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Home > Breaking Into Freelance Illustration: A Guide for Artists, Designers and Illustrators
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Breaking Into Freelance Illustration: A Guide for Artists, Designers and Illustrators
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By Holly DeWolf
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(9 Reviews)
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List Price: $19.99
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Publisher:
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How
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Date:
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December 31, 1969 |
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Binding:
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Paperback
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Pages:
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272
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Build Your Own Thriving Illustration Business The boundaries between art, design and illustration are blurring, and with all the new opportunities for visual creatives, now is the perfect time to unleash your talent on the world! Breaking Into Freelance Illustration provides a step-by-step roadmap for promoting yourself and running your creative business. You'll find up-to-date advice about best business practices, ideas for new promotional tools, answers to common questions and words of wisdom and inspiration from top illustrators. This book shows you how to: - Set up a home office and balance your professional and personal life
- Create a professional portfolio and promote your work online
- Search out and negotiate with potential clients
- Create your own brand and work with an agent
- Develop a fair and accurate system for pricing your work
- Network within the creative community
Full of industry insight, this book is a down-to-earth guide that fills in the creative business blanks. If you've ever wanted to moonlight as an illustrator, start a full-time business, or simply see your work published, this book will give you the information you need to make it happen.
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Customers' Reviews: Add Your Own Review |
Good Motivator, January 2, 2010
By J. Hogan (Birmingham, AL)
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This is a good book for those start-ups who need some motivation to get up and start their own design practice. The author gives some good advice from someone who's "been there, done that." Starting a new home-based, illustration business, or any business for that matter, can be very intimidating for those who have never done it before. I've always appreciated those who step forward to offer guidance to those who are new to the business. This book tells the reader that they "can do it" and offers some good tips for a successful business, as well as, offering some good advice on things to avoid.
At first, the book seemed to be geared towards stay-at-home moms looking to start a design business while working around the daily routine of running a home with kids. But, as the book progressed it offered good advice for all new home-based business owners. It definitely has given me some motivation to do what I thought may be a difficult field to break into. Also...it's a good book based purely on illustration and not co-mingled with graphic design. Well worth the read.
12 of 12 people found this review helpful
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Three Things I Love About This Book, January 22, 2010
By wellerwishes.com, kathywe.. (Cambridge, MA United States)
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>Its a creative business book that's also a fun read
There is no slogging through the content in this book. It's packaged well in fun-sized, easily digestible morsels. This helps make it an addictive read. It's a flexible one, too--for the reader, it would be as comfortable to consume the entire book in a few longer sittings, as it would be to pop off a few pages at a time over the course of a couple weeks, say, on your daily commute.
>It features real-deal conversations, observations and advice from a variety of active, working illustrators and designers
I love that there's snippets from working professionals from all walks of illustration: children's, editorial, art licensing, logo designers, and more. This not only helps to illustrate personal experiences in so many different areas of the industry, but it also illuminates how similar all of our experiences as creative professionals are, how we all often struggle with the same fundamental challenges, and how some general solutions to these problems can be retro-fitted to our own particular situation with just a fresh eye and an open mind. Though each of us may concentrate on different areas of the industry and, as such, have very individualized, specific goals for our respective work, there is more that is fundamentally similar in all of our experiences than is different.
>A great introductory book for young illustrators... and a good reminder manual for the established
Many business books for creatives tout the same, classic, tried-and-true fundamentals. Good advice is good advice, right? This book shares some of the same, but also shares so much more--Holly's voice shines right through the words on the page. She's personable and honest, like a good friend who doesn't sugarcoat things. Holly acts as an invisible mentor, dispensing some real tough-love advice, but in a completely comfy, "positive-vibes" type of package. She definitely has a way with words, proving a strong ability to cover a lot of material in a way that's neither overwhelming nor disorganized, while maintaining her loose, conversational tone. All in all, it's an easily digestible book on the business of art that's great for artists who have an aversion to business books.
5 of 5 people found this review helpful
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Mostly fluff, December 30, 2010
By Progfrog
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This book should be retitled to something like "Self Help and Motivation for Freelancers." Not a lot of nuts and bolts. I don't know how all this fluff and filler was ever organized into chapters. I could take random paragraphs from different sections of this book, and you would not be able to tell where they were supposed to go. However, maybe one fifth is worth reading, therefore one out of five stars.
3 of 3 people found this review helpful
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Not a lot of helpful information, June 25, 2011
By Kelley
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As an illustration student, was excited to receive this book and learn all about breaking into the illustration industry. However, I was disappointed by the content, or lack thereof. As another reviewer pointed out, most of this book is full of "fluff," such as organizing your home office (the author recommends placing your recycle bin near a paper shredder) or how to be a better listener (the author's tip: pay attention to people). When describing ways to get inspired, the author suggests starting a file of inspiring quotes. Then she lists "a few websites to get you started: [...] Wow, good stuff, right?
Quotes are obviously a big deal to this author, because the whole book is littered with cutesy, unnecessary quotes that don't always match the content of the chapter. The illustrations featured throughout the book are sometimes dated and stick pretty strictly to the author's greeting-card style rather than a broad range of styles. The author quotes other artists about their experiences and advice, which is nice, but these extended quotes sound a lot like unedited emails from friends.
With nuggets of wisdom such as "feel what you need to creatively feel," this book reads more like a motivational tool than a real nuts-and-bolts guide to the illustration industry. The more practical information, such as building a printed portfolio, tends to be vague and generalized. Meanwhile, the author spends too much time discussing lighter topics such as "creative diversions" to get your artistic juices flowing. (She collects Playmobil toys!)
I'm going to keep looking for another book on getting into the illustration industry.
2 of 3 people found this review helpful
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Go team!, September 23, 2011
By Daniel Heywood
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If you need a cheer leader, this may work for you. For me, I found it lacking in solid information. I thought it more of a "You can do it!" than a "Here's how to do it."
1 of 1 people found this review helpful
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the perfect book to help you kickstart your illustrative career, July 2, 2010
By Joshua
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As an illustration student about to graduate and hit the real world myself, I have found this book to be beyond helpful and insightful into the industry! My professors have of course spoken a great deal on self promotion and the importance of having a website, but this book covers those subjects in far greater detail as well as many other areas my professors have failed to mention or have yet to elaborate on. Before reading this book, I was quite nervous about my upcoming launch into this career, but I now find myself both well informed and excited for my first years of breaking into the industry! I highly recommend this book to both art students and established illustrators alike. Whether you know all the information already or not, it is always good to have such a detailed refresher course as this.
1 of 1 people found this review helpful
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Info that's hard to find anywhere else, May 13, 2010
By spunk (Southern California)
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The author writes from her own experience and gives details on how to actually make money as an illustrator. She is honest and humble and writes extremely well. It's truly hard to find this kind of information. Sure,there's a lot of books out there on this topic, but most do not actually give you the info you need as an artist. (I've read almost all of them!)
1 of 1 people found this review helpful
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Intro Only, March 2, 2011
By Scott P. 'Doc' Vaughn (Glendale, AZ United States)
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I was kind of hoping for more specifics, but this book has some good introductory ideas and points the way for Illustrators interested in learning more.
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Loads of great information!, November 23, 2010
By A Story
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I just started reading Breaking Into Freelance Illustration: A Guide for Artists, Designers and Illustrators and have already found it to be full of useful information for those of us who have chosen this profession. The author's personal experience is something I can relate to.
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