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#and the only way to access the pattern is by video (thankfully the video maker is alright šŸ™)
uncanny-tranny Ā· 5 months
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You know how some clay artists make a little kiln god to protect their pottery? I need to crochet a little yarn god to make sure my projects always have good omens near them because I think I need that šŸ˜­šŸ˜Ø
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artdjgblog Ā· 4 years
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Innerview: Ercan Ucer / Grafik Tasarim (Turkey)Ā 
October 2008
ā€‹Image:ā€‹ NA /Ā Grafik Tasarim Dergisi
Note: Take #1 of a design magazine interview.ā€‹Ā 
ā€‹0ā€‹1) How do you name yourself other than being a versatile designer? Labels arenā€™t my liking, but they canā€™t help but be used. Things are what they are. The past year and half Iā€™ve come to the realization that Iā€™m not really a graphic designer. Well, I am, but not in conventional ways or to todayā€™s standards. I find myself every day becoming more and more out of touch with things. Iā€™ve always had the knack for carrying my own cocoon with me, but some days itā€™s very apparent that Iā€™m enclosed. That aside, anymore I just say that Iā€™m a maker of things, as I like to just make things. I think I confuse a lot of people, actually I know I do. Iā€™ve had people email me confused if my web site is an archive for many artisansā€™ work. Some think that there is a D, a J and a G teaming up in my basement. One girl asked if I did any actually DJ-ing. Which, I gladly agreed with. Iā€™ve had clients get a little disappointed by what I make for them because itā€™s not what they wanted, even though they told me from the initial phone call or email, ā€œI like everything that you do. Do whatever you want.ā€ I simply like to make things and hope to dab a bit into many things by the time my time is up. I do know that every day is a new adventure at my soupy head and dining table. Iā€™m calling a portion of my problem, well not really a problem for me but it might be to others and so be it, the ā€œBatman Boyhood Concernā€. When I was younger I simply made things. When I was younger I was obsessed with Tim Burtonā€™s take on ā€œBatmanā€. And I still find it to be my most engaging. I wanted everything in my room to be ā€œBatmanā€ related and if we couldnā€™t afford the room make-over, Iā€™d just have to take matters into my own hands. My Grandparents lived just a four minute, little-legged sprint down the sidewalk from the school house in the small town I was associated with. Nearing 3:30 PM about three out of five school days, Iā€™d hit the screen door running, grab a sugar cookie and get to work on my life-sized detail drawing of actor Michael Keaton as Batman. My Grandma kept this ode to pop-culture and my life in her bottom dresser drawer next to a giant pile of drawings from a giant pile of grandkids that she had collected over the years. Iā€™d shut myself in her bedroom, drawing my way into a little portion of my master work until ā€œSupperā€ wrapped itā€™s way around the kitchen corner, calling down the hallway. Drawing utensils were then exchanged for eating ones and the paper was rolled back up until Iā€™d hit the front door again the next time. Something in me just said to draw it, to do it. Something before even this particular episode or movie was in me saying for me to do and make things. And I just enjoyed it. I found a peace to documenting things and sometimes Iā€™d tag team with my older brother and weā€™d feed off of our energy to draw and make things. Weā€™d tailor many creative moments after late nights watching movies or attending a wide range of events like fairs, tractor pulls and visiting cities. For the record I believe the ā€œBatmanā€ project went unfinished, but in some extension Iā€™m still making things in this formative format, along with feeding off of other events in my life, past and present. Sadly, when my Grandma had to finally sell her home and contents, I wasnā€™t there the day the trash was hauled off with that over-sized, unfinished treasure map to my late ā€™80s world in-tact. In some ways maybe it is better off that it lives as a memory, though Iā€™m sure Iā€™d proudly display it if I had it today. And in some ways I hope that somebody plucked that thing up out of a trash heap somewhere to hang on their wall, to either celebrate anotherā€™s dream or as inspiration for their own. I know Iā€™d do the same if I found someoneā€™s life work, even if it was only drawn in a season and only for the sake of making something. I can see that a lot of talent is emerging right now from my generation (mid-20s/30s). In a sense weā€™re coming out of our bedroom closets to share with others what we can do. Weā€™ve got a firm grasp on our ancestorsā€™ aesthetics and fuse it with a brimming-over upbringing pile of video tapes, video games, computers and pinches of rebellion and rock ā€˜nā€™ roll and whatever environment we come from or have access to (at least from my perspective). I suppose the versatile designer isnā€™t a new thing, as Iā€™m now thinking of some of my favorite and influential master designers of yesterday. But the combination of yesterdayā€™s and todayā€™s technology plays a role in the creative implants of the current versatile designer. I think youā€™ll find that a lot of people are just up and making a wide-range of things, not because they have to but because they simply can. Everybody seems to be versatile, and many are extremely good at it. Many artist/designer web sites are a file cabinet for all things, all ideas and information (I know that mine is that way, or Iā€™d like to think it is or will be some day). I always say that you can throw a rock and hit somebody who is involved in the arts. And thatā€™s not a bad thing, but itā€™s this is interesting to me and I think itā€™s due to the internet and technology. There are a lot of people making things or tying to. Itā€™s good and bad that weā€™re all kids again? I think Iā€™ll always be a man-child to some degree, but I have to plug into the adult world. Opposed to being versatile, there are a few one-hit-wonders, or stylists that can pull off their own thumb prints with each piece over and over and over, assembly-line like. Personally, I get a bit blahed by this and like I say a few can only pull it off for a career of the ā€œsame something to sayā€. I always think of one of my favorite illustrators, Edward Gorey, when I think about a style that sticks and is truly of the originator. He had his influences and his loves, but he also spun his own world and I donā€™t think his world caan ever be truly duplicated. ā€‹0ā€‹2) What is the relationship between marketing and your designing process at different areas? (poster, packaging, logoā€¦etc) Until recently Iā€™ve never had to market myself in conventional practice. For six solid years I cut my cloth diapers full on independent music-related designs that involved posters, logos, illustrations, etc. Being plugged-in to a small market like Kansas City, MO as a maker of things, and early-on living with a band who knew other bands and so forth, it was easy for me to crank out quite a quantity of work and a wide selection. Still, Iā€™ve always just barely dipped into the arts scene here. My first few years of my design odyssey, there was no shortage of people to form relationships with and most of these people needed things made for their band or whatever. Not to mention I was in my early 20s which amounted for a large amount of energy and excitement. It also got to the point where I didnā€™t need to be told to make something. Iā€™d just up and do it. Granted, I havenā€™t made much money at all doing what it is I do (this is something I knew from the get-go) and there have been some frustrating times, but the rewards have been greater and most all of my initial goals and curiosities have been met, several times over. And look at me, Iā€™m making it in Turkey! Anyway, mostly what Iā€™ve fit into is ā€œTrickle Downā€, or ā€œWord-of-Mouthā€. On top of