November 20, 2015 13:11
Tumblr
November 20, 2015 03:31
Tumblr
500monsters: Regards to your "No Shame" post. Throughout your four years were you applying to all manner of jobs or were you selective about where you wanted to apply like job duties and if it was in your state or out of state. I've been in retail for 2 years now since college and the stress of wondering where I should take root or just get anything that "relates to creating" is real. Layer that with the job app process low esteem and not enough money. A recipe for woe indeed.
Hi! This was dynamic and changed with time– I was a little bit selective, but as time went on, what I was selective about– changed. I was really starting to stress at points, and It is indeed a recipe for woe, but the balance of ingredients can sometimes act as a catalyst.
Coming up on graduation from SCAD: I applied to many animation studios, big and small. I was even applying to computer graphics studios who did things like credits for films. This was late 2005/early 2006. Oddly, a few places I had applied to had gone out of business or moved and portfolios were returned. I applied to locations all over the country, with interest in Los Angeles area, Florida, New York, and Chicago areas.
Coming up on graduation from AiCA-SF: I applied to a wide variety of studios, large and small– but didn’t get any internship interest in the Bay Area. I did have something lined up in LA area, so I moved to Los Angeles and then the internship fell through. This was the same time the economy crapped out, and there was a huge influx of Computer Animation grads coming out. I spent the next two months applying to anything I could find in postings. At this point, I had friends in the LA Area and I enjoyed it a lot, and decided I was going to stick to Los Angeles/Burbank and surrounding areas. There’s a LOT of studios, big and small here. I applied to retail jobs because I was out of what little savings I had. I had an interview at a large bookstore in the Grove, and it was a huge group interview. It felt very awkward to me. I then had an interview with an art supply store. Way more up my alley, so when they offered me a job, I took that one. Discounts on art supplies is a win.
The thing about retail in Los Angeles is, it can really suck when you get bad customers. I’m not talking just plain rude– I’m talking flat-out asshats who purposely damage merchandise, try to get a discount on it, and pitch a wave of sass at me when they don’t get a discount because I watched them pick something like a very expensive sheet of handmade paper up, and crumple it just 5 feet away from my register, and turn going “this is damaged, whats the discount?”. This ate away at my soul. I would find hope in learning more skills and getting better at coloring and such– the things I did for fun.
I worked in that job for 4 years, the early part of that applying to anything within that general area that consisted of animation, texturing, and even modeling in Maya. What happened though, was that after a short while of rejections from CG related jobs, I started to teach myself illustration, coloring, and such. This is when my focus shifted. Maya costs a buttload of money so I couldn’t keep up with the rapidly changing software. Drawing, coloring, and illustration– that I can keep up on.
I still applied to studios who needed generalists and such but eventually that stopped. My best friend Kyle was doing a lot at this time. A web comic, storyboarding, and an animated short-pitch kinda thing. That was called Weird Eddie. I learned some flash animation (2d traditional frame-by-frame style) and I started doing the coloring for the backgrounds on his comic Frog Raccoon Strawberry. I developed a coloring style for that, and continued to teach myself stuff. Later I started learning storyboarding. I started applying to jobs looking for character designer, colorist, storyboarding, and such.
Early 2011 was an awful time. I was dealt an ultra-crappy hand of cards, and things just kept getting worse. Then something inside of me clicked. I don’t know what it was. Everything sucked, I was very unhappy being kicked around in retail, and something inside of me caught on fire and that’s when I dug my heels in more so than ever before. I focused on learning and becoming better at everything I could. Discouragement kinda left me because I think I had hit the bottom. I just focused on getting better at everything I had time to work on. I was applying to things that I had been learning, but then my friend told me about an opening at the place he was working at. I interviewed, and I got the job. I will never forget the moment I had finally gotten my foot in the door.
Granted that job lasted about 2 months, and I was out of work over the holidays– but that was EXPERIENCE! I had finally gotten some work experience! I kept applying and studying Storyboarding (Dudes and dudettes– Sherm Cohen is your guy for Storyboard learnings! His DVDs are hella amazing!). I was getting art tests for boards but nothing was catching– I was running out of unemployment, and then one night I was cleaning out my email junkbox and saw an email from Disney. Someone had emailed me asking if I was interested in a job.
And that started with freelance as a designer, and led to me being hired full time in Disney Publishing. It took what felt like forever– but it finally happened.
I noticed that the more I pushed myself to get better– the more art tests I got. Then more interviews. It finally built up enough to tip in my favor. That’s why I will always tell others– don’t ever give up. Don’t ever stop learning. Sometimes it hits just right an amazing happens.
If you’re worried about taking anything that involves creating– ask yourself: Will you be happier doing that? Also– take time out of the equation. I frigging hated being fed the old formula: Graduate High School. Do 4 years of college. Graduate college. Get standard job. Life.
