Join for FREE | Take the Tour Lost Password?
[x]

deviantART

 
[x]  

Link




Share


  Share on twitter Share on Facebook Share on reddit Share on digg

Notices



More Editorials

Photographers Rights and Law

=Kaz-D:iconKaz-D: reports, November 18
Do you know the legalities of the photographs you are taking? This is an article to refresh your brain on the rights and wrongs of photography, primarily focusing on UK law, but also providing links to international law aswell. Fav and pass it on if you like it!

How to Commission an Artist

*ArynChris:iconArynChris: reports, November 16
A comprehensive guide to commissioning, based on my personal experiences and observations. This guide does not address hosting contests, nor does it specifically address the unique challenges of commissioning through specific websites, though some typical scenarios are mentioned in passing. Topics include choosing the artist, why it's important to make sure you can afford it, how to contact the artist, payment, what WIPs are and why you might want to see them, and legal rights of both parties. Legal rights are discussed at the beginner level and are NOT in depth here.

Purism Vrs Creativity

=morbidthegrim:iconmorbidthegrim: reports, November 18
Does it matter?

Remembrance - Nobody is Alone

*YourChameleon:iconYourChameleon: reports, November 16
This article explores the issues of war and how it affects us. Depending on who we are and where we live, war and disaster will strike us, but in many different ways.

5 Tips to Maintaining and Gaining Watchers

*ProjectComment:iconProjectComment: reports, November 15
For those who have many watchers, and for those who don’t have many, it is hard to know how one retains that interest as well as receive more. This article explores the basics of watchers and how we react to certain situations. Although it does not affect some deviants, and the tips are generally related to common sense, we hope the article is a worthwhile read and that the majority learn something from reading this.

5 Tips for Running a Successful Contest

=KneelingGlory:iconKneelingGlory: reports, November 14
The title says it all, really.

BBC - Who Are the Furries?

=Commander-Luminaire:iconCommander-Luminaire: reports, November 13
The BBC released an article today about furries, mostly in a positive light. Thanks go to FurAffinity's Twitter [link] for finding this :)
Click the title for the actual article!
10 comments   Editorials  Last +fav: ~Vaxl

Realms of Fantasy and Myth: Week 22 - Gargoyles

~ladyarah:iconladyarah: reports, November 10
Realms of Fantasy and Myth: Week 22 - Gargoyles

A new place where the emphasis is on you

=Artistic-Maneuvers:iconArtistic-Maneuvers: reports, November 8
A new place for promotion of all things art. A place to find resources and provide tips and tricks. A place where the EMPHASIS is on the art

Moments in time: The Year 1989

*woodfaery:iconwoodfaery: reports, November 7
Looking back to the year 1989, featuring some truly stunning pictures. 20 years after the fall of the Berlin Wall, we look back, remembering.

Editorials This Week

5 Tips to Maintaining and Gaining Watchers

*ProjectComment:iconProjectComment: reports, November 15
For those who have many watchers, and for those who don’t have many, it is hard to know how one retains that interest as well as receive more. This article explores the basics of watchers and how we react to certain situations. Although it does not affect some deviants, and the tips are generally related to common sense, we hope the article is a worthwhile read and that the majority learn something from reading this.

Purism Vrs Creativity

=morbidthegrim:iconmorbidthegrim: reports, November 18
Does it matter?

Photographers Rights and Law

=Kaz-D:iconKaz-D: reports, November 18
Do you know the legalities of the photographs you are taking? This is an article to refresh your brain on the rights and wrongs of photography, primarily focusing on UK law, but also providing links to international law aswell. Fav and pass it on if you like it!

5 Tips for Running a Successful Contest

=KneelingGlory:iconKneelingGlory: reports, November 14
The title says it all, really.