creating my first five or more years, which was squandered into the late night / wee morning or on weekends, I was working 40 hours a week (oh, still am) at day jobs. I was a janitor and grounds keeper for many years and currently I do data entry in an office and have a better schedule and sleeping pattern. For a season or two I was even working 60 hours a week to make ends meet, plus a full-time girlfriend (now my wife) and working all night to meet design deadlines (thankfully independent music industry deadlines can be very relaxed and since I donā€™t get much money, I can pretty much make my own deadlines). I was at times scrambling between 10-to-15 projects at once, and only to basically be paid in cheeseburgers. Certainly, the ultimate goal and position for me is to someday make a clean getaway from the day jobs. I will still dabble in music-related practices, but Iā€™m finding new avenues and realizing the powerful and simple marketing tool that the internet has to offer. Although I butt heads with computers and technology, Iā€™ve learned to just be myself when representing myself. But, my biggest ā€œbuttā€ will be with myself. I can never do enough and Iā€™m so very hungry. ā€‹0ā€‹3) Can you tell us about your working environment and your different feelings or extraordinary events that inspires you? Ever since I was a child, my working environment has been in my bedroom hunched over at my bed or whatever work station of the week Iā€™ve built. I could always be found drawing or building something, or putting culture into my system. Though, my working environment extended beyond the bedroom as I grew up a child of rural farm and country life in the middle of America. I made dives into the sandbox, the fields, creeks and woods. I certainly believe in a home base of operations, mostly a place to find peace through the pieces, store my treasures and to unload my skull cap. And Iā€™ve claimed to friends before how I could easily stay alone for weeks or months on end. I donā€™t get bored and lonely. Like my childhood on the farm, I still see everywhere on the outside as my working environment as well because I do my most thorough thinking / observing while out of my clubhouse comfort zone. Donā€™t most all who dive into any area of the arts and crafts? Given my odd schedule, I also must spin wheels rather quickly. So, I suppose the clubhouse external is the feeding and processing ground until I get the momentā€™s time to get it out of my system while at my desk down in my basement clubhouse. And I need this. Itā€™s my cure, though it can be my downfall. Iā€™m a major fan of extraordinary events and tend to find humorous and peculiar ones to be more my taste, and more-so in retrospect of the event. Iā€™m a fairly anxious guy, so inspiration usually comes after my own post-dramatic stress of a situation. I feel to be blessed with a certain quality that attracts odd circumstances, or maybe itā€™s just in over-kill-over-my-head. Extraordinary has its own brand of fast pitch. More often I find inspiration in places, events and things that are fairly run-of-the-mill and every day ordinary for any person, which can give them an added cushion of ā€œextraā€ for me. Some of my very favorite designs are remnants of everyday people, places and things. I do a lot of looking down or glancing off into space, collecting while Iā€™m out and about either mental delights or physical ones that have been discarded. Since I was young Iā€™ve had a habit (good or bad?) of bringing things home. While most men bring booze, golf clubs, sports cars, tools, even ladies homeā€¦I started dragging pieces of the farm to my world under the bed. I believe this started with bugs and the only type of spider I find comfort in, known to me as the Granddaddy Long Leg. When I found out that these long-legged, tiny had wonders would pass away of suffocation and frost bite after rounding them up in a glass jar kept in the freezer, I started dragging pre-dead things home to spare me some emotion. Not too unlike the family farm dog, Iā€™d drag animal carcasses, parts and pieces to my bedroom. I was a gatherer before I was a hunter. Though, part of this was instilled in my boots while on excursions with my father to hunt animals like quail, rabbit, squirrel, turkey and deer. My Dad would let me keep things like turkey beards, feathers and feet. He himself had an impressive collection of deer antlers. When I was 6 or 7 my grandmother made me a denim backpack lined with plastic to collect the dayā€™s dead things in. My Dad would shoot something and toss it into my backpack. Once home weā€™d dump it out to field dress our dinner and wipe out the lining for the next hunting trip. Mom and Dad have a couple picture books filled with the conquests of kills. They also serve nicely as a chart for watching four children grow-up as they jot the front lawn or pick-up truck bed landscape in front of my Dadā€™s kills, with big eyes, grins and sometimes a tongue hanging out in mimic of a dead deerā€™s. Further-on the photographs reveal the children as stars to their own still scenes with their own bagged game. A future goal of mine is to have an exhibition of blown-up family photography of this genre. To some this may be quite strange or extraordinary, but itā€™s not unusual for me at all and nothing out of the ordinary in response to the environment I grew up in. Itā€™s only one tier of the cake. Iā€™ve had many events in my life stick-out (check the ā€œhistoryā€ on my web site), but a singular extraordinary event that sticks out in a way in which it triggered me happened when I was six years old. I was at the school playground during Kindergarten recess. All alone I sat on top of a tall slide and watched the rest of the class playing games together, rummaging through the playgroundā€™s wood chip obstacles and tennis court tag playing. They were all going and doing and jumping and seemed to be enjoying themselves, but it just didnā€™t feel right to me. The playground sat directly next to a well-traveled road and it too was buzzing behind me with cars, trucks and tractors housing people on the go. Even though I made my own decision to do my own thing, sitting atop that slide, I felt extremely alone, confused and secured inside a most intense sadness of insecurity and strangeness to this scene, to the extended world I was coming up into. I can still feel a connection to this moment and Iā€™ve had two or three other episodes like it, but not nearly as bad. Jokingly, Iā€™ve maybe spent three of my nine lives during these moments. But, the one thing I canā€™t precisely channel, looking back up that slide, is what exactly happened after my observational anti-social breakdown. I do know that I blacked-out, fell from the top of the slide and hit my head really hard on the ground. The next thing I remember was sitting in the back of my parentā€™s car, smiling at the blue sky and excited to leave school early. Something important announced itself that sunny day. I wouldnā€™t exchange my early observations, inputs, memories and moments for anything, even the things I did this morning I wouldnā€™t trade. It has all compounded and fueled me in a way to how I got to the right now. When that can be channeled and floated on, then the moves you make can be pre-calculated and form purity to them. Notes like that arenā€™t always hit perfectly, and sometimes youā€™ve got to miss and even collapse to the floor. But, when the notes are on, you can really feel it. ā€‹0ā€‹4) When did you discover the impulse that led you being a designer? This impulse to create, to leave behind a paper trail of some sort on my impression, has always been kicking around in me. I donā€™t remember a time when I wasnā€™t doing or making something. Even now, creeping on 30 Iā€™m finding that Iā€™m more in touch with my former self than my current, chipping away at something. Actually, the former and current are the same person. Iā€™m not really living in my past, but Iā€™m moving forward with it fully there and in use. Which, is another calculation of how all things gathered and hunted in oneā€™s life can lead to the now, I suppose? Though, I donā€™t mean to randomly aim arrows. From a young age I was dealing with design (as all of us ā€œdesignersā€ did and do), but at the time didnā€™t really make a proper connection to it. I knew how to spot Beatles records by their green apples. I was a fan of the ā€œStar Warsā€ logo type and knew it was its own calling card and mega cool. I was very respectful of my nationā€™s flag and very curious of how one got his picture on moneyā€¦and many other things that we all find developmental comfort or relation in. And while growing up on a farm I became quickly associated with tractor machinery identities and seed corn logos. With my older brother Iā€™d collaborate on mini magazines and we also would cut and clip exciting words and phrases out of Momā€™s magazines and paste them down. I always chose to ā€œVisualizeā€ my book reports in school rather than ā€œVerbalizeā€ them. I must confess there was many times where I wouldnā€™t even read the book and still score a top honor with my interpretive illustrations based on my own guts and thoughts. Which, sometimes a designer doesnā€™t have time to read a whole book before slapping a cover to it. When the age of 9 or 10 came around I was the winner of a wide-spread logo competition for a roller skating / bowling alley business in a nearby town. I had a hunch Iā€™d win as every other submission, even those by students 8 years older than me, didnā€™t feel inspired or realized or even logo-like (whatever that means nearly 20 years later). I still like my logo. Though, when my family drove by the facility after the sign was finally up, I got a real-world shock of disappointment as the owners had took the liberty to butcher my design and it just wasnā€™t the same. It was ruined to me. It was my first design disaster and it hurt at the age of 9 or 10, just like they hurt now. I was also a big fan of collecting and mimicking logos and mascots for collegiate and professional sports teams. There was a time when I claimed, ā€œI want to be one of those people that makes those sports logos.ā€ Not really knowing what people who made such things are called, but I knew that I wanted to be involved somehow and I knew how to make sense of them (I also celebrated a go at trying to design athletic shoes). My love for those sports logos moved into sports stadium design and architecture while I was in my early teens. I still have pages and pages of baseball stadium designs Iā€™ve invented. However, a poor track record in mathematics finally convinced me at 18 that I probably couldnā€™t make the cut in such a technical field as architecture without being held accountable for faulty engineering. It was a hard reality, though I eventually would work as a night janitor for a successful stadium design office when I first moved to Kansas City, MO. So, technically I did work in sports architecture. The summer previous to my non-math skills realization, I was involved with a wide-selection of fellow high school artists to form the first annual Missouri Fine Arts Academy. This opened me up to other channels for future development with the arts. And I became more open and dare-I-say, evident of my ability for ā€œartsyā€? I also was becoming influenced by new things like typography of graffiti (even though I only practiced graffiti in sketch books and had no idea what typography was until two years later). The last year of high school I decided to go to college for something called graphic design. I enjoyed art and making things, but from what I understood graphic designers guaranteed ā€œmore chunky of a pay checkā€, something Iā€™m still looking for. It wasnā€™t until receiving a great helping of design education at Southwest Missouri State University (SMSU, which is now Missouri State University), that it really began to seep in what a graphic designer was defined as. The illustration and design department at SMSU was a unique opportunity to study with as my instructors were from Eastern Europe and Russia. This brought a great perspective on not only the largely hands-on work that I was interested in pursuing but also from a cultural platform. Most importantly, I learned how to build and burn from the fuel that I once had while making things in my bedroom as a child. This took over two years of redevelopment, oiling and eye opening to get at what I had in me from the foundation get-go. My instructors helped me to see this, along with a lot of hard work. Though, looking back I donā€™t think I really worked hard enough. At times, it wasnā€™t an easy transition and at times I was laughed at by peers. One such instance early-on in my studies was when I said, ā€œIā€™m going to take the graphic design route that doesnā€™t involved computers.ā€ It wasnā€™t arrogance speaking, rather backwoods boy. A couple of friends thought I was crazy for that one. Later on those same friends would look at me very strange when I thought that typography class involved map making. After many paints of red face, and once knee-deep into my studies, I had second thoughts about graphic design as I fought with the screen barrier of the computer monitor, the route I didnā€™t want to take. Computers choked the fun out of creating for me. Frustration was sensed from within and out as I was at a loss with my once creative love and my first computer design instructor was pretty frustrated with me. Along with this struggle, I visited many professional design studios and always came back very unsatisfied with the ā€œprofessionā€ I was getting into. It lacked what I was searching for, the thing that kept me up as a child making stuff. A professional design office atmosphere might work for most, and that is perfectly fine, but I for one wasnā€™t about to give myself to another manā€™s dream, spending 40 years pushing around on an assembly line screen. Iā€™m painting a terrible picture for professional design offices and I apologize. I just didnā€™t see myself and the way in which I thought and worked in that environment. I knew what I wanted to do, but had no idea what to do with it. And I for sure knew it wasnā€™t going to be wasted on computer monitors (Note: I own a computer and use it. It is a remarkable tool and has been a good/bad addition to the industry. But, a computer is not design nor does it have a magic button that pukes out designs like people back home have once thought). Sheepishly, I took a chance on myself the last couple years of school and gained much needed confidence in doubling up design with illustration classes and learning to merge the two. It was a lot of work (even though I donā€™t think I worked hard enough), but something clicked and I felt like something could come of it. Outside of class I was catching fever as well, starting what would become my own business and shuffling a large amount of clients. This was when I started getting into independent music graphics, merging my love of music with my love for making things, and meeting people who needed me to make them things. The last couple of years of school were very important. I learned to reconnect with myself, to poor into my work to where it became more than just ā€œworkā€. I would then finish up the rest of my design and illustration courses and secretly drop-out of school to pursue a higher calling to do my own thing. ā€‹0ā€‹5) Is looking at life always from a different angel, the designerā€™s necessarily ego? Most any area of most any job / skill / talent / business doesnā€™t come without some ego hurdling. The ego is amped further within the arts. Inflated achievement comes with ease when your voice gets a little loud in a ā€œsceneā€ or beyond, when you start to make some ground or just think youā€™ve got it going on. Itā€™s easy to become your own Hallmark moment. Iā€™d like to think Iā€™m fairly grounded, but itā€™s hard not to feel the eggs weight the other side when I know I could be sitting on a couple of golden ones. And everybody asks me why Iā€™m not doing this full-time, why I donā€™t have my own book, why this and that. Working a day job can help matters upstairs and can also add a unique fuel