Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Meeting Recap 2/1/13

This Friday the lovely Lillie Templeton came to visit and gave a wonderful lecture about the importance of being professional on the web, in your resumes, and in your portfolio.

Here is the presentation below.




The first good tip Lillie gave was always asking for your target audience.
-Who is looking at what you are presenting
-What are they looking for
-Is what you are presenting what they are looking for
- Cater your illustrations to the client / company.
It's always good to research the client that you plan on working on.
Make sure you can fit within the branding of the client you are working for.















Two great websites Lillie suggested are when thinking about using fonts.


Lillie also suggested that until you feel comfortable with fonts you should limit yourself to the list below to not feel over whelmed. 








Couple of other notes from Lillie's talk. Don't mix fonts until you feel comfortable with using basic fonts. Sometimes the less font the better. 

Another topic Lillie covered was Client Proposals:
- Hourly Rates
--- How long it will take you to do the project
--- Always pad your hours
- Charge them tax

Resumes:
- Skills come first
- Education and Awards
- Client List
- Try to cut useless info from your Resumes. 
- Try to avoid strict black, but use tints of black.
- NO pie charts on a resume
-   If you're not comfortable with a program don't put it on your resume.

Great place to find social media
http://picons.me/download-social.php


Thursday, January 31, 2013

Link of the Week: Jeremy Slagle

We're sharing this artist in preparation of Lillie Templeton's talk on Friday about graphic design. Jeremy Slagle is a Columbus-based Design-Illustrator. He successfully blends graphic design and illustration in a refreshing (not over-done) way.

http://www.jeremyslagle.com/

Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Meeting Recap 1/25/13

Hey eveyone,

So were back for another fun filled semster, I hope it has been a great start!

This last week was one of the coolest weeks we've had so far as Steve Prescott came to Visit!!


Steve Prescott


He was super funny and did a talk about his development as an artst and how he grew into who he is now.





Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Vanja Todoric

For this weeks link I'm going to share one of my recent personal finds. The awesome artist Vanja Todoric.

Click here to see more of his work

His style is especially inspiring to me because it has certain similarities to a style I have been experimenting with.



I found this artist while I was at IlluXcon and I was looking though a book of serbian fairytales at Petar Meseldzija's table. Here is a link to the book. Unfortunately it is only in croatian at the moment. But it is a beautiful book and the typography on the cover and all throughout it is just fantastic.

Anyway apart from just sharing a new artist I would just like to encourage everyone to go beyond the normal limits when discovering new artists. It can be difficult to research sometimes especially when you are dealing with foreign artists to track down their websites. But with enough determination you can discover some great things and you won't be trapped in a world of artists that everyone else knows about and that you've seen countless times.

-Wes

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Meeting Recap 11/2/12

Lora Innes comes to the ISC!

So Lora Innes came to the ISC this last Friday! She told us her dark and mysterious past of life as a CCAD graduate and the dreams of becoming a comic book superstar!

She talked about her mentor and great boss Jim Theodore and her first real art job at The Artifact Group


She also talked about the importance of having someone draw over your work to show where you can improve in something! 
And the importance of learning the program Adobe Illustrator if you really want to get commercial work! 

Lora also talked about the importance of budgeting your money if you are a freelance illustrator. 

She regaled us with wondrous stories about meeting Jeff Smith for the first time



And finding a life long friend and mentor in Beau Smith



She talked about the importance of showing your portfolios to the right people, especially to the people who are doing what you want to do!

One of the places you can go if you are also interested in comics / web comics is C2E2

There are many other conventions you can go to but you must learn to pick and choose the the shows that make the most sense for you, some of this will be trial an error.

Once you find these conventions that you best connect with there will be a basic timeline of how well you do if you should decide to have an art table

-First couple of years you will be in the red as you slowly build up your stock of items to sell, and find out what sells and what doesn't as well as getting a following of people that are interested in you.
- Then as you learn what works and what doesn't and have people that are excited to see you each year you will begin to break even.
- Next comes actually making a profit, as you have found a good niche hopefully for yourself and what others want, and you have loyal customers!
-finally and hopefully if you get enough people who love your work and what you do, some conventions might even invite you to come, which means they would pay for things like your hotel room, ticket to convention and table, and maybe even your travel cost.

To reach this final goal though you have to be doing the research and committing to being part of the community.

Here Lora met people like Bob Shrek. When Bob was looking over her stuff he said:

You should be involved with the people you want to work with, give it time and you will get work in the field that you want.

Lora also gave the great advice of, don't work for free!!!! 
and, draw what you want and what you are passionate about because people will see the passion through the work!

She also went through a couple of webcomics she liked

Girl Genius

And before you start putting up a web comic you should make connections and try to build a fan base and advertising the comic to people you think would be interested in it.

You have to find out where your fans are and interact and socialize there if you want to build a loyal following

The top 2 most important details to making a successful web comic are

1. UPDATE ALL THE TIME, EVERYTIME!
---you cannot let your readers forget about you, it has to be a part of their everyday life to think about your webcomic, or it will be forgotten.

2. YOU CONTENT MUST BE ABLE TO STAND OUT
---there are so many people creating web comics now a days it is important that if you are going to add to the list that it be something worth exploring and something you are truly passionate about. You are not competing with just others like you, but also professionals and those who have been doing this for years. Be original, and don't just try to fit into a genre!

Here is a podcast about story topics and their importance!

and finally what ever you want to do in are go for it with everything you have, but don't be fooled that it's not hard.


Lora talked about the importance of updating when you said you would, and keeping that promise to your readers!
About how important the flow of lettering is on each page, and how she used a program called Comic Life for her lettering in her own work!


Lora also talked about the tools she uses in her own process, which are
Sketchbook Pro for the drawings
and Adobe Photoshop for the colors. 

For those of you interested in trying out Sketchbook pro here is a link where you can get a 2 years free use with your school email. Enjoy!!


Now that Lora updates her comic twice a week, she has hired on extra hands to help her with the comic, one being 
Julie Wright - who is a CCAD graduate!



For many of you out there who are interested in starting a webcomic, a good place to host it is Comicpress which is hosted through Wordpress 


Important people to know in the comic world

Scott Peterson - worked on many Batman comics
David Mack - creator of Kabuki
Chris Claremont - the man that made the X-men the X-men
Frank Miller - Writer and director. Worked on The Dark Knight Returns, Sin City, 300.
Bill Wilingham - writers and creator of the comic Fables

Lora next went into how a web comic can be the stepping stone into publishing!
Lora brought here stats and views of her webcomic to the publishing company IDW 

And because they saw how many readers she had online they said yes because she had proven her comic and story were marketable! 

If anyone is interested in looking into commercial illustration work there is a company called
Envisual 

Lora also talked about the advantages of getting an art rep - as if you don't and you are working as a freelancer you will being doing two jobs instead of just one!

Those were all the major pointers now here are couple of photos of Lora being awesome at the ISC





Also Paperwings Podcast - go there, learn things, do it now!

That's all for now -

P.S there will not be an official meeting of ISC next week as most of us will be out of town, but Colleen might have something special for all of you!

Meeting recap 10/26/12

The Parkinson Brothers!

This week Chris and Tyler Parkinson Came in to talk about their game they are creating for a Dairy company.


Chris first talked about the inner workings of the game they are creating! 

First thing they talked about is the fact that flash is NOT dead when it comes to game development, and in fact it is a live and well in the indie game community.

To really get started creating a game for money you first have to fine a funder, their's was Dairy Enterprise Inc.

Next you have to make a timeline to project how long it will take to produce your game!

Then you begin the to get into the real meat of game design, with the concept art and programming.

The  animation of a flash game is divided into spread sheets on a png file where you can jump from one image to the next to create the animation.
Try to simplify images where you can to make the programming as easy as possible.


This game when done will have taken them six months to make! 


Some of the programs that they suggested if you are interested in Physics programming in games were

Box 2D



Nape

Here is a fun example of the physics engine of Nape:


If you wanted to make a game without having to learn any code you can go to

Gamesalad

Games made on Gamesalad


Tyler talked about Zynga and how was a decent enough place to work but their ethics about creating games is terrible, and that it was the spawn of Satan.




The things you would make at Zynga







Tyler's Blog


Concept for Mars needs milk








Oh and this little gem.



If you're looking to work with game developers check out the site 


Tyler suggested for anyone interested, to take a class with Neil Riley a CCAD 
He teaching painting classes particularly landscape.


An Artist Tyler recommend is Jason Chan who works for Massive Black

We will definitely be talking more about Massive Black in the future as well guys so stay tuned! 


If you want to do indie flash game work your portfolio should have 

Character design
Png Sequences
Sprite sheets 

That's all for now!!