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Veer Inspiration

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I don’t know how many of you have heard of Veer before but I have come to know the name well. I get there brochure/inspiration book every couple months and it is great. Now this is not something that is free but if you are a designer and looking for inspiration or great fonts there book would be what you are looking for. You can also find some free wallpapers and things on there website here.

I don’t know how much more I can say about them, it’s a great service and website and please check them out. I know they will help you more then once when you need it the most. Enjoy.

Perspective Wallpaper

Well I just wanted to post about my latest wallpaper. Which is not my original artwork but it was featured on http://www.changemydesk.net/ and I thought that was really cool since I was never featured on anything before. All the details can be found on my deviantart profile.

Please check it out. Very nice wallpaper. If you have any questions or ideas please contact me here.

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This Is A Photo, Believe It!

Details from Flickr

At Nippori station, Tokyo.
3xp(2EV) handheld.

[EDITED]
- 3 exposures (-2EV, 0EV +2EV). EXIF for middle
- SLR camera and lens: Nikon D80 /w Tamron SP AF11-18mm (A13N)
- tripod and head: handheld
- software: Photomatix Pro 2.5.3 on MS-Windows XP

See where this picture was taken. [?]
[MAP by ALPSLAB]

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Stock Photos

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When design becomes your job and it is 100% serious you start to have to spend money. One of the things that are used the most these days are stock photo websites. Now I know most of you probably have a website that you go to all the time, there are millions and they make there money. Now there are also times where you’d rather not spend money on a certain project and this is where this post comes in. I did a search awhile back on google for free stock image sites and came up with some what of a lot. Most of them give you a couple free and then charge, and others are just plain crap.

I stumbled upon stock.xchng 5 months ago or so and I use it quite often now. They have a pretty big collection of photos that are free for you to use. Sometimes they turn out to be a link to stock.xpert which means its not free but I still found use out of this website. If it’s a small project then this website is most likely worth your time to check out.

The Clients

I have only been doing design for a job (career) for a short while. The first thing I noticed is clients. It can be quite hard at times listening to clients and getting them the things that they want. They don’t always explain themselves and sometimes what they want is well impossible. There are a few things I have learned so far that makes things a little bit easier at times.

1. CLEARLY explain everything you do.

2. Make sure you understand what they want before sending a million files. Talk with them in person and on the phone.

3. Explanations don’t always work, show them what you mean.

4. Be Patient!

5. Always remember, if it’s not fun anymore, just think about the money.

That is about it for what I have learned in my short while. If you have any tips or ideas which should be added to the list please contact me here or leave me a comment. I am always open to suggestion!

This post comes from You The Designer on December 10th 2007. These books are some of the best out there! Enjoy this article written by Jessica Stockdale!

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Outlined by Gino Orlandi, Written by Jessica Stockdale

I have probed the web for the most highly recommended and best-selling graphic design related books that can inspire and help you as a graphic designer. These books cover many areas of design, including typography, color theory, layout, design theory, web design, business and even search engine optimization and marketing for designers.

These delightful graphic design books will make a great addition to any graphic designer’s library!

1. Graphic Artists Guild Handbook: Pricing & Ethical Guidelines
This is a book you should not do without. It touches on every topic you need to know about how to be successful as a graphic artist. If you want experienced and practical advice on anything from setting prices for your work on the Internet to how to best manage your client relations – this is the book for you.

2. Sagmeister: Made You Look
Daring designer, Stefan Sagmeister, chronicles almost 40 years of working in this business in this book. Sagmeister conveys his wit and humor into these pages, as he tells you his personal adventures.

3. Make It Bigger
This book caters to designers who work with businesses. Read this to be inspired and benefit from the wisdom of years of experience working in the field of graphic design.

4. About Face: Reviving The Rules Of Typography
Talking about the large topic of typography, About Face, helps you navigate through the world with ease. Many wonderful and successful examples of typography are provided in this book.

5. Typographic Design: Form and Communication
This is the fourth edition of a best-selling book. If you want just one book to help you learn about how to properly typography, it’s this one. Whether you’re interested in the history of this art, or how it can be effectively used in this modern-era, this book is chock full of valuable information for graphic designers.

6. The Elements of Typographic Style
Author, Robert Bringhurst, has written this book, which uses beautiful language to tell the story of how to apply your own artistic sensibility to typography. One treat in this book is the examples of fonts in different languages such as Russian and Greek.

7. The Elements of Graphic Design: Space, Unity, Page Architecture, and Type
This book’s author, Alexander W. White, is a strong advocate of white space – what you can also call negative space. Many designers feel the need to clutter things up, but less can be more. Learn how to master that idea with this great book.

8. Making and Breaking the Grid: A Graphic Design Layout Workshop
This book focuses on layout. With it, you can comprehensively learn the elements of layout so that you can better use them in your work.

9. Designing with Type: The Essential Guide to Typography (Designing With Type)
A book that’s been around since 1971, this is something that will introduce you to typography. It offers pointers on how to take into account such things as the feeling of a text, as well as how effectively it is conveyed in different formats.

10. Meggs’ History of Graphic Design
This offers a wonderful writing up of the history of graphic design. It may be of interest to both current graphic designers, and general artistic-minded people.

11. Graphic Design: A New History
Own this book and learn about graphic design history in a new light. The book talks in-depth of the different times of history in correlation to what graphic design’s were used.

12. Thinking with Type: A Critical Guide for Designers, Writers, Editors, & Students (Design Briefs)
Author Ellen Lupton has written this wonderful book. The book has three main sections: letter, text, and grid. Learn the history of each, how technology can help you, and then see examples in practice.

13. The Designer’s Toolkit: 500 Grids and Style Sheets: 500 Grids and Style Sheets
As you may have already guessed, this book challenges designers to re-think their idea of how to work within a grid. There are 500 grid and style sheets ready for you to produce your work on and see what you like.

14. Looking Closer 5: Critical Writings on Graphic Design
This is the fifth and final installment in a series of wonderful books. Within these pages you will find writing on controversial topics that will encourage you to think outside of the page, or the screen.

15. How to Think Like a Great Graphic Designer
Learn what you have in common with other graphic designers who have achieved success. What has helped them overcome obstacles may very well help you as well. This book is full of interviews you will find invaluable.
16. Seventy-nine Short Essays on Design
The title of the book tells you what you’re getting, right off the bat. Michael Bierut writes with whimsy and a critical eye in this book that you are sure to enjoy and be educated from.
17. How To Be a Graphic Designer Without Losing Your Soul
The work of a graphic designer is not easy, and you probably already know that. Within these160 pages you will discover writing on topics such as how to generate ideas when your mind is void of them. You don’t want to become a slave to mundane tasks and lose your spark, if you feel yourself drifting – reach for this book.

18. LogoLounge 3: 2,000 International Identities by Leading Designers (LogoLounge)
If you’re crazy for logos then this is the book for you. In this third installment, you will find a myriad of different logos – 2,000 to be exact. Get inspired with this book, and then get designing.

19. Logo Design (Midi Series)
This is a handy reference book on logo design. Students and professionals alike will enjoy this book.

20. Hand Job: A Catalog of Type
Fifty typographers are featured in this book, and what they all have in common is that they reject technology, and design their fonts by hand. While the title at first can seem shocking to anyone, it will stay shocking to a designer. When’s the last time you reached for a pen and paper for your final draft? Maybe next time you will, after reading this book.

21. Universal Principles of Design: 100 Ways to Enhance Usability, Influence Perception, Increase Appeal, Make Better Design Decisions, and Teach Through Design
Well-written, this book is what it claims to be – 100 ways to enhance, influence, increase, teach – you get the idea. It is easy to understand and follow, and gives you well-researched briefs on a variety of topics that normally you’d have to read about in several different books.

22. Adobe Photoshop CS3 Classroom in a Book
Experts that make up the Adobe Creative Team have put together this book for you to easily expand your knowledge of the Adobe Photoshop program. Learn how to do things better and faster, all from reading this book.

23. The Adobe Photoshop CS3 Book for Digital Photographers (Voices That Matter)
To have Adobe Photoshop is one thing; to be able to use it is one thing, but to be able to use it well is another. And that is especially true when it comes to digital photography. If you want the best tips and tricks, this book won’t lead you astray.

24. Adobe Illustrator CS3 Classroom in a Book
Master the programs in Adobe Illustrator by using this book as a step-by-stop guide. The Adobe Creative Team will guide you where you need to go.

25. The Adobe Illustrator CS3 Wow! Book (WOW!)
If you want to be the best with using Adobe’s Illustrator, you need this book. There are tons of lessons in this book to help you learn new tools. Ever wonder how to take a desaturated image and make it appear to be a color photo? Read and learn.

26. Adobe InDesign CS3 Classroom in a Book
This is a good book for beginners. Make sure to get the second printing, as the first as some typos!

27. HTML, XHTML, and CSS, Sixth Edition (Visual Quickstart Guide)
You should know HTML, and probably XHTML and CSS as well. So learn it here, with this wonderful book! This is not for advanced students.

28. CSS Mastery: Advanced Web Standards Solutions
Authors Andy Budd, Simon Collison, and Cameron Moll have written the ultimate guide to CSS! Learn everything you wanted to know, and more – in this book.

29. Bulletproof Web Design: Improving flexibility and protecting against worst-case scenarios with XHTML and CSS (2nd Edition)
When you build a Web site, you want it to work. This book will help you learn how to get out all of the kinks and bugs from your site so that the widest possible audience can access it without flaws.

30. SEO Book
When you have a Web site, you want traffic. You get that through search engine optimization (SEO). This is the only book you will ever need to master search engine optimization and you can download it!

You The Designer

You The Designer

There always comes a time where you need help on a task. If it’s resources, tutorials, ideas or what not there is always a time you need help. Now I’d rather not give rep to another design blog but I have too. I have been checking out this blog for awhile now and it has helped me countless times. You the Designer is a graphic design blog dedicated to providing you with quality graphic design tips, graphic design resources, graphic design news and much more! I don’t even think I can say anymore about it, if there is one thing you do today let it be this, please check it out.

Vector Site Part 1

Vecteezy

If you are a designer you know it’s hard to find good vector images. I am going to post new vector sites over the next little while that I find are really good to have in your bookmarks. Some will be general vector images and some will be related to one type of design or creation. Now I really enjoy the urban grudge type of look and also the new age Web 2.0 look. I found this website awhile back thanks to digg and I have been using it ever since.

Vecteezy is a very good vector site for that type of work. As they say “stupid name, cool vectors!” and they are correct. Check it out and bookmark it. I find that it is not updated that often, but when it is there are lots of new vectors and great resources. You can use there stuff for many different things I find. I love it.

Enjoy it!

Design Blog

I have technically had this blog for years now but I never really used it. I tried awhile back to keep it going and adding new content every once in awhile. Well, that did not turn out to well. I don’t know if it’s because I was busy or just because no one read it. I have now recently updated it with a new design (yes, chosen from the list) and I will be starting to add great content to it. Now this blog is going to be about all types of design, say it be graphic or web or even interior. It will be a collection of postings from around the web, what I believe to be good and useful to the designers out there. It will also be updating on my career and design related items throughout the times.

Now I wanted to start off with one of the newest and most useful websites out there at the moment. Adobe Creative Suite 3 came out a little while ago and I am sure you all know about Live Trace and all those goodies. Well if you have ever used it, it’s not that good. Now I know it’s not there to do all your work but the less work you have to do is always good. Vector Magic is a new online software that converts your bitmap images to vector images, it’s an online auto-tracer. Now that is the same thing that Live Trace is in the Adobe products but I find that this application from Stanford works very VERY well. From what I have used it for it does at least 90% prefect creations of the original image. It is very detailed with the options it gives you and if they don’t do the best job they allow you to edit it as well. Please check it out and you won’t be sorry!

Now be sure to come back and check out my new blog postings every once in awhile (that is you I mean) and enjoy!

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