Hi,

I have been reading this thread and most of the comments represent my own sentiments. You can skip to the bottom for some ideas on drawing or continue reading for a bit of background.

I loved doing creative stuff at school, but I had to work at it. I studied engineering, post 16, then combined multimedia and engineering for my degree. After this, I worked for a few companies programming for music & TV equipment. I moved away from the city, as I am a country boy at heart and I wanted some inspiration from nature rather than city life.

It's hard to find work doing what you want outside the city, so I taught myself a lot of stuff - HTML, CSS, PHP, MySQL, Flash, ActionScript. I loved Flash because I could finally get things to appear on screen without having to learn reams of DirectX or Windows code first, so I played lots...

Eventually I got full time work as a web-developer - I settled for a job where I did quite a bit of programming and not much Flash. I worked like this for 3 years, with me getting fed up with management decisions, office politics & not getting to exercise my creativity on projects because "I was a programmer". Over the 3 years, I continued to freelance doing some nice little projects that were safe enough for me to try and design with and also do some Flash stuff. Finally, I lost my job, which gave me the prod I needed to freelance full-time.

It's been 6 months since then and I have been busy on projects ever since. I am starting to learn to say "no" to some projects too and am firmly setting my sites on doing Flash based projects. I have realised that I am an engineer rather than a specialist, but I am striving to be build good quality Flash based projects and to know as much as possible about working with the Flash & the myriad of stuff that goes with it. I shall never be an amazing programmer - I have spent too long trying to get my head around Fourier and other difficult maths to realise that some things are really hard and that understanding the principles is enough so you can always find someone who knows enough to actually do the work. This applies to design as well - for some jobs I will recommend the client gets a designer to do the work, others, I feel confident in my abilities to do something good, or it's just artworking customers ideas rather than design, which my designer friends hate doing.

Anyway, the upshot is I am doing what I enjoy, I have variety too and I will work hard to keep doing this. I am always trying to learn about business, design, and everything else I can lay my hands on. I also love working with different people on projects to get the best possible result. Speaking to other people is also a great way to just geek out about stuff and share ideas. I have loads of stuff I want to do, and hopefully will meet various people who I can realise some of my ideas with. One of the most rewarding things for me in the last 12 months was going to Flash On The Beach. I was humbled, amazed and stoked to be able to meet other people like me, who understood Flash & ActionScript and were doing some really cool stuff - this has kept me going for the last 6 months in a big way.

I think the most important thing I have learnt is to "have a go" and to learn about as much stuff as possible outside of what you do. Some people disagree with the "jack of all trades" approach, but I think there are a lot of Flash people out there who can do the design & programming really well so as long as you have a core skill that you also enjoy using and developing, I think that it's okay to work around this.

   Anyway, down to brass tacks:

For learning to draw, I would recommend doing still life drawing. Either teach yourself and get criticism from other artists, or if you can do classes, then even better. You should/will learn about drawing materials, but also about observation - at the end of the day we all make marks on the paper that are different from the next person, but it's about looking that's important. Drawing organic materials like fruit, leaves, trees, whatever interesting stuff you can find is good - use pens, pencils, ("Quink" ink & bleach is interesting), wax crayons, chalks, (do you get the idea? as much variety as possible). Drawing machine-made items is useful too. Photograph stuff, scan things, print them scan them again, cut them up - the idea is "play". It may look rubbish to you, but do another variation, don't throw it away (if you have space). Just experiment and try to get feedback from people. I want to do figure drawing classes again - this is a good thing to do and the real thing is better than drawing from magazines, but if you are stuck, you can practice with these. A friend of mine is always sketching people in his book - really quickly - when he is sitting in town and watching people go by - he is an animator and draws their "walks".

I can't really say too much about graphic design - I am learning about the grid from reading lots of articles and experimenting a little when I have time. I have a nice Typography book that explains things succinctly. http://www.amazon.co.uk/Type-Typography-Portfolio-Phil-Baines/dp/1856694372/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1211382973&sr=8-1 <http://www.amazon.co.uk/Type-Typography-Portfolio-Phil-Baines/dp/1856694372/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1211382973&sr=8-1>

Lots of books on graffiti, art & some nice ones by John Maeda http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_ss_b/026-1469050-0833224?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=john+maeda&x=0&y=0 <http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_ss_b/026-1469050-0833224?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&field-keywords=john+maeda&x=0&y=0>

Colour theory, erm, I understand it a bit from reading books, but also look at photographs on Flickr to get my colour schemes :)

   For software, I am guessing that a lot of people use the Adobe Suite.

Anyway, it's quite longwinded, what I said, and I would extend "just do what makes you happy" to "try a wide range of things, for fun if nothing else, but concentrate what makes you happy".

   Hope this helps.

   Glen
--

Glen Pike
01326 218440
www.glenpike.co.uk <http://www.glenpike.co.uk>

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