How to Commission an Artist

*ArynChris:iconArynChris: reports, November 16
A comprehensive guide to commissioning, based on my personal experiences and observations. This guide does not address hosting contests, nor does it specifically address the unique challenges of commissioning through specific websites, though some typical scenarios are mentioned in passing. Topics include choosing the artist, why it's important to make sure you can afford it, how to contact the artist, payment, what WIPs are and why you might want to see them, and legal rights of both parties. Legal rights are discussed at the beginner level and are NOT in depth here.

Remembrance - Nobody is Alone

*YourChameleon:iconYourChameleon: reports, November 16
This article explores the issues of war and how it affects us. Depending on who we are and where we live, war and disaster will strike us, but in many different ways.

Realms of Fantasy and Myth: Week 23 - Western Drag

~ladyarah:iconladyarah: reports, November 17
Realms of Fantasy and Myth: Week 23 - Western Dragon

Horror News. The Gift Guide pt 2

=mzscarecrow1313:iconmzscarecrow1313: reports, November 17
The 2nd Gift guide for the holidays from Horror news.

Filmmaker and Writer, Tariq Ali, on Afghanistan

=reddartfrog:iconreddartfrog: reports, 1d 11h ago
While President Barack Obama continues to deliberate his strategy for Afghanistan, the answer for British-Pakistani writer, journalist, and filmmaker Tariq Ali is clear - prepare an exit strategy and execute it.
2 comments   Editorials  Last +fav: =nolakha

The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement and You

*RaineJoybringer:iconRaineJoybringer: reports, November 15
If you haven't heard of this agreement and its threat to your internet, it's about time you did!

Who loved it?

*The-Mad-Pirate
=Azurice
~Romy-SD
~rainbowppleater
~Memis-Nyu
~DastardlyRomantic
~Sinome-maruvan
~Jaded-Cherret
~oCToR-8
~maskawisiwin
=MarcosBnPinto
~blende13
*TheNotLostWanderer
=No-Reason-At-All
~Doncreegan26
~InaliBlast
~MegatronSmith
*rachelregnier
~Wit-Imaginary
~ZXIV
~arvelous
~Mandrakes
~Hoshi-Ryu
~riacharda
~NoctuaEcho
*Kinarii
~Cejika
*loppi
=buttercupbabyppg
*anathema-creature
~Armonah
~claes-gascogne
~626elemental
~polyamoroux
~nadeshani
~LaPetit
=slspotlighter
~adc-comics
*EquidnaRojo
~Nonobot
~Pyro-Kale
~myimmortalmuse
~Pajara-san
~cm1greenbear
~Tillette
~shadowmagi
~uchiha-avenger
~RyMantys
~Diazos
*bleu-huskie
~Crash0and8Burn
~FoxNede
~SomniCelestia
~Silverstar3
~B-R-E-T
*CyrionB
~MoonAmorbueno
~onesta
~jingster
~beksakarikku
*MeGoSa
~parami-san
=CyberChristFF
~darkelf19
~letsalldropdead
*Nethrion
*Phantasmagora
~Keaze
~tetsuoshima
~MrBadger
~Kendo-chan
*Anton42
~gatogirl12345
~kscat5220
~Mamath
~leodreamden
~iancanfield
=nancy-kelpie
~quinsidently
~thenumber42
~CapnFlynn
=ruu
=wheaman
=questingraven
~parodyofapathy
~LadyHazy
~HowlSeage
~OutOfTheOrange
~roos7er
~rr983
~thewintercynic
~Katasha
~DeeplyKidding
~a1984niceguy
~Manabloom
~waterproofness
~stuart-turner
~treebeliever
~Hayashiox
=Athansor
~Black-Blossom
~Zyouki
*Wyrdling
~perfectionality
~Pooky-di-Bear
~qdstudios
*Datenshi-Vanyel
~UchinanchuDuckie
~JodeOnslow
~Boogie5000
~Yoruhikage
~Mackeriffic
~RhyssaFireheart
=DavidStrife
~themeclub
~vevew
~derAua
~goldenavatar
=wolfmorphine
*Hunter-Wolf

x 1 devious rejections

Editorials


Of Professionalism and Portfolios

^Cedarseed:iconCedarseed: reports, September 4, 2007
This article was inspired by something that happened yesterday, so let me start by sharing that story.

