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  • Design Something Every Day

    As designers, we’re all trying to get better at what we do. We surf the Web daily for hours trying to find useful tips and tricks to enhance our design skills. But what if we spent less time surfing the Web looking for inspiration and more time creating and designing things?

    The Challenge

    Someone once said, “Practice makes perfect“. While that statement might not be completely true, I do believe that practice makes you better. That is why in this blog post, I would like to propose something to every designer: Why not try to design something every day for one year?

    Actors rehearse their lines until they learn them perfectly. Musicians practice their songs until every note is just right. Athletes practice their particular sport so they can excel. As designers, why can’t we do the same? Ask any successful designer in the community about how they have succeeded and they will attribute much of their success to practice. I challenge you today to design something daily. Take fifteen to twenty minutes that you would normally use to surf the Web today and devote it to designing something.

    Most of you are probably thinking that I am out of my mind for proposing this. How can you, as a designer working either for a company or for yourself, find the time to design something daily? More importantly, how will I come up with design ideas for a whole year’s worth of projects? Well, to answer those questions, here are some practical tips.

    Some Practical Advice

    15 – 20 Minutes Daily

    This challenge is for you to practice your skills. It doesn’t have to be a final, polished project, so you can limit it to a short period of time. Additionally, you can actually schedule this as part of your daily routine, which will make you more likely to follow through on your decision to design something daily.

    And don’t worry or get discouraged if you miss a day due to other more important commitments. The key is to jump back into it as soon as possible. Keep doing it, and try your best to stay consistent. If you don’t find it reasonable to design something daily for a whole year, then you could try instead for one month, or another more manageable time period.

    Design Ideas

    You’re probably wondering how you will be able to come up with a fresh new design daily for 365 days. Actually, it’s quite simple. You can use a theme for your designs. Maybe for one month you can try to design something retro. For another month, you can try your hand at some typographic posters. The possibilities are endless. A good example is Jessica Hische. She started a project called the Daily Drop Cap, where she designs a drop cap every day and makes her Drop Cap designs available for free download.

    Z-1 in Design Something Every Day!
    Daily Drop Cap is Jessica Hische’s personal project: she designs a drop cap every day and makes her designs available for free download.

    Another thing you can do is experiment with different ideas that you have. Maybe you’ve been thinking about doing a collage effect, for example. You might have an idea that you’ve been wanting to try, so this might be the perfect time for it. You can also use this “practice time” to try out different tutorials that have caught your attention.

    Be Accountable

    Some of us will have a hard time staying motivated during such a lengthy commitment. One way to stay motivated is to create a blog specifically for tracking the project’s progress during the year, and post the results daily. People will be expecting to see something from us and this will keep us motivated.

    This method of blogging daily for one year has recently been popularized in the mainstream movie Julie and Julia, which follows American author Julie Powell’s year-long attempt to cook every recipe from a famous cookbook by Julia Child, while blogging about the experience each day. In Powell’s experience, her accountability was part of what kept her motivated for the 365 days.

    Another way to stay accountable and keep motivated is to get a fellow designer to do the challenge with you. During the year, you can show each other what you’ve designed each day, allowing for some healthy, friendly competition.

    It’s Been Done Before

    As mentioned, the concept of blogging daily for a full year has been done before in a variety of contexts. It’s also been done successfully by a lot of great designers. Here are some designers that I have asked about designing something daily.

    Stefan G. Bucher – The Daily Monster

    Daily Monsters Website

    Daily-monster in Design Something Every Day!

    How long did you design / have you been designing daily?
    I filmed myself drawing Daily Monsters for 100 days straight (including weekends and holidays). I capped it at 100 days since I also started animating the Monsters in more and more elaborate ways as the project grew. Since then I’ve done month-long bursts of Daily Monsters, and also documented the making of the book 100 Days of Monsters as a daily process. These days I usually do Monsters with lots of animation for special events or occasions.

    What are some challenges associated with designing daily?
    The main challenge for me is integrating a daily practice with the demands of my regular work, and my occasional attempts at having a social life. There are just so many hours in the day, and it becomes a nerdy endurance challenge. The process itself is great, though. The real challenge is to not block out everything else.

    Can you give me at least 5 benefits of partaking in this daily project?

    1. I got to draw every day again after almost stopping entirely for a few years.
    2. I’m getting better at creating characters every day.
    3. I’m teaching myself how to animate in the process.
    4. When I release the Daily Monsters daily it quickly attracts a great, active, and creative audience of kind, amazing people.
    5. Doing something every day short-circuits procrastination and self-doubt. There’s only time for doing, and doing = happiness.

    Where do you get ideas for your daily designs?
    The Monsters are a process. As long as I sit myself down and do the work, I don’t have to worry about ideas; they simply appear. That’s the best part. You’d think I’d have learned that lesson now, but I still fall out of the habit, and get right back into my head. “What am I going to draw? Is this any good? What’ll I do next?” When you’re committed to putting something out there every day, you just don’t have the luxury of doubt. And if something comes out a little wonky, well… you know you can redeem yourself the next day.