The thing is– there’s no time limit to your dreams and wishes. They can change as you develop more as an artist and discover what you really like and enjoy doing. That’s what happened to me. There is a massive “life/art/learning/take your time” post somewhere here on tumblr (that I cannot find for the life of me find a link to) where an artist discusses how life happens and that you can shift focus, but there is no time limit on learning or pursuing your goals. Experience life.
It’s a lot of blabbering from me and I hope I didn’t go too far off subject, but I guess I want to make some points:
Take care of you. Make sure you’re keeping yourself healthy and your stress level down to a manageable level. If you’re stressed out by applications– try to think of them in a manner that releases you from the constant stress. I started to see it this way. Once I apply– it’s outta my hands. I did the best I could do. I make sure to write a follow up email/letter if need be, and I stopped babysitting the clock. Use that energy for doing something that makes you happy, like learning a new media. Something fun. You might stumble upon something. That’s what I did.
Set a list of priorities for yourself. Rent/bills, food. I reminded myself that those things had to be taken care of, and the rest of the time was a reward. I used it to learn new stuff. I used it to focus on going up. That way, I enjoyed my time making my skills better– even more. It was more satisfying to me.
If bills get tight, try taking commissions. I started doing this to supplement my income, and at the same time I got better and better.
But at the end of the day– you are still priority number 1. You take care of yourself. If you’re feeling burned out, take a break. A breather. I’ve found when I intend to just zone out for a day to stop burnout– that’s when the need to create hits, and I get that new energy. Make sure you drink plenty of water, take walks if you can, and find a way to de-stress yourself. Don’t beat yourself up about wasting a day or two taking a break. You gotta let yourself regroup sometimes. It happens to us all.
And don’t forget to look at how you’ve succeeded. How far you’ve come. It helps to put things in perspective and I found it gave me a great deal of pride. I was still in retail, but I was coloring comic backgrounds and cleaning up animation. I was so damned proud. I’m not doing what I went to school for, but I changed what my focus was, and I was so happy. I love doing my job, and I love being a part of of what I work on.
It’s never too late to learn. There is no end-date on you or your dreams. You’re always getting better. It can be tough, but you gotta keep at it. You’ll get there. You’re more rad than you think.
Whew! I really hope this helps! Feel free to ask me to focus on something if I missed anything :)
November 19, 2015 20:41
Tumblr
November 19, 2015 20:40
Tumblr
November 19, 2015 00:59
Tumblr
November 19, 2015 00:22
Tumblr
November 18, 2015 01:40
Tumblr
November 16, 2015 20:09
Tumblr
November 16, 2015 20:05
Tumblr
(Source: freebensears.com)
(Source: youtube.com)
November 16, 2015 19:57
Tumblr
November 16, 2015 19:54
Tumblr
(Source: Laughing Squid)
November 16, 2015 19:44
Tumblr
November 15, 2015 23:56
Tumblr
(Source: dieselsweeties.com)
November 15, 2015 23:51
Tumblr
There's no shame.
A quick point I wanted to make– if you’ve gotten out of school and are working in retail to make ends meet until you get your foot in the door, there is absolutely no shame in that. Do NOT let that make you feel bad. Do not let that eat away at you. Just keep working on making your artwork better, and strengthen your skills. You’re working hard to ensure you can do what you love– creating. Paying the bills with retail or similar work is allowing you to continue getting better and trying to get your foot in the door.
I graduated with an MFA in animation and had a BFA in Animation and it took me four years in retail before I got my foot in the door. Four years. Every night I went home after work, I had the goal in mind to get better. That’s what I worked on– drawing, coloring, painting, Storyboarding. I worked hard at it and it finally paid off when I got out of retail and into a small studio. Later on I was hired by Disney.
Keep working on making your skills better, and you’ll get there. I know you can 💙
November 15, 2015 23:45
Tumblr
November 15, 2015 23:40
Tumblr
concept: me, well-rested, getting up just after sunrise before work. the sky is that golden pink, I am sleepy but content. I pour myself a cup of coffee and read the newspaper. I like my job and it pays the bills.
November 15, 2015 23:36
Tumblr
November 15, 2015 14:22
Tumblr
November 15, 2015 14:19
Tumblr
NaNoWriMo - The Evil “0″
I’m taking a break from writing (even though I am behind and I really shouldn’t be) to discuss something that’s come up for me within the last few days. We’ve just about concluded the second week of November, so we should be about halfway through our novels by now. Unfortunately though, if you’re like me and you’ve fallen just a bit behind (or you’ve fallen a lot behind), it can be difficult to find the motivation to continue.
During this month, I’m always obsessed with the number 0. I think 0 is both a motivator and a deterrent for the exact same reasons. Whether it’s one or the other doesn’t just depend on who you are, but where you’re seeing this 0.