to the equation, but it can also be a nightmare pushing everything to the back burner because of a day job. It can hard to keep up with everything. But, life is life and Iā€™m best when I donā€™t try to push it so hard that I end up breaking instead of making. I have to just tell myself that I am a man and a man who happens to make things. Even if those things are on the side, and at times have to stay on the inside. It doesnā€™t mean that Iā€™m better than somebody nor am a ā€œsomebodyā€ because Iā€™ve found a certain something within me or a way to leave my mark. I enjoy my life, have fun and feel very fortunate, even if I do find it all quite silly or serious from time to time. I think one needs healthy doses of reality and a whole heap of humor to make it. Besides, I have no answers. If you know somebody with it all figured out, have them call me. Phones tend to bring the egos out, but Iā€™ll at least give an ear. What helps me is to find comfort and ease in venturing back into my child manner. I find peace in just Be-ing, but not in some freak-out way. Iā€™m much more content and find peace when Iā€™m either looking at the world through a certain lense that I might qualify for or just making and enjoying the act of celebration in creativity. The moment I start to think too much about it all or start to answer questions for interviews is when it can get a little dangerous. I feel odd for the people who sit through an entire interview with me because half the time I have no idea what the heck is going on. Creative voice can be a dangerous stomping ground. We see individuals all the time start to play God with their arts and crafts to where they become the work of art. They say itā€™s ā€œwho you knowā€, not ā€œwhat you knowā€ and this may be true in some fashion, but I think people play with their gifts a little too hard to become something other than a someone, to where they donā€™t even recognize themselves. Itā€™s a place where the art takes possession over them and the things and even the people that they pioneer. Itā€™s sad. And another thing, itā€™s sad to me when creative people resort to outside influences to fuel themselves. This is another topical can of worms, but I get extremely sad, frustrated and the feeling of cheat when I find a great piece of art was created under the guise of chemical enhancement and or power pills. I donā€™t think Iā€™ve ever had a creative supply shortage. Even if I had the full-time employment of my own craft, Iā€™d still have a back list added to daily as there isnā€™t enough time and resources to accomplish everything I want to and I donā€™t have a lack of work ethic or passion (though sometimes I might think Iā€™m lazy). Itā€™s evident that those who are steeped with some intuition to create and spew out what theyā€™ve got in them have been blessed and cursed in some way. I feel very blessed to have this ability of self-contained entertainment and amusement and the strange need to put my stamp down here. Though, it can be a wreck when I stay too deep within myself. Itā€™s hard to find balance sometimes, but if I just take things one step at a time, Iā€™m fine. I think gaining wisdom through maturity helps and I know that my energy and will-power have died some and of late because Iā€™m getting older. But, Iā€™m leaning on this as a beneficial tragedy and it excites to want to always be making my best work. I think I say and do some dumb stuff now, but Iā€™m positive itā€™s less than yesterday. ā€‹0ā€‹6) Can you inform us about graphic designā€™ s one of the important field, package design and your sketches? / Tell me about the sketching and process of packaging. There is a certain amount of image longevity that becomes attached to packaging. Iā€™m not experienced in much more than musical CD packaging, but I think a long life span especially applies to this in the iconic halls of pop-culture. Certainly, my little kicks arenā€™t associated with the big boy playground pop-culture world at all, as Iā€™ve only floated around the local independent music scene and a few magazines and books. Though, who knows as time passes and perhaps within the very small circle Iā€™ve operated in, it will tell. Besides, itā€™s not the reason to make something and/or package something (to win awards and hearts or to make something cool-lookinā€™) but if you can add some meaty eye candy, then so be it and why not? I love poster design because there are endless possibilities to exhaust, many ways to work reach-and-grab, to be of-the-moment and intuitive. If something doesnā€™t work all-around, itā€™s throw-away and will die soon like house flies. CDs are so different, at least for me, and they can be quite intimidating and sometimes a nightmare. I do a little bit of sketching, but more-so the process and evolution of diving right into the CD package is the sketching for me. If Iā€™m rewarded with an ample amount of time to work on a CD I usually make it happen in three different sessions, or what I call ā€œincubation stagesā€. This allows me time to sit on ideas and to come back to them with fresh perspective and clear head, to play or spin off ideas and such. With the way in which I work, I tend to feed off of my day-to-day (sometimes minute-to-minute) emotional handy work. It can be a little strange though as I say I donā€™t like to think, but Iā€™m no stranger to it and thus I can easily obsess over wondering the what-might-have-been with something like a CD package or anything after itā€™s over. There have been moments where having an extended deadline for a package can cause too much to happen, too many sessions. And Iā€™ve had some CD packages that the musicans/band have taken anywhere from six months to two years upon getting to the final. You know, people taking their time, finishing up recording, life stuff and production blahs. These typically turn to nightmare with the band or a third party (another designer or the printer) ending up with passed around digital files, putting the project on the mutated chopping block. CDs can wear me out. Especially in the age of digital and ā€œeverybodyā€™s a designerā€. Thatā€™s another ball park though. Though I appreciate not cramping my time and style, as Iā€™m a busy boy, I do believe my best packages have come down on me at the last minute, and usually on the lowest of budgets. And I mean cheap, major cheap. Sometimes I only need one session to cram for the final. There have been times where a client tells say, ā€œHey, Iā€™ve got such ā€˜nā€™ such idea to release a CD.ā€, and instantly Iā€™ll have the image in my head and make it and itā€™s perfect. I guess it just depends? ā€‹0ā€‹7) What are the benefits of making global designs for the designer? I love a body of work, one that breathes and not only serves as a timeline for the maker, but also for views and observations on life itself. I like the idea of the paper trail through the woods. Even if it goes barely used or undiscovered in its own time, it still becomes a piece of time. Who knows, maybe it will be a major highway further down? Of course anyone who makes things in a passionate format and routine canā€™t help but be a tad bit selfish when it comes to dishing something up. Even if it is for some other body, it is always from an original body, the creator. Anything that goes global is still connected to that first breath of singular life. It means a great deal to me when something silly that I get tickled out of bringing to life, in some aspect, makes it out of the nest and causes others to react in their own way, mostly positively and even sometimes negatively. In todayā€™s fast-paced world of millions and billions of images and things flashing, it really does mean a lot that my meager things have made it in some strange and oddball small-scale way. Even, if itā€™s just a grin or a double-scoop by someone of a little poster on a wall or in a magazine or out there on the internet billboard. After starting to make things on my so-called professional design odyssey for only a few months, I had people track me down to say how their bedroom walls had few places to hang anymore of