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The VelvetAnt Blog contains useful information about different aspects of the design industry. I write articles giving fellow designers and design students useful tips on being and becoming a successful designer. I use this blog as an open forum for designers to come and discuss design as well as a networking tool to meet other talented designers.

At VelvetAnt I strive to meet all of your design needs by taking your thoughts and ideas and turning them into reality. If you are interested in using my design services please drop me a friendly line. While you are here feel free to browse through some of my finished work.

Archive for May, 2010

5 Things a Designers Can Learn in Every Day Life

ONE. There is more than just one direction.
There is always more than one right way to approach and tackle design obstacles. If certain techniques aren’t working for you, look for a new solution.

TWO. Strangers can offer good advice.
The most unbiased advice can come from a stranger. Online design communities are a great place to find help when you may be suffering from so-called “designers block”

THREE. When you’re lost ask for help.
If you’re not sure you are on the right track never be too afraid to ask a fellow designer for help. I always find myself asking other designers for help. Sometimes the smallest suggestion can make a massive difference.

FOUR. Beauty is in the detail
Never skimp on detail, especially if you are a designer. We make things look pretty for a living. When you choose to look over “tiny” details it can make a huge impact.

FIVE. Grids make busy beautiful
Designing using a grid is not for everyone, but designing on a grid can help make a designer’s busy canvas look well-organized

A round-up of round-ups

Ok, I lied, this post doesn’t contain just round-ups. It also houses some of my favorite and in my opinion, some of the most inspirational blog posts thus far in 2010. I wanted to do this round-up because I’d like to think it can really be a great resource for a struggling designer looking for a flick of inspiration or a nudge of clarity. I keep all of these posts in my delicious bookmarks, which contains many more useful links for you to browse. If there is a round-up or article that has really inspired you, please share it in the comments. The more inspiration-rich content that can fit into this post, the better!

  1. Responsive Web Design, A List Apart
  2. Self-employment advice for designers, David Airey
  3. The Psychology of Web Design, Web Designer Depot
  4. Typography that moves you, Fuel Your Creativity
  5. The Differences Between Good Designers and Great Designers, DRAWAR
  6. Corporate identity design done right: 17 great examples, designer-daily
  7. 86 Beautiful Book Covers, You The Designer
  8. 33 Letterpress Business Cards for Inspiration, Vandelay Design
  9. Negative Space in Webpage Layouts, a guide, Six Revisions
  10. 10 Websites Every Web Designer Should Know About, Lee Munroe
  11. The Most Relevant Identity Work of the Decade, Brand New
  12. 5 Branding Basics Every Logo Designer Should Know, Six Revisions
  13. 11 Design Strategies of the Next Decade, design sojourn
  14. Whitespace: The Underutilized Design Element, Web Design Ledger
  15. Michael Bieruts 5  Secret’s of Design, design sojourn

How to gain experience without being given opportunity

So you’ve just graduate college and you’re ready to jump into the real world and start your life as a professional designer. Exciting, isn’t it! Something that can really put a damper on your excitement is reading the position qualifications under a job listing in hitting every point on the head, but the one reading: must have x years of experience in the industry. So how does one gain years of experience without having experience?

One way to gain real world experience is to freelance. Whether it be in-house freelance work or working from home with clients you’ve found on your own. Freelancing is a great way to learn how to deal with clients and a better understanding of the design process.

Intern. Many designers try to avoid interning after college, but sometimes it’s the only way to gain the experience you need to get one step closer to finding your dream job. Not all interning is bad! There are many internship out there that pay.

Do not be picky. Even though optimizing images in Photoshop doesn’t sound like a thrill, entry level tasks like this need to be done and in most cases are given to new designers. Almost all of us have done crappy jobs like that to get where we are.

No matter what kind of entry level job you find always know that you are valuable. Even if you are optimizing images in Photoshop or renaming files, someone has to do it. Your position will always be essential to finishing a project.

Do not become discouraged. It can really take a lot out of a person to send out 15 applications a day and at the end of a month MAYBE receiving one email saying they are not suitable for the position. It is totally normal to not hear back from a company you’ve applied for a position once. Like I said early, they are receiving hundreds of emails. If most companies had the time they would almost all rey letting you know why you weren’t chosen for a position.

Never stop learning. A massive part of gaining experience is always being educated on the latest software and design trends. Having a recent education is The biggest advantage a new designer has over someone who graduated on adobe 7.

Last but certainly not least, FOLLOW UP for any position you apply for! Just sending one email application for a position is almost in most cases not enough. I’ve landed positions and have gotten interviews from my follow up emails. When you see a job listing on the internet, you’re not the only one seeing it. Companies are receiving a very high volume of resumes at the same time, so by following up you have a greater chance of really having your resume read over instead of being quickly glanced at.

For those of you who have been in the industry for awhile, how did you land your first job, and what advice can you offer to design graduates who do not have enough or any real world experience?

20 Amazing Movie Posters From the 1980′s

The 1980s was a decade of cultural and artistic confidence and exuberance, represented in all media including the movies. The brilliance of the decade’s films is reflected in the posters created to accompany them, and many of these designs are fine artworks in their own right. This list brings together 20 amazing movie posters of the 1980s, set out chronologically and representing the highlights of that astonishing decade.




1. The Empire Strikes Back (1980)


Image: The Empire Strikes Back

The year 1980 saw the release of George Lucas’s follow-up to the hugely successful Star Wars, The Empire Strikes Back, directed by Irvin Kershner. Although originally a sequel, the film became Episode V of the Star Wars saga following the more recent release of three prequels. Artist Roger Kastel created this beautiful hand-painted poster for the film’s theatrical release, taking his inspiration from a poster for Gone With the Wind.

2. Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)


Image: Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark

American illustrator Richard Amsel produced some of the most iconic movie posters of the 20th Century, including this for the original release of Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark. The film, in which adventurer archaeologist Jones thwarts the Nazis in their efforts to capture the Ark of the Covenant, was the top-grossing film of 1981.

3 Excalibur (1981)


Image: Excalibur

Another key figure in the development of film posters was American artist Bob Peak, who created this design for Excalibur, director John Boorman’s classic interpretation of the King Arthur legend.

4. Chariots of Fire (1981)


Image: Chariots of Fire

Chariots of Fire is an Oscar-winning film based on the true story of British runners Harold Abrahams and Eric Liddell, competitors in the 1924 Olympic Games in Paris.

5. The Thing (1982)


Image: The Thing

American Artist Drew Sturzan produced this striking poster for John Carpenters 1982 film The Thing. The film is terrifying sci-fi horror story with a team of researchers in the Antarctic who come into contact with a parasitic alien life form.

6. Blade Runner (1982)


Image: Blade Runner

Blade Runner, the third film on the list to star Harrison Ford, is Ridley Scott’s dystopic vision of the future based on Philip K. Dick’s novel, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? Award-winning cinematic artist and painter John Alvin created the design, and is responsible for some of the most recognizable movie posters of the late-20th Century.

7. E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial (1982)


Image: E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial

Steven Spielberg’s E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial tells the story of an American boy called Eliot who discovers a friendly alien stranded on Earth. The poster references a scene in the movie when Eliot and E.T. fly above a forest on a BMX, a sequence that Empire magazine named as the most magical moment in cinema history.

8. Amadeus (1984)


Image: Amadeus

This powerful design is the poster for Amadeus. The film’s epic tale follows the lives of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Antonio Salieri, composers in 18th Century Vienna.

9. The Terminator (1984)


Image: The Terminator

James Cameron’s 1984 action movie The Terminator is a brutal science fiction noir in which a cyber assassin is sent back in time from 2029 to track down the mother of a future resistance leader. The film, the first of four installments, gave Arnold Schwarzenegger one of defining roles of his acting career as the eponymous Terminator.

10. Re-Animator (1985)


Image: Re-Animator

This poster is for the cult-classic Re-Animator, director Stuart Gordon’s reinterpretation of H.P. Lovecraft’s horror story, Herbert West-Reanimator. The film tells the story of a medical student’s experiments with a life-restoring serum, and the horrific, and often comic, results.

11. Back to the Future (1985)


Image: Back to the Future

Back to the Future is one of the defining movies of the 80s, following the story of teenager Marty McFly who is accidentally transported back in time from 1985 to 1955. McFly meets his parents’ younger selves during his comic time travel adventures. Drew Struzan designed the film’s iconic poster, showing Michael J. Fox as McFly next to the DeLorean sports car, which the Doc has converted into a time machine.

12. The Breakfast Club (1985)


Image: The Breakfast Club

Another classic movie of the 80s is John Hughes’ The Breakfast Club, featuring five archetypal American high school students who meet during detention and emotionally bond despite their differences.

13. Brazil (1985)


Image: Brazil

Terry Gilliam’s Brazil is a classic dystopian sci-fi satire centring on worker Sam Lowry and the dysfunctional Orwellian society in which he lives.

14. Aliens (1986)


Image: Aliens

The sequel to the classic Alien is itself a defining moment in science fiction and action cinema, with Sigourney Weaver’s heroine Ripley and a team of Space Marines battling an army of alien creatures.

15. Stand by Me (1986)


Image: Stand by Me

Of all the coming-of-age and buddy movies of the 80s, Stand by Me is one of the best. Based on Stephen King’s short story The Body, the film is narrated by a writer who, following the death of a friend, recounts his adventures with three friends as they set out to find a missing boy.

16. Blue Velvet (1986)


Image: Blue Velvet

This is a poster for the German release of David Lynch’s masterpiece Blue Velvet, with the stars Kyle MacLachlan, Isabella Rossellini and Dennis Hopper as the unsettlingly malevolent Frank.

17. The Fly (1986)


Image: The Fly

David Cronenberg’s 1986 sci-fi body horror The Fly is a remake of the original from 1958, with Jeff Goldblum playing a scientist whose teleportation experiments result in a monstrous metamorphosis.

18. The Princess Bride (1987)


Image: The Princess Bride

John Alvin’s poster art for The Princess Bride reflects the fantastical nature of the swashbuckling fantasy comedy. The film’s narrative is worked around a grandfather reading a story to his sick grandson, the film relating the fairytale adventure.

19. Withnail and I (1987)


Image: Withnail and I

Artist Ralph Steadman provided the artwork for this brilliant poster for Withnail and I, the much-quoted black comedy by Bruce Robinson, starring Richard E. Grant as Withnail and Paul McGann as ‘I’.

20. Do the Right Thing (1989)


Image: Do the Right Thing

At the close of the 1980s, Spike Lee released Do the Right Thing, which he produced, wrote and directed. Featuring an ensemble cast, the film is set during one day on a single Brooklyn street, as the various residents face the summer heat as simmering tensions boil over. The film was controversial but critically and commercially successful, and like the best films of the 1980s, reflected the culture of that amazing decade.


This is a guest article from Tom Walker, A blogger who works for an online supplier of next day ink. You can read more of his posts about advertising and design on their blog.



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