Every year The Creative Group puts out a salary guide for creatives - people in the design world. Not only is it designed very well, but it contains important and useful information including job descriptions. You can get a copy by contacting them.
Good detailed information for creative design-based careers from The Creative Group. The Creative Group is a company that (among other things) works with companies and freelancers to pair them for specific projects.
I agree - this is what a sketchbook should look like. He's building a catalog - a library of images, ideas. There's a hand, there's a foot - it's all there without a lot of editing. So - he's just allowing these things to happen. He's allowing this growth to occur probably before he can label it this or that.
By the way - judging from the color of the paper and the rounded corners - he is undoubtedly drawing in a Moleskine®
Artist's blog that I've been watching for a little over a year now. His digital stuff blew me away initially, but I prefer his pencilwork now, after seeing pages of his sketchbook
The big-eyed paintings of Margaret Keane and an explanation of the true authorship of paintings once believed to have been made by her husband, Walter.
You're right - Wal-Mart did royally screw it up. But - in that screwing up may have made it even more sinister than you had planned. Another thing - when I was looking at it in class - for some reason I was viewing it as the light being on the right side - whereas your intended orientation locates that light on top. Have you looked at it in different orientations? If so - how do those orientations affect your judgment or interpretation of the work?
For months, we have been bookmarking interesting, useful and creative Adobe Adobe Illustrator tutorials and Resources, so you can now rest assured that you will have the necessary tools to get the job done.\n\nDue to this phenomenally vast amount of vector packs, brushes, patterns available, you can now add dirt, rust, floral effect, swirls, mold, oil stains in your artwork and to give it any look you want.\n\nSo in today's post, you'll find an assortment of top-notch tutorials, brushes, patterns, vector packs, tips & tricks and .EPS downloadable files that others have freely contributed to the design community.d that you will have the necessary tools to get the job done.\n\n
The city is a fantastic source of beauty and inspiration, with all the glitz and glamour glistening beneath the city lights. But there is another side of the city altogether, one rife with its own kind of allure. Across the tracks, away from the dazzle of downtown, lies a darker imagination, this one looking to grunge-ridden, dilapidated architecture for inspiration. There is a beauty that pervades this kind of urban decay and captured wonderfully through a photographer's well-trained eye. These industrial city scenes are wonderfully dark and offer a glimpse of the weathered face beneath the city facade.
If you are designing something - laying out a page and you are wondering how the page would look with text but you don't want to plug in the contents of your secret diary - this is a way to get that text...
Example of an analytical drawing from a student. Note heavy use of line in place of shadow. Line is heavily worked - not singular or necessarily definitive. The shape is worked towards methodically and appears even appears transparent.