my work. This just floored me as I am not one to have much bare space on my own walls of other peopleā€™s work. ā€‹0ā€‹8) Can you explain the relationship between marketing and designing? Like I previously mentioned, years of marketing for me came by word-of-mouth or by people seeing my work in the community or in magazine competitions and book publishing. Something I tell artists and designers is to get the work out there. Even if itā€™s something youā€™re doing in the off hours, just get it out. I know that I have some things that only I and my basement will see, but a lot of what I make gets out there. And if the people find something to listen to within your work, they will come. Even if itā€™s just one or two, then that is worth it. I feel Iā€™m finally at a place where I can sit back and re-learn some things and actually look at the things Iā€™ve made, the pile Iā€™ve built. Iā€™m learning to use the internet as the tool it is to pass emails to prospective clients or industry folk and to find ways in which to get my new web site some traffic. I have to take it a bit slow though because I only have so little time to actually make things that itā€™s hard to find the time to push that stuff into other areas. There arenā€™t enough hours in the day. Also, I definitely believe in getting the work to design competitions whether local organizations, national or world-wide. I recommend dumping as much stuff as you can every year, money-willing of course. People on the other end start to take notice and begin to look for you, which can turn to magazine editors leaving positive messages and emails, interested in your work. This can also lead to interviews and other special things. The work in magazines has been the most important for me as publishing can extend many world regions, gathering a lot of feedback. This can lead to book submissions and beyond. Iā€™m not sure if Iā€™m answering this question correctly. Marketing in other waysā€¦? A design is a marketing tool. Though, a designer does play eye-grabber, a designer is not really a marketer, but I guess it helps a bit to know how to sell something? I had friends in college who studied marketing as well as design. But, itā€™s an area Iā€™m not familiar with other than getting people to get excited for a musical group/sound/feeling/expression by way of poster, CD or logo design. It is marketing tool though, especially when working with a client. It certainly is not only what the designer can bring to the ā€œproductā€, but youā€™re also working for somebody and trying to sell an image or an item and in the case of show posters, selling a venue or the place the poster is hanging or even the scene and city. I think this can be a tricky walk. Iā€™ve been fortunate to have some success with great clients and great projects to where things work out lovely. I guess it helps that independent music graphics kinda start out in left field? Though, I donā€™t think that the work should limit itself. I think itā€™s great when the work speaks to anybody. There are times though where things donā€™t mix well, whether under the weather or client-wise or consumer. Itā€™s just part of the deal. ā€‹0ā€‹9) Does any of your designs have an unforgettable story? This question has been asked a handful of times and itā€™s always answered the same way as this story is one that I wonā€™t forget. I think that everything I make has a story to it. Whether itā€™s an unforgettable one in terms of production on my end, or one that is contained within the background of the piece internally, everything has a story. The ā€œWhatever Makes You Happyā€ CD package design I made in June of 2002 for the band Elevator Division, is one of my most memorable moments, story-wise and design-wise. The following has been told so often for interviews, that Iā€™ve now come to simply plug in a script that Iā€™ve already spent time with to answer such a question. I donā€™t aim to cheapen this interview by including something that I gave for another, but here goes the story. Itā€™s pretty whacky and ended up being one of the best things that I think Iā€™ll ever make. It was a special run of 250 homemade CD packages for the band Elevator Division. Iā€™ve had many projects that demand more production time than my little brain imagines, but this one was the worst. Actually, the finished piece is a lot tamer than my initial idea. Though, the final imageā€™s concept, married to what the band was communicating on the disc inside, is way better. The idea came at the night I started printing. Well, actually it was spray paint. I had an image made for a month or more and then changed it at the last stroke of inspiration. It married the themes for the album ā€œWhatever Makes You Happyā€ perfectly. With reflections of war and relationships in the songs, I made an image of a hand shooting off its index finger like a missile. It was the idea of shooting off oneā€™s options and making decisions. It was aggressive, inviting, serious and humorous all in one. It was not only fitting for the band / music but also to the national / world agenda and climate. I went to war that night with many cans of spray paint and the idiot mind to do two-hundred and fifty, all in one massive sweep, and in my basement, which is something I will never do again because I could have died. I will probably also never be involved with another package like this again (take that back, I have been). Anyway, each one was hand-cut from cardboard and handmade stencil sprayed and rubber stamped. Inserts were cut, folded and glued. At the last mist of red spray a crack of thunder shook the massive turn-of-the-century home and I bolted from the basement and out the front door to a down poor fit for Noah himself. I was like a much less cool version of Dr. Frankenstein though. I leapt off the front porch and slid head first down the embankment and into the street turned river current. Like a taxidermy nightmare, I was born again. The drug dealing squatters of the home across the street were on their front step perch per usual summer evening, looking at the fire in my eyes and the red paint streaming from ears, nose and mouth. It was a high much higher than that of chemical substance. Well, maybe a three pack of design, life and paint fumes. -djg
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What To Do With Lavender and Frankincense
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Video: What To Do With Lavender and Frankincense What is Lavender Essential Oil?
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Lavender Field Lavender is regarded as one of the most powerful and versatile essential oils. When looking at the ingredients of a product, the latin name should be labeled for lavender, and the true species you want to read is Lavandula Ā  Ā  Angustifolia. In France, Young Living bought the first foreign-owned lavender farm, which is situated in southern Franceā€¦ nearly two hours north of Marseille. As shown in the picture, its 136 acres sit in the valley looking up at a 12th century castle. This valleyĀ  in southern France is now the largest farm of true lavender in the world, and the history of why this is the case, is a shocking reminder as to why ā€˜playing with natureā€™ with fertilizers and pesticides should NEVER be used. The effect these toxins have on the immunity of plants, is similar to the negative effect we see in humans.Ā  Thankfully, the seed originally grown here was brought to the Young Living farm in St. Maries, Idaho many years ago, so we have access to the very popular Lavender essential oil, which is distilled from this original plant species.Ā  And to give you some context, if youā€™re thinking of growing your ownā€¦It takes 27 sq.ft. of lavender to produce one 15 ml bottle of lavender essential oil, which gives you approximately 250 drops. Why use Lavender Essential Oil? Well, whatever the reason for wanting an essential oil, this tends to be the oil Iā€™ll grab first. Itā€™s commonly known as the ā€œSwiss Army Knifeā€ of essential oils as it has so many uses thanks to it having over 200 different chemical components.