My biggest excitement on Day 1 of NaNo is changing my word count from 0 to anything really, even if it’s just 50 words. But even if the 0 is gone from your overall word count, it sticks around for daily word counts. Until you write on any given day, your daily word count is 0. And while I was so excited to banish that 0 on Day 1, throughout the rest of the month, the 0 lures me into this false sense of security. It’s complicated, so let me explain.
I have a calendar on my fridge keeping track of daily word counts, and I don’t live alone so others can see my progress. Though I haven’t logged a word count of 0 on any day so far (my lowest was I think 72 words), I find myself almost ashamed when my word count is extremely low, to the point where I’d rather write 0 words than 72, and I didn’t really get why that was. So I thought about it and came to the following conclusion.
A word count of 0 could indicate a lot of things on the surface. Sure, it could mean that you opted to play video games or binge watch on Netflix, but it could also mean that you had a long, rough day at work, or you had a million appointments, a lot of homework, or even things like family emergencies, a sick pet, a friend that needed you. Life can create lots of valid reasons that you didn’t have time to write. A daily word count of 0 could mean that your schedule just didn’t allow for it.
As soon as that 0 becomes anything else, the perception suggests something new. It suggests that you sat down to write at some point during your day, and a measly 50 words is all you could come up with. You clearly had an opportunity and motivation enough to open the document and type something, so the fact that you could only get 50 words feels pathetic. It feels like failure. You clearly started, and then stopped. So either you got bored with your story, which is source of extreme panic during NaNo, or you got bored with writing, which is a source of extreme panic for writers every single day of our lives.
This isn’t how it should be. We shouldn’t look at small progress as pathetic. But for some of us, this is how our brains naturally operate. And because we’re so critical of making our stories perfect, we can translate that perfectionism to the writing sessions themselves and feel like if it doesn’t go flawless and we don’t get at least 1000 words, then it’s a huge waste of time and it’s not even worth attempting.
I can’t stop myself from feeling shame when I write daily word count totals of less than 500 words on my calendar, but what I can do is acknowledge this shame and tell it to GTFO. Because when I think about it, what I really see is this: I wrote on a day when writing was the last thing I wanted to do. When I felt like crap, when I hated the world and myself, when I was too busy to even think about my story, when I had people that needed me and I still managed to be there for them, when my day was packed so full that there was no time for a dedicated writing session…I wrote something. Despite all those odds, I got into my characters heads for the briefest of moments and said to my story, “You matter to me.” Even if I only have a few minutes today, I’m going to give some of it to writing.
Because it’s not the days where we write thousands and thousands of words that make us productive writers. It’s when we’re able to write on days when it’s difficult to. Even if it’s just a sentence, it keeps you engaged in the story and with the characters, and it makes it easier to keep coming back to it day in and day out.
So if you feel like your pathetic daily word counts are a waste of your time, think again. Because this month is not just about writing 50k words. It’s about developing loyalty to your story, to your writing, so that you can’t go a day without thinking about it and tossing even just one sentence at it.
Good luck WriMos! Keep writing and do not give up!
-Rebekah
About This Blog
Hi, I'm Tim Lai! I'm a cartoonist living in Ontario, Canada. I like drawing cute and colourful things. This blog is a hub where you can find all of my Tumblr, DeviantArt, Flickr, Blogspot, and other posts in one place.
About My Work
I write and draw Lemon Inc., a comic about a seven-year-old who wants to be a business tycoon when he grows up. Until then, he runs a lemonade stand. You can read it at www.lemon-inc.com.
I have done some professional web and graphic design work, including designing the website for the webcomic, Just Joel. I'm also a member of the webcomic collective, Ink Bomb Comics.
My Sites
Ink Bomb Comics
Other Comics I Like
Artists & Designers
Archive
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- August 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- January 2018
- December 2017
- November 2017
- October 2017
- September 2017
- August 2017
- July 2017
- June 2017
- May 2017
- April 2017
- March 2017
- February 2017
- January 2017
- December 2016
- November 2016
- October 2016
- September 2016
- August 2016
- July 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
- February 2016
- January 2016
- December 2015
- November 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- August 2015
- July 2015
- June 2015
- May 2015
- April 2015
- March 2015
- February 2015
- January 2015
- December 2014
- November 2014
- October 2014
- September 2014
- August 2014
- July 2014
- June 2014
- May 2014
- April 2014
- March 2014
- February 2014
- January 2014
- December 2013
- November 2013
- October 2013
- September 2013
- August 2013
- February 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2011
- July 2011
- June 2011
- May 2011
- April 2011
- March 2011
- February 2011
- January 2011
- December 2010
- November 2010
- October 2010
- September 2010
- August 2010
- July 2010
- February 2010
- January 2010
- July 2009
- June 2009
- May 2009
- April 2009
- February 2009
- January 2009
- December 2008
- November 2008
- October 2008
- September 2008
- August 2008
jetbluehumankinda:
Me every night.