How to Improve as a Graphic Designer
One of the major threats to your career as a graphic designer is to let your work stagnate and your improvement slow down. It's very easy to fall into a comfort zone where you stop exploring new design techniques and simply stick with what you know. This is why most designers experience the greatest learning curve early on, and why after they 'find their style' their future improvement is far more limited.
Today I want to argue that designers should never 'find their style'. They should always strive to try new styles, to continually improve, and to push beyond their comfort zone. Imagine if you continually improved at the rate you did early in your design career - I'm betting that you'd be a better designer than you are today!
Let's explore some of the ways to improve as a designer:
Read Design Tutorials
Design tutorials are a fantastic way to improve your skillset. Tutorials usually show you how to make a specific outcome by explaining the entire work process in a series of detailed steps. Tutorial sites usually cover a range of different categories, such as text effects, photo manipulations, web layouts etc... Try to explore a range of tutorial sites, as well as tutorial categories in order to broaden your design skills. It's important to read a high quality of tutorial. Many sites publish tutorials that actually teach bad technique (for example, the classic example of photo retouching skin using the gaussian blur tool). It's also important to not merely skim the tutorial as eye candy. Try to focus on the workflow and techniques that are used, rather than just checking out the final outcome. The sites below all offer high quality tutorials to improve your technique:- Psd.Tutsplus.com
- PSD.FanExtra.com
- Abduzeedo
- I can also highly recommend the Russell Brown Show for brushing up on Photoshop's huge array of tools, and uncovering techniques you never would have thought of.
Seek Inspiration From a Wider Variety of Sources
The number one killer for design inspiration is limiting your sources of inspiration. I've already mentioned the importance of design tutorials, but you should look beyond online inspiration. Offline influences can have a tremendously positive effect upon your designs. Inspiration lies everywhere - in nature, in the everyday, bizarre, and transitory. Look to films, art, posters, street signs and photography. The more varied your inspiration, the more varied your work. If you let all the creativity available in the world benefit you, your work will be richer and more profound. Instead of merely skimming over design blogs today, why not try one of the following ideas for inspiration:- Take a long walk in a picturesque area. If you have a camera bring it, and photograph anything that grabs your attention.
- Go and visit some local exhibitions that interest you. Look for interesting photography, art and design galleries in your area.
- Flick through any magazines or newspapers lying around your house. Rip out elements that catch your eye and pin them on a board as an inspirational collage.
Choose to Design From Something Specific
Often it can be difficult to improve because you consistently design around the same themes. Broadening your inspirational sources is a good start, but I find that designing around a specific idea can also be beneficial. Rather than designing a photo manipulation around the theme of 'nature' for example, why not design around a specific quote, song lyric or even memory. The more personal the specific influence the better, although it can also be interesting to design around an abstract or obscure entity. [caption id="" align="alignnone" width="550"] Source[/caption] When you have selected your lyric, memory, quote, or other influence, try and consider the following:- How does it make you feel? What emotions does it evoke?
- What colors, shapes and images do these emotions evoke?
- Try to consider more abstract interpretations, perhaps opposites, relating images, and such.
Utilize Your Other Relevant Talents
As you may have guessed by now, it's crucial to add diversity to your design work, as this is a key ingredient in improving. A great way to do this is to bring in some of your other talents. If you draw, then scan in hand drawn elements and integrate this into your design work. If you do calligraphy then implement what you've learnt into your digital typography. If you have no relevant creative skills (which is unlikely) then learn some! Take a class, or if you can't afford that teach yourself. The more areas which you feel confident in creatively, the better your digital work will be. Why not try the following ideas, you should feel more inspired afterwards, which in turn should improve your regular design work:- Take a step away from the computer and create an offline work of art. Aim to design a mixed media piece using whatever talents you possess. If you can't draw, why not create a creative collage?
- Print off some of your digital work and mess around with it using more traditional art tools. It feels liberating to mess it up a little, so get out the scissors and go nuts!
- Try to recreate one of your favorite digital designs in an offline medium. You'll be surprised at how much you'll learn about the basic ideas behind your original composition in doing so, and you should formulate some great ideas on how to improve your digital work.
Be Passionate, Be Original
Don't follow design trends simply for the sake of it. There are thousands of images out there that look almost exactly the same, and this shows no attempt to improve at the hands of the designers. Always strive to produce original, unique work. The greatest way to be original is to be passionate. If you're copying others you're never going to feel passionate about your work. However, if your design inspiration comes from within, and you really care about what you're producing then it will show through in the quality of your work. A great way to feel more passionate about your work is to design around something that you really care about (perhaps love, loss or friendship), or perhaps even a political or social cause that's important to you. Here are some ideas to evoke more passion and originality in your design work:- Produce a piece inspired by a loved one. Try to pour how you feel about this person into your composition.
- Think of both the best and worst moment in your life. Produce a piece inspired by each. Be honest and transparent in this, don't hide behind anything.
- Produce a visual diary for a limited time. For instance, you could record a week of your life in a series of 7 compositions.
Nice! Some helpefull advices/reminders :)
So helpefull !!! iShare
GREAT article! Thank you for the good advice Tom :)
Thank you:)
You can go beyond being average by reading case study type books and find out what great designers/firms do to solve difficult design issues… and not just design for designs’ sake, but actually solving real world issues that are sustainable and meet real business goals. Books like “How to Think Like a Great Graphic Designer” by Debbie Millman, “The Brand Gap” by Marty Neumeier, and “Making Ideas Happen” by Scott Belsky [Behance Network] are all amazing resources.
Once you get into the mindset of understanding what design does, then go and apply your own creativity to solve the issues at hand. It also helps to not design in a vacuum and get under a good Art Director or Assistant Creative Director and consistently them for how they might approach the design.
More than anything, I strongly recommend being humble and a willing mindset to learn.
Great post. Another thing that also really helps me is to think about product design, and look at things from almost an engineering perspective. Look at daily surroundings that would normally not be part of any design of yours and think of ways you can improve them. Think of the direction these things are headed and also how they originated. It adds more spectrum to your work.
Great article. Very impressive and assertive. May I translate this to spanish so others can read about it?. Thanks a lot Tom!
hi tom really usefull article
This is one of the most visually pleasing site designs I’ve seen this year. Also I like the site of that bloke behind Themify…Nick La if I remember…
Great tips for not only graphic designers but designers in general!