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Swiss Army Knife of Essential Oils It has a sweet and light floral aroma that is well known for itā€™s comforting and calming properties. Many use it to aid relaxation.Ā  In most cases you do not need to dilute it, so itā€™s perfect for children. My girls love it, and itā€™s normally the one they ask for, and thatā€™s not just because it has a purple label.Ā  Itā€™s also a great essential oil to help replace toxins in your home, such as dryer sheets, which have been proven to be one of the worst toxic producing culprits in homes.Ā  Instead, add 3-5 drops of Lavender EO to a few wool dryer balls and throw them in the dryer with your washing. My dryer balls are still going strong after years of use. Not only will your clothes come out smelling wonderful, youā€™ll save money as youā€™re not longer buying the sheets and your load of washing will dry quicker. So, to avoid unnecessary static, reduce the length of time youā€™re running your dryer, and to help further you can even add a safety pin to a couple of of the dryer balls. Youā€™ll be pleasantly surprised with the results.Ā  If you donā€™t have dryer balls yet, you can make reusable dryer sheets instead from fabric scraps. Add 1/2 cup of distilled white vinegar and 8-10 drops of Lavender EO into a mason jar. Allow time for the fabric to absorb some liquid and add a few to the dryer. After use, put them back in the container to absorb more liquid. While weā€™re still in your laundry room. Lavender is also a great ingredient when making a fabric softener, or even your own laundry detergent. Remember, your clothes and bedding have contact with your skin (your largest organ) 24/7, so these were a couple of the first products I swapped out with non-toxic ingredients for my family.Ā  Now letā€™s cover other typical ways that Lavender essential oil can be used via aromatic, topical and internal techniques. First up, using it aromatically.Ā  Aromatically This popular oil is often diffused for a comforting and calming scent. But when youā€™re on the go and donā€™t have a diffuser near by, you can still enjoy this relaxing aroma by rubbing a drop in the palm of your hands, cupping them over your nose and breathing in.Ā  In the spring itā€™s very common for me to diffuse Lavender to freshen up our home and mood, and I love pairing it with Lime and Spearmint OR Lemon and Peppermint. Ā 
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Desert Mist Diffuser If you got a Premium Starter Kit with Copaiba EO, add a few drops of this and a few drops of lavender to your diffuser and sit back and relax after a tough day.Ā  Before bed place 3-5 drops of Lavender in your bedroom diffuser. This fills the room with its relaxing and peaceful aroma. I also like to add a couple drops of Cedarwood too, especially for the children.Ā  In a spray bottle add 8-12 drops to a pinch of salt and add water. Use it to spray beds and inside closets for a fresh, pleasing aroma. If youā€™re not a fan of DIY, Young Living has got you covered with Seedlings Linen Spray, which was originally created to help the babies in our lives have a peaceful nightā€™s rest.Ā  You could also add a couple of drops to your own pillow at night.Ā  In my purse I carry a nasal inhaler, to which I added 2 drops of Lavender, Lemon and Peppermint. All of these are in the Premium Starter Kit and it lasts a long time. Perfect for when on the go.Ā  Add 6 drops of Stress Away EO, 2 drops of Lavender and 2 drops of Peppermint EO into a 2oz glass spray bottle. Fill 3/4 full with distilled water and top off with Witch Hazel. Now you have a portal spray to create a chilled environment. These EO are also in the Premium Starter Kit.Ā  You could even place a drop on your wrist and inhale whenever you need a brief ā€œpauseā€ for the day.Ā  Topically There are multiple ways to use lavender topically. Commonly people add a couple of drops to their shampoos, lotions and other skin care products.Ā  Why not place a drop in a new (non-waterproof) mascara tube for lovely conditioned eye-lashes. Cedarwood is great too, but donā€™t poke yourself in the eye.Ā  Apply a drop or two topically for menstrual cycles. This is going to come in very handy in a few years time as my girls grow up.Ā  You could also combine Lavender with Peppermint essential oil for a cool tingling sensation that helps relieve occasional head tension, when rubbed in.Ā  How about unwinding with a night time bath of several drops of lavender added to 1/2 cup of Epsom salts. This is a great option for children. And for an extra boost,Ā  as you hop into bed, rub 2 drops onto the bottom of your feet, wrists and the back of your neck.Ā  There are also endless sugar and salt scrub recipes on the Internet. One of my favorites is the aroma of a Lavender & Peppermint sugar scrub. But a simple one to start with is this foot scrub, which combines 1/8 cup of almond oil, 6 drops of Lavender EO and 1 cup of fine salt of your choice. It can be stored in a glass jar and you use it 1-3 times a week in the shower. Itā€™s even better if you add a few drops of Cedarwood or Patchouli EOs to the recipe.Ā  When you want a Sweet Dreams foot lotion for your kiddos, or even yourself, whip together to combine 1/4 cup of Coconut oil, 10 drops of Lavender EO, 10 drops of Valor EO, 10 drops of Peace & Calming EO and 10 drops of Cedarwood EO. Who doesnā€™t like a foot rub before bedtime, and this smells amazing.Ā  Young Living carries multiple Lavender infused products such as hand soap and lip balm, but you can also easily make your own. Ingredients for a lavender lip balm can also work great for a general salve. And the combinations you can make for hand soap using essential oils, such as lavender are endless.Ā  Internally I n the US, Lavender Vitality has a white label and is intended for internal use.Ā  Outside, especially in springtime, I place a drop on my thumb and press it against the roof of my mouth.Ā  Itā€™s a key ingredient in Young Livingā€™s SleepEssence supplement, which promotes healthy sleep patterns.Ā  In the kitchen there are various recipes you can make using Lavender Vitality. For example: Lavender cookies, or in the icing for cakes. Mix it with jams and jellies, or even a citrus sorbet for a another layer of flavor.Ā  You can even balance it in savory chicken and lamb dishes with herbaceous essential oils such as Thyme, Rosemary and Oregano.Ā  Here are some yummy recipes weā€™ve made:Ā 
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In the Kitchen Lavender lemonadeā€¦mix together 6 juiced lemons, 1 juiced lime, 1/2 cup honey, 2 drops lavender vitality, 10 cups iced water. You could even add sprigs of lavender for presentation. Credit goes to Young Livingā€™s blog for this recipe. Ā  Lavender dipā€¦whisk a block of cream cheese and add 1 drop of Lavender vitality and Maple Syrup to taste.Ā  Lavender ice-creamā€¦the ingredients include a 14oz can of full fat coconut milk, 2 eggs, 1 vanilla bean (slit lengthwise), 3 Tbsp of raw honey and 2 drops of Lavender Vitality. Once it comes out of the ice-cream maker, it will have a creamy soft texture.Ā  When we make a batch of chocolate truffles, mix in 8 drops of Lemon Vitality and 3 drops of Lavender Vitality for a delicious treat. What is Frankincense? Affectionally called ā€˜Frankā€™ by many, there are several different species of frankincense, known as boswellia trees: (papyrifera, serrata, carterii, sacra and frereana).
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Boswellia (Frankincense) Tree Once a tree has matured for 5-10 years, it can be ā€˜nickedā€™, where some of its bark is pealed away to allow the treeā€™s milky sap to bleed slowly over the fresh wound. Several days later the semi-hardened sap (known as tears) are harvested and placed in dry caves for several months. This produces Frankincense resin. The resin can then undergo a distillation process to obtain the Frankincense Essential oil. Itā€™s a lengthy process, which gives you a better understanding as to why itā€™s not the cheapest oil around. But each species produces an essential oil of different qualities and attributes.
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Young Livingā€™s Frankincense, boswellia carterii (car-tear-ree) is a very popular essential oil in the premium starter kit. But also available are Sacred Frankincense (boswellia sacra) from their farm in Oman and a third species of Frankincense (Frereana) is used in one of the weight management products, Slique gum - a new chewing experience.Ā  When labeled as a single Frankincense essential oil, it should NOT be a mix of species (a trick to reduce costs, but also reduces itā€™s specific therapeutic powers), so read your label. Frankincense was valued more than gold during ancient times. Itā€™s mentioned multiple times in the Bible, and in one of the oldest known medical records, Ebers Papyrus (Egyptians).Ā  Frankincense has been sought after, and traded since ancient times, and plays a special role in many religious ceremonies. Today, it has been used in hospitals and is subject of substantial research.Ā  Elemi, which originates from the Philippines is known as the poor manā€™s frankincense as it has similar properties.Ā  Why Use Frankincense Essential Oil? Itā€™s a very powerful essential oil that can center emotions, including temporary sadness, feeling blue, and even occasional feelings of anxiety, which everyone experiences at some point.Ā  It supports focus and healthy cognitive function.Ā  The chemistry of this essential oil consists of mainly monoterpenes (can be 82%), which help to reprogram cellular memory.Ā  So it supports healthy cell regeneration in the body, which we all want to have, as well as the immune system.Ā  It also contains sesquiterpenes which help deliver oxygen molecules to cells.Ā And itā€™s known to delete miswritten codes in DNA.Ā  To top it all off, the amazing Alpha-Pinene is one of itā€™s naturally occurring constituents - look it up!Ā  Again, letā€™s cover other various ways that Frankincense essential oil can be used via aromatic, topical and internal techniques. First up, using it aromatically.Ā  Aromatically Diffusing Frankincense provides a woodsy, warm and earthy aroma. You can even get a special burner for the resin, for a deeper atmospheric experience. These are both popular aromatic techniques during meditation or yoga. Ā  Put 3 drops of Frankincense in your diffuser, and itā€™s a great oil to combine with your other favorites. Ā  At anytime, for an extra boost of this relaxing aroma, rub a drop in your palms. Then cup your hands over your nose and breathe in. Ideally close one nostril at a time to allow this aroma to pass over your olfactory into the brain. Your brain will really thank you for this oil.Ā  This is a good essential oil to diffuse when you need support with focusing and want a healthy cognitive function.