    Any advice for anyone who wants to get started doing this?
    Don’t think about it. Don’t plan for it. If I had thought about how much work the Daily Monsters would be, I’d have never started. If you get an idea for something, just sit down and start doing it. Also, you might consider not telling anybody about your daily project until you’re a few days or weeks into it. Commit to it, but allow yourself some privacy to work out the early kinks. Most importantly: Make sure you don’t ever skip a day. If you know you’re going out of town, or if you feel a cold coming on, create a few posts in advance. You mustn’t skip a day. As soon as you’ve skipped one day, it becomes so much easier to skip the second. And then you’re screwed. But here’s the thing: You won’t want to skip. Doing the Daily Monsters was completely addictive. I got to be proud of something I’d done every single day.

    Matt Lyon

    Make Something Cool Everyday Flickr Group

    Matt-lyon in Design Something Every Day!

    How long did you design / have you been designing daily?
    I’ve been designing on a strictly daily basis since January 1st this year… It was one of my New Year’s resolutions.

    What are some challenges associated with designing daily?

    Most of the challenges centre upon either time or inspiration, but it’s these challenges that form the reason for doing daily work alongside other commitments.

    Can you give me at least 5 benefits of partaking in this daily project?
    I’ve discovered plenty of benefits over the year, but I think that these have been the most valuable:

    1. Keeping the creative juices flowing
    2. Working in different ways as a means to overcome potential obstacles (e.g. creating a piece of work with limited materials or within a strict time limit)
    3. Daily work inevitably improves your skills / craft, be it in terms of drawing, using creative software, etc.
    4. Daily work creates its own momentum in terms of recurring themes, directions and ideas, that will feed into other work.
    5. The process instills and supports a sense of discipline to work.
    6. Allows for experimentation and unadulterated freedom to try anything out.

    Where do you get ideas for your daily designs?

    All of my work evolves from drawing, and for a while many of the themes and ideas in what I create have generated over time through the process of just letting things happen. Simply put, I take a line for a walk and see what happens, be it in response to something I’ve read, heard, or am just feeling. There are no rules – this is my time to do what I want.

    Any advice for anyone who wants to get started doing this?
    I would recommend anyone and everyone with an interest in image-making to take up the challenge of creating something every day. My ‘drawing a day’ project has been so rewarding to me this year that I’ll be continuing it come 2010. Illustrators or character designers should keep a daily sketchbook to keep their ideas fresh… Alternatively, taking a photograph a day can prove just as valuable for others. Perhaps graphic designers or typographers could do a ‘layout a day’ project?! Who knows?! The sky’s the limit!

    Joshua Wysocki – Wysocki Weekday

    Wysocki Weekday

    Wysocki in Design Something Every Day!

    How long did you design / or have been designing daily?
    I started doing those dailies since November 25, 2007 — so over 2 years now.

    What are some challenges associated with designing daily?
    The biggest is trying to keep at it on a normal pace. You probably noticed how I have missed a lot of days so far. Working a 10+ hour day-job wears me out and my brain can’t handle holding the pencil in my hand.

    Can you give me at least 5 benefits of partaking in this daily project?

    Benefits? Are there any? Maybe it’s the thought of continuing a project. Training yourself to be expressive and challenge yourself creatively. Making new friends and communicating with fellow artists. And hopefully eventually making some money from selling zines/books.

    Any advice for anyone who wants to get started doing this?
    Just jump into it and doodle a small event that happened to you that day… from something as small as stepping into a puddle of mud, or watching your favorite TV show.

    Brock Davis

    Make Something Cool Every Day 2009

    7-12 in Design Something Every Day!

    How long did you design / have you been designing daily?
    In my job I think of ideas every day, but this project for 2009 is the first time I put to task
    making a new piece of art every single day for a year.

    What are some challenges associated with designing daily?
    Coming up with ideas I feel are original. I always strive for originality — it is almost impossible to attain
    but the effort often conjures interesting results. Another challenge is simply finding the time to do it.
    I have a full-time job in a creative field, so I have to separate my professional ideas from my personal
    ideas. I have a family as well, so I tend to work late and think when my children are in bed.

    Can you give me at least 5 benefits of partaking in this daily project?

    1. Keeps my brain fresh.
    2. Helps me identify my strengths, weaknesses and consistencies.
    3. Creatively challenging, and I love a challenge.
    4. Improves my ability to hone in on an idea and learn to execute it quickly as well as meticulously.
    5. Shows me creative sides to myself that i didn’t know I had.
    6. An interesting way to visually calendar my year; I can look at a piece and think more clearly about what was going on that day.

    Where do you get ideas for your daily designs?
    From everything. I try to absorb as much from every day life as i can. Also, memories from childhood, pop culture, observations of how the world is always changing in all aspects (socially, technologically, economically, etc.).

    Any advice for anyone who wants to get started doing this?
    Have fun and always be a student. No one can know everything, it’s better to absorb and learn all the time. Then apply that to your work and let it influence you to reshape it into something original.

    This entry was posted on Saturday, January 2nd, 2010 at 3:35 pm and is filed under Web Design. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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