Career Information
Fine art sends a different message to everyone. Graphic design sends the same message to everyone.
Areas of Design: There’s a gazillion types of design jobs. These are just a few: LOGO DESIGN Logo specialists are on the rise and are quite a talented group. If you’re good with a pencil and tend to be more of an artist than a designer, logo design is a perfect fi eld for you to pursue. PRINT/DIGITAL PUBLICATION Every single page in a daily, weekly, monthly, bi-monthly and annual publications has to be designed, compiled and organized by teams of Graphic Designers and Creative Directors. PACKAGE DESIGN Boxes, bottles, cans, bags and cartons that fi ll every shelf in every store. You might design the graphics and the physical container. ADVERTISING AND BRANDING These designers create the personality of the brand: its logo, characters and mascots, typography, colors, messaging, goals, drive, etc. MARKETING These designers create coupons, in-store promotional materials and engage other short-term projects meant to achieve incremental lift, which is to say tactics such as a holiday sale where purchase is hopefully increased. PROMOTION DESIGN These designer create public awareness of a product, event, service, movie, restaurant or company. WEB DESIGN This growing fi eld consist of front-end designers responsible for making the web look pretty and web developers responsible for making it work. UI DESIGN User Interface design relates specifi cally to the design and development of application and website interfaces. ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN A human-centered discipline that focuses on the total spatial experience. These designers create indoor and outdoor public and private spaces where people live, work, and play. ENTERTAINMENT GRAPHIC DESIGN Movie posters, TV show print advertising, album covers, magazine ads, trade publications, billboards, bus riders, and vehicle wraps. LICENSING APPAREL DESIGN More and more graphics are appearing on clothing. Every time you see something printed or stitched onto apparel, someone designed it. WAYFINDING DESIGN These designers create information systems that guide people through a physical environment and enhance their understanding and experience of the space. AND SO MANY MORE!
9 Signs You'd Make a Good Graphic Designer
- YOU’RE OBSESSED WITH DETAILS How many times did you have to change clothes to fi nd
just the right ensemble for today? Your detail-oriented approach to life is perfect
in the world of design. Designing creative collateral requires a keen eye for detail.
The wrong shade of blue may be the difference between the winning logo and a failed
one. Successful graphic designers have a thoughtful purpose for every aspect of their
design.
- YOU’RE THE ULTIMATE PROBLEM SOLVER When your friends are arguing, you’re the mediator
who helps guide them to a peaceful resolution. We graphic designers are problem solvers.
A designer’s goal is to provide creative solutions to meet client needs. Good designers
understand every aspect of a client’s message and cater their work to convey that
message to a specifi c audience.
- YOU’RE EXTRA PERSUASIVE Your poise and charm makes it easy for others to agree with
you. You stand fi rm by your ideas and you’re confi dence makes it easy for you to
enlist the support of others. What one person thinks is brilliant, another may think
is garbage. A good designer has a purpose for every decision they make and is able
to intelligently defend that decision. Often times, thoughtful reasoning and confi
dence are all it takes to convince a client on a design.
- YOU’RE ALWAYS PUNCTUAL If you have dinner plans at 7:00, you’re there at 6:45. The
world of graphic design is driven by harsh deadlines. If you can’t keep up in a fast-paced
environment, you may fi nd yourself losing work, losing clients and, worst of all,
losing paychecks. Successful graphic designers thrive when working under pressure.
- YOU ENJOY LEARNING NEW THINGS When your parents’ think you are asleep, you enjoy clicking
through Pinterest to discover the newest innovations. New trends and technologies
pique your interest and you want to try everything. The graphic design fi eld is constantly
in flux. New developments and technologies are always emerging. The best designers
are never done learning!
- YOU’RE A MASTER MULTITASKER Your life is a constant juggling act. Between school,
homework, friends, the updating Facebook, you’ve got a ton on your plate but it never
seems to faze you. In fact, you kind of enjoy the fast-paced lifestyle you’ve created
and wouldn’t even know what to do with a day off! Graphic designers are rarely focused
on one task at a time. Rather, they often fi nd themselves handling multiple projects
all at different stages with different clients. It’s important that you can effectively
manage several things at once.
- YOU’VE GOT THICK SKIN You’re a resilient person, so it takes a lot to hurt your feelings.
Life has thrown its share of obstacles your way but you’ve always picked yourself
up, dusted yourself off and kept moving forward. You’re independent and self-reliant.
The graphic design industry can be cutthroat, so it’s important to have thick skin.
If a client gives you poor feedback about a design you poured your heart into, you
can’t take it personally. Successful designers don’t dwell on a single project; they
move on and focus on the next one.
- WORKING 9 TO 5 IS NOT YOUR THING If you are looking for a traditional job working
9 a.m. - 5 p.m., graphic design may not be for you. Although these types of positions
do exist, more often than not you’ll fi nd yourself working odd hours to meet strict
deadlines. But this fluctuating schedule isn’t necessarily a bad thing. Many designers
opt to work as freelancers, allowing them to work on their own time and in their own
space.
- YOU KNOW IT’S MORE THAN JUST SOFTWARE In this day and age, the term “graphic designer”
has become a generic title given to anyone who has access to design software. Having
an old version of Photoshop doesn’t make you a graphic designer any more than owning
a pipe wrench makes you a plumber. True designers know their software but they also
know the elements and principles of design, creative process, typography, color theory,
gestalt theory, conceptual thinking, sketching, research, effective presentation,
a pinch of math, and a dash of psychology.
Is Graphic Design Right for You? To fi nd out take these two classes: ARTD-20 TWO-DIMENSIONAL DESIGN You will learn composition, color theory, vocabulary (you’ll be able to speak ‘designese’), Gestalt theory, the elements and principles of design, and how they apply to all disciplines of the arts. ARTC-100 GRAPHIC DESIGN 1 You will primarily use Photoshop as a tool to learn the creative process of graphic design. You will experience a graphic design studio environment in this hands-on course full of fun activities, helpful exercises, and challenging projects. All geared toward showing you what it’s like to work as a graphic designer.
Graphic Design is Art with a Purpose Suppose you want to announce or sell something, amuse or persuade someone, explaining complicated system or demonstrated a process. In other words you have a message you want to communicate. You could tell people one by one or broadcast by radio or loudspeaker but that is verbal communication. If you use any visual medium at all, if you make a poster, create a logo, magazine ad, an album cover, make a website, or even a smart-phone app, you are using a form of visual communication called graphic design. Graphic designers work with type and drawn, painted, photographed, or computer generated images. Designers create, select, and organize these elements forming a visual language, to effectively convey a message to an audience. Graphic design is part of your daily life from humble things like gum wrappers and digital buttons to huge things like ad campaigns and brand identity. Graphic design can persuade, inform, identify, motivate, and brand. Graphic design is a creative process that combines art and technology to communicate a message from a client to an audience. Graphic design is an exciting and rewarding career.