I delivered a storyboard job to an ad agency yesterday, a regular client. As I was waiting around, the art director I work with received a board from another freelancer, and turned green. The board looked like it had been made by someone's little sister. It was badly drawn and incomprehensible as she had tried to cover up for the weakness of the characters by adding tons of irrelevant details. "That's not the kind of work she showed us in her portfolio!" the art director fumed. She showed the damage to a colleague. He said, "Make her redo it." "She'll never have time to redo it for tomorrow, and she won't make it any better anyway! I can't send this to South Africa!"
To make a long story short, they managed to get me to save their skins, which took all day yesterday and half of today. It should have taken much longer but I departed from my usual storyboard style and went for a sketchy approach I had developed for one of my pieces here on dA. It allowed me to work much faster: the sketchiness made the lack of details and rough colouring look good as opposed to looking hasty. All this brought to mind several things worth sharing.

:pointr: Extra-curricular or extra-job experimentation really pays. Don't wait until you have an urgent or unusual job to do, to come up with different ways of getting something done. If I didn't have this readily tried alternative to fall back on, making the deadline would have been much more painful.

:pointr: In any given job, keep your mind on the essentials. When time is short, there is no room for frills. This person obviously wasted hours adding "cute" little details while the main characters were not only horribly drawn, they were so lost in the gimmicks that the whole thing was useless. Far from being impressed by her little touches, the clients were further angered by them.

:pointr: Never do what this girl did, showing a certain quality of work and delivering something unrelated. Your portfolio is a promise – that you can deliver the same quality every time. If you can't keep it, don't make it. A portfolio should only contain work you're confident about, not experiments that may look awesome but you don't know how to achieve again. Nor should you include work you don't want to do as a commission. For instance, if you went to school, you may have had assignments in 3d imaging. You may have done a good job, but really hated having to do it (guilty as charged). Don't put that work in your portfolio. You won't be able to back out if a client spots it and asks you for some more. Focus instead on the fields you want to work in. Even though it may appear safer to show versatility, it's actually much safer to show focus and confidence in a few chosen directions. This is true especially if you're not equally good in all the fields you're trying your hand at. Presenting something okay just to show the viewer you "also do that" only weakens your portfolio. Here's a hint: mention it in your CV, under Personal Interests. That's where a long list of extra skills will look interesting, without commitment!

Which brings us to the subject of professionalism, that I have seen brought up a few times in the forums.

Here I have to draw an important distinction: there is a difference between being a professional (noun) and being professional (adjective). Let me define both and I'll explain why the distinction is necessary.

You are a professional at something when you fulfill three conditions:
1. Expertise in your field and experience of the nitty-gritty aspects of it. How that expertise was acquired (school or self-teaching) doesn't matter as long as the third condition is fulfilled.
2. You make a living of it, or are supposed to. Obviously if a political crisis makes it impossible to make ends meet anymore, it doesn't make you less of a professional, and neither does departing form your original career path (I know an architect who turned baker, for instance). Making a living out of it implies you have the practical knowledge necessary to be functional in (and on!) the field, which in turn attracts a steady client base, etc, so it's not just about rounding off your allowance by making websites. Also, you can know everything there is to know about the stars, but that doesn't make you an astronomer (it makes you an amateur, which I assure you is not an insult, but an objective statement.)
3. Recognition by other members of the profession. This is where natural selection occurs. It's easy for someone who only knows Photoshop to claim they're a graphic designer – but only as long as there are no real graphic designers within earshot. Professions come as bodies. When you are a professional, your expertise enables you to go anywhere in the world and be recognised as a colleague by any member of that same body, because you speak the same language and have the same frame of reference.

