like Kris, I thought we’d maybe see the designs (I keep a store of draft logos people send, and keep meaning to share them with my feedback). When time allows, I’ll be sure to.
A little off-topic, did you uninstall the “subscribe to comments” plugin? I don’t see the check-box anywhere, and think I remember you having it.
Hope the week’s going well mate.
David Airey’s last blog post..Woolmark logo
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Can we see his designs?
Maybe I send you my works once, too….
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You’re very welcome, buddy.
“Subscribe to comments” is the first plugin I install. A definite plus for commentators.
As for the wedding planning, the two of us had a look around Belfast Castle, which is cool, but we’re not sure if we want the stress of a “home-town” wedding, what with everyone we’d need to invite, so we’re thinking of combining it with the honeymoon, perhaps in the Bahamas.
David Airey’s last blog post..HP invent
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There is 1 more thing, in your portfolio, when I click on a design the picture is still in the same size… Is that only on my computer or … ? Or it can’t get bigger than that?
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Thank you for the advice. I am a young designer too, and I shall keep that in mind.
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Very cool, I actually did something similar when I was first starting out. I called a decent size local web design firm and asked someone on the design team if they’d be willing to sit down with me and go over my portfolio (I was 16 at the time). I still keep in touch with him today


