Use your follower count and tag your result!
Ok the Selfie vs Sona is done. You are free to use it. Don't forget to credit me with this. Also tell other people about this! đ
If a client says they canât afford to pay you but youâll get good exposure, one of two things is happening:
1. They are lying. They can afford to pay you, but they are choosing not to. They will pay the printer to print the books, they will pay the mail service to deliver them, and youâd better believe theyâre going to pay themselves for sending you an email explaining that they canât afford to pay you. They think you are a sucker, and if you take the job youâll be telling them they are right.
2. They are not lying. They have zero budget, no audience and no real distribution system. Theyâll still be paying the printer and mail service because people who work in those professions donât work for free just because someone promises them a recommendation. But they arenât paying themselves, theyâre running on an incredibly small margin, and thereâs a good chance they wonât exist as a corporate entity in a few years. Publishing your work with them will give you less exposure than putting it on tumblr or Instagram for free would. It will never lead to a paying job.Â
If a client starts ranting about the âshort-sightednessâ of artists, or otherwise complains about artists in general in their opening offer to you, run. Run as fast as you would run if a blind date spent the whole of dinner ranting about how horrible your entire gender is. Yes, there are doubtlessly clients whoâve been screwed over by artists in the past, but the ones who complain about artists in general will not respect you, they will not treat you well.Â
Working for free does not prove that you are passionate about something. It proves that you do not need to be paid for your work. How many doctors went into medicine because they are passionate about saving lives? Do you think any of them are asked to perform heart surgery for free?
No one will ever pay $50 for something if they can get something similar for $5. When you charge next to nothing for art that youâve worked for hours on, art that required years of training to create, you are telling your client that it is worth next to nothing. They will remember that the next time they want to hire an artist.
People who are looking to exploit artists know that artists are hard on themselves. They know that most artists donât think their work is good enough to charge top dollar. They know that artists have been told from the first day they started taking their art seriously as a career that theyâll never make any money off it, that itâs not a real job, that it has no value to society. They know how to push artistsâ insecurities about their profession in order to convince them that that demanding fair compensation is unrealistic and uncooperative.
If youâre just desperate for a job in the arts, any job in the arts, give yourself a job. Start a webcomic, or give yourself illustration assignments that you post on social media regularly, create work for a gallery show even if you donât have one yet, or make a book. Give yourself a job. If youâre going to work for free, you may as well be working for yourself, setting your own hours and following your own interests. Having original art with original characters and ideas in your portfolio, and making sure your art is visible online will get the attention of publishers who are actually looking to hire people for good jobs. Drawing a shitty comic for a defunct publisher based on someone elseâs shitty ideas will not.
tv tropes + attack on titan Ⳡcharacter tropes: armin
This is me trying to kick the shit out of reality but it loves to fuck me over being a showing of it shits
Aomine vs gravity
ok but what if like. werewolves transform under the full moon but theres just this one and by day hes a big tough guy and then when he transforms hes a tiny dog. just fucking. just fucking turns into the tiniest, fluffiest dog
imagine that howling at the moon
âWhen someone leaves your life, those exits are not made equal. Some are beautiful and poetic and satisfying. Others are abrupt and unfair. But most are just unremarkable, unintentional, clumsy.â
â Griffin McElroy, The Adventure Zone