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Rainstone Diffuser Topically Frankincense is a Popular essential oil for massage, so combine with your favorite carrier oil to cover a large area. I love using Young Livingā€™s V6 as my carrier oil for this.Ā  For healthy smooth looking skin, add a drop to your moisturizer or apply around the eyes. Frankincense LOVES the skin!Ā  It features prominently in many well liked recipes, as well as Young Livingā€™s skin care products (for good reason), especially the ART (Age Refining Technology) skin care line.Ā  For emotions, rub a couple of drops over your neck & outer ears. You can also add several drops to 1/2 cup of Epsom salts and run a warm bath to relax.Ā  Itā€™s also a key ingredient in the Longevity EO blend, which leads us nicely into covering internal use. Ā  Internally As well as the Longevity EO blend mentioned, Frankincense is a key ingredient in the Longevity Softgels. These also contain Thyme, Orange and Clove EOs and protect DHA levels that support brain function, as well as help maintain healthy cell integrity. It also supports liver and immune function. Frankincense is also in Young Livingā€™s Cortistop supplement, along with Peppermint and Fennel. Itā€™s designed to support the female glandular system and maintain balanced cortisol levels within the body.Ā  Frankincense Vitality is specifically labeled for internal use to support our internal wellness. Add a drop to your glass of water (which is common in other cultures), juice or your daily shot of NingXia Red. For extra support, add a drop to a teaspoon of honey. Our recipes in the ā€œDiscover Frankincenseā€ PDF include: Frankincense Earl Grey Tea, Frankā€™s Scottish Shortbread, Frankincense Flavored Goat Cheese and Mushroom & Onion Phyllo Treats. Ā  Letā€™s review practical uses of these oils together. I often diffuse 3 drops of both Lavender and Frankincense at night to promote a restful nightā€™s sleep. For healthy looking skin, add 1-2 drops of each oil into your:Ā  - Moisturizer or lotion. - Jojoba oil for a face serum.Ā  - Shaving cream. For a nasal irrigation rinse: Add 1 drop of either oil in the salt before adding the water. I personally prefer Frankincense.Ā  Young Livingā€™s blog also give this DIY Lavender-Oatmeal bath soak recipe: 1 cup Epsom salts, 1 cup quick oats, 1/2 cup baking soda, 5 drops Frankincense EO, 10 drops Tea Tree EO, 15 drops Lavender EO.Ā  Grind the oats in a food processor or coffee grinder into a fine flour-like texture. Mix all the ingredients in a bowl until they oils are evenly distributed and store in a glass jar. Youā€™ll want about 1 cup of the mixture for each bath. They even suggested creating a pouch for your mixture using a sock or pantyhose to reduce floating oatmeal flakes in your bath. But your skin will love it.Ā  However, if you like to keep it simple, add a few drops of each oil into 1/3 cup of Epsom salts into a basin or bowl. Add hot water and soak your feet. Youā€™ll even catch my husband joining in, and you can tell by the look of our feet when weā€™ve been making time to do this. Micheal especially loves it after a week of being on his feet for 12+ hour shifts at the hospital.Ā  We also love Myrrh & Patchouli together, or even combining Lavender or Frankincense with Cedarwood. There are endless combinations. More Tips & Tricks. Both Frankincense and Lavender combine well with other essential oils, especiallyĀ  Cedarwood and Sandalwood.Ā  There are multiple research studies out there regarding the power of these essential oils. Check them out on: pubmed.gov & cochranelibrary.comĀ  There are also multiple published resources so you donā€™t have to wade through endless pages on the internet, many of which are unreliable. A couple of great STARTING resources include: D. Gary Young The World Leader in Essential Oils, by Mary Young , Young Living Essential Oils.Ā  And Essential Oils Desk Reference (EODR) by Life Science Publishing. There are more resources mentioned in the pdf: ā€œDiscover Frankincenseā€, which we will email all of you who registered for this Thursday Night Live. But you can find it on our website, familylifescaping.com Next Week, our Thursday Night Live will cover: Whatā€™s Inside Your Box? Whether you have yet to get started with essential oils, or you bought your kit several years back and still donā€™t know what to do with it, donā€™t worry, weā€™ve got you covered. We will discuss various tips and tricks of how to get the most out of items in the Premium Starter Kit. Every penny counts, and so does every drop of an essential oil, and essential oil infused products. So donā€™t forget to register.Ā  In the meantime you can check out our full Introduction to essential oils video on our familylifescaping website or U-tube labeled: Discover A Healthier Lifestyle with Essential Oils, or check out last weekā€™s Thursday Night Live, which gave a quick breakdown covering the How, What, When Where, Who & Why of Essential oils.Ā  Video: What To Do With Lavender and Frankincense Click to register for Thursday Night Live Webinars Read the full article
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siliconwebx Ā· 5 years
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16 Best Adobe Illustrator Tutorials for 2019
Adobe Illustrator (AI) is considered one of the bestā€“and certainly one of the most popularā€“design programs for illustrators and graphic designers. If you need to design something in vector format, then Adobe Illustrator is an excellent tool for the job. Currently, AI is available as part of the Adobe Creative Cloud. Until a few years ago, the software could be downloaded along with the Adobe Creative Suite or as a stand-alone program. Now, all Adobe programs are in the cloud and update automatically with a paid subscription.
If youā€™re looking to improve your AI skills there are a ton of of tutorials available for all skill levels. So many, in fact, that it can be a daunting task to try and find the best of the bunch. Which is why weā€™ve put together this list for your convenience. In this post weā€™ll share sixteen Adobe Illustrator tutorials well worth checking out.
Free Adobe Illustrator Tutorials
Most Illustrator tutorials available online are free. Thatā€™s because designers are like a tribe and love to help each other. Also, free tutorials are the perfect way to learn the basics of Adobe Illustrator or learn a specific skill. In order to help you out, we have rounded up some of the best free Adobe Illustrator tutorials available for the latest version of Illustrator CC. There are also some high-quality video tutorials by professional design instructors and creative designers with great ideas.
Envato Tuts
Envato Tuts is one of the all-time favorite tutorial databases for creative professionals in all fields. Their community of professional designers has created tutorials for graphic designers, illustrators, web designers, coders, and photographers among others. They are a creative bunch indeed! Below are some of the best Envato Tuts Illustrator tutorials for 2019, ranging from how to use shapes to how to create patterns, and additionally, how to design your own brushes.
Creating line patterns with Adobe Illustrator
Beginner Level Tutorials
Adobe Illustrator is the favorite tool for pattern designers. Itā€™s not surprising since AI has all the integrated tools necessary for easy pattern making. This tutorial explains the steps to create vector line patterns in different styles. You will learn to create wavy lines and zigzag shapes in different colors.
1. How to Create Line Patterns in Adobe Illustrator
Many people love watercolor style designs for their graphics and branding stylings. In fact, designers are always sourcing watercolor brushes to use in Adobe Illustrator. This tutorial explains, in detail, how to create a professional watercolor brush in your personal style.
2. How to Make a Watercolor Brush in Adobe Illustrator
Intermediate Level Tutorials
If you are looking for instructions on how to create vector art with shapes, then this tutorial is for you. This is an intermediate level tutorial, users should already know the most common keyboard shortcuts and tools. This design is a great way to practice creating a finished product from start to finish, in addition to learning how to manipulate some of the brushes
3. How to Use Brushes in Adobe Illustrator to Create a Colorful Flamingo
Icons are some of the most common vector graphics. This intermediate level tutorial explains how to make a house icon by putting shapes together and colorizing them. The step-by-step instructions describe how to set up a pixel grid. The final step is how to make different versions of the same icon.
4. How to Make a House Icon in Adobe Illustrator
Learn how make a house icon with Adobe Illustrator CC
Adobe Help Center
The Adobe Help Center is full of professional tutorials for all skill levels. There are plenty for absolute beginners; like getting to know the tools, how to use artboards efficiently and how to use the ever-elusive pen tool to make bezier curves. Below is a selection of the best tutorials for the newest version of Illustrator CC.
Beginner Level Tutorials
The first tutorial on the list is specifically about using the ā€˜drawing modesā€™ tool. The instructor explains the different ways to create artwork behind or inside vector graphics which are already on the canvas. For example, how to use the ā€˜isolationā€™ mode to edit only a specific layer and section of the artwork.
5. Create artwork behind and inside with drawing modes
Another practical skill beginners need to know is how to change colors and stroke styles easily and efficiently. This tutorial explains how to use color swatches with personalized color palettes and, additionally, how to use gradients to recolor artwork.
6. Change color and strokes
Putting simple shapes together to create complex compositions look easy when you know what youā€™re doing. Thankfully this tutorial shows the different ways to achieve this skill, with easy to follow steps. In few words, this is a very practical tutorial when getting starting with Adobe Illustrator.
7. Combine shapes in different ways
Illustrator CC 2019 ā€“ Keyboard Shortcuts
TrainingOnsite
Along with tutorials, self-learners have plenty of other free resources available to improve their Adobe Illustrator skills. For example the ones available on the TrainingOnsite website. Easily the most useful is the downloadable PDF will all the keyboard shortcuts a designer will ever need.
8. Illustrator CC 2019 resources ā€“ Keyboard Shortcuts
Digital Arts
Following a design project commissioned to Jimmy Gleeson, this tutorial follows every step to how he created an artistic map of Australia. Unfortunately, this is not a tutorial for beginners. In order to follow along, users need to know many basic skills to be able to recreate the steps of this creative map. In fact, the tutorial mentions the creation of custom icons and illustrations but doesnā€™t explain how to make them. This is definitely a tutorial for designers with good knowledge of the program. If you are a regular Adobe Illustrator user, then you should have no problem with this one.
9. Adobe Illustrator tutorial: How to make a vector map in Illustrator
Free Adobe Illustrator Video Tutorials
YouTube is full of amazing information for pretty much everything. Not surprisingly, there are plenty of Adobe Illustrator tutorials as well. We did some searching and have put together the best tutorials for 2019. Most are for specific skills like creating intricate patterns and a gradient logo.
TutVid
TutVid is a great platform full of creative tutorials for Adobe Photoshop, Lightroom and Illustrator. Below are some of the best.
The first video tutorial is a one-hour step-by-step guide on creating a glowing glass planet over a dark cosmic background. It might be ok for a beginner if they are fast learners, but this one is more suited for intermediate users. The instructor explains in detail how to create this shiny glowing planet.
10. Glass Planet Vector Illustration
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On another note, the second tutorial is completely different. Itā€™s about creating a fancy and intricate lace circular pattern. If you are a lover of mandalas, this tutorial is for you. Itā€™s easy enough for a beginner to follow along.
11. FANCY Intricate lace Pattern Illustration
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Dansky
Dansky is a graphic designer, illustrator, and all-around creative professional with an impressive YouTube channel. He has created tutorials about Adobe XD, InDesign, Photoshop, Sketch, and Premiere Pro. In other words, his channel is an extremely valuable asset to any creative professional.
The first Dansky tutorial is about creating a Gradient Logo. Itā€™s a pretty great tutorial! Thatā€™s because both logo design and the use of gradients are incredibly useful skills for designers. A beginner can follow along quite well with this one actually!
12. Create a Gradient Logo
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In second place on the list, this tutorial is all about making a cutesy pattern. Dan explains how to create a seamless pattern with the help of the integrated ā€˜make patternā€™ tool. Beginner users can get a lot out of these tutorials, especially if they are looking into a career as a pattern design maker.
13. How to Create a Cutesy Pattern
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Paid and Subscription-Based Adobe Illustrator Tutorials
In addition to free tutorials, self-learners also have access to paid and subscription-based courses and tutorials. These are available through a number of platforms. One of the best and most creative course websites is Domestika. In contrast to most tutorial sites, Domestika is in Spanish. Thankfully, there are subtitles in English!
Domestika
The best Adobe Illustrator tutorial/course from Domestika is all about achieving digital illustration with geometric shapes. Although this is a tutorial for beginners, it gives insight which intermediate users might find handy as well.
14. Digital Illustration with Geometric Shapes for Beginners
Skillshare
Similarly, another big favorite tutorial site is Skillshare. They have lots of extremely valuable tutorials for all skill levels. This one, in particular, is about mastering digital illustration with creativity, style, and efficiency, and itā€™s directed at both beginners and intermediate users.
15. Digital Illustration: Creativity, Style and Efficiency in Adobe Illustrator
The second course from Skillshare is all about using colors creatively and more effectively and in any type of design. As a result, your illustration projects will look more vibrant and interesting.
16. Adobe Illustrator: Level Up Your Colours
Conclusion
As a graphic designer or illustrator, itā€™s always a good idea to brush up on your skills or learn new ones. Thankfully, itā€™s very convenient that we now live in a time where tutorials at all levels are easy to come by. Above all, Adobe AI tutorials and courses are in great demand and are easy to find. Nevertheless, the trick is to follow along with the ones which are created or updated for the newer version. We hope you managed to learn something new with this updated collection!
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