Being professional is a behaviour, or rather a work ethic. What it really designates is the model behaviour a professional should have, but unfortunately many pros really fail in that regard (and only stay in the profession because they move on to new clients all the time). At the same time, there are people who apply that standard to hobbies or things they do on the side. So it becomes necessary to distinguish the status (professional or amateur) from the ethic (professional or unprofessional).

What does being professional mean, then? It means to be reliable on every level a client might expect. When we say someone is "very professional" we mean he or she delivers consistent quality, in a timely fashion; puts forward and abides by clear terms of collaboration, foreseeing and covering possible issues; rates honestly and consistently; gives advance warning of anything that may affect the work flow (such as a scheduled trip); never backs out of a project in a way that would leave the client in a lurch; maintains professional integrity (no company wants to find out their designer plagiarised someone else's work, as they will be held accountable); keeps professional secrets; stays abreast of the news and fads in the industry... In short, can fulfill any of the client's needs (or have them fulfilled efficiently) and never bring bad surprises. That includes making sure a Google search for your name won't reveal that your standards drop drastically outside the job. Some won't care, some will very much. It's always best to have no dirt attached to your name. It's just more... professional!

Believe me when I say upholding professional standards is as important as having a brilliant portfolio. Some clients will tolerate the sloppy unreliable artists because they really love their work; others will choose reliability over creativity every time. It depends on what they need the most. Obviously, you will go the furthest if you develop iron-clad ethics along with your skills and creativity. People and companies, equally, remember those whom they can count on.

Devious Comments

love 4 4 joy 2 2 wow 0 0 mad 1 1 sad 0 0 fear 0 0 neutral 0 0
:iconirenukia:
Great article, it was a very interesting read.

I agree with everything you said and you gave some useful advices, i appreciate it :heart:

--
~ The two rules of procrastination: 1) Do it today. 2) Tomorrow will be today tomorrow ~
:iconbetelgeux:
pardon my corniness, but i think it's a way of life, too. a daily decision.




great read! :nod:
:iconlivana-deathrose:
Definatley a great article. Also some tips there are great for those who are say, building there first portfolio and new to freelance work.

--
I HAVE MOVED TO =Talei! I WILL NO LONGER BE USING THIS ACCOUNT. IF YOU WANT MY RESOURCES, VISIT *Talei-stock IF YOU NEED TO CONTACT ME VISIT =Talei PLEASE!
:iconpakse:
Great article. You write some of the best articles on dA in my humble opinion =)
Its good to see someone who knows what he is talking about taking the time to share some =)

--
Dont mess with me, I know kung-fu, karate and 47 other dangerous words.
:iconnegradaluvamao:
Awessome!!!

--
Better if it were a dream......

trying to find-----------►[link]
:iconstarstriker1:
Awesome article. It doesn't just apply to freelance artists, either... it's not much of a stretch to apply your advice to any field!
:iconfatkat:
Absolutely superb. You state everything clearly and in an approachable manner. Say, can one add articles to favourites?
b


--

"I don't remember reading the bible verse where Jesus turns water into blood." [link]
:icondapoliticalforum:
You give some very good advice. Some might say that some of it is just "common sense", but common sense isn't so common these days. You have put together a pretty well illustrated article.



:icondeviantoftheyear:

--
[link] Rules of Engagement For Posting Threads
[link] What Is An Original Post?
*SwordOfScotland Club Founder
:icongatogirl12345:
This is the freaking basic why cheating your way into a profession is an awful idea.

--
Contests
~gatogirl12345 [link] WEAPONS AND MAGICAL ITEMS CONTEST
*DarkHorseTournament
`touchedvenus EARTH TONES [link]
~Aikin's icon! Thanks!
:iconplanetsomsom:
great article. I only wish I could be a fly on that wall. I am very curious to see what the awful storyboard looked like... you know... for comparison *never done storyboarding before*
 

Site Map