Inspired by Job 12:12 “Is not wisdom found among the aged? Does not a long life bring understanding?” Working in an environment with lots of young people, some of them are very discriminating on the age of others, making a lot of demeaning remarks, becomes my inspiration in this design. Continue reading this blog post to gain inspiration in whatever age you have.
Thursday, May 22, 2025
The Beauty of Wisdom: Honoring Age with Grace and Strength
Wednesday, May 14, 2025
4 Takeaways I learned from the Book "Thread's Not Dead: The Designer's Guide to the Apparel Industry" by Jeff Finley:
Back to basic in times when AI invaded our designs. In today's blog post, I would like to share to you the 4 takeaways I got for the book Thread's Not Dead: The Designer's Guide to the Apparel Industry by Jeff Finley. But before that, I would like you to check this design here with discount within 48 hours. This design is the result if the ideas I got from reading the book. Grab it here.
Now without further ado here the things you can learn if you read the book:
- Strive for a hand drawn design or something that looks like a hand drawn illustration. This means that if you know how to draw then by all means draw but don't be discouraged if you can't. As long as you can make your design looks like a hand drawn you are doing it right. Fortunately, I know how to draw and paint. Even when I am not yet starting a print-on-demand t-shirt business, I was already drawing a lot of subjects (buildings, woman, anime, and flowers). I was also hand lettering a lot which means I am drawing letters. When I read this, I felt I was back with my first love which is drawing. When I was starting out I was relying on AI for my clip arts. Now, things will be different moving forward because I don't want a design that can easily be copied by others using the AI website. I want a personal touch in my every design even when it would take me a while to do it.
- It's the Brand that sells. Capitalize on developing a t-shirt brand. "The most important thing in branding," according to the boos, "is consistency (design, website, packaging, social media presence, the way you talk, email signature, verbiage on website. The number one thing to remember is you are setting and meeting customer expectations. Work hard to make the entire customer experience a great one that consistently please and exceeds their expectations. Make sure all your designs look like they belong together and aren’t a smorgasbord of various design styles and themes. Be human in your branding and marketing. Craft a story behind your brand and put a face and voice to the company that customers could relate to. Cultivate relationships by doing things like surveys, allowing customers to vote on designs, showing them the process of taking design from sketch to shirt, and even showing them how a shirt is printed.” I am planning to dig deeper in branding my t-shirt design soon.
- You design must have meaning to the one who will buy it -- your target audience. The book said, "Have a solid idea and purpose behind it. It should mean something to your client or customer. What moves them and makes them feel good?" The design you are seeing here as an example is intended for the gardeners. Why I come up with this? It's because based on my Pinterest Analytics, most of my audience are looking for gardeners design. So I give what the customer are looking for. However, I would like to create also for Book Lovers because I am both a gardener and a book worm. I believe that in order to create a great design, the designer also like what she's doing. She herself is also proud of wearing what she created.
- When you are just starting out, you must focus solely on perfecting your design and nothing else. I fall short here because instead of focusing in designs I busy myself finding another means of earning online because I want to quit my job. I think of affiliates, copywriting, opening more store in different designs etc. I overload myself with more side hustles that I forgot I should be creating and sketching more. I have no focus and I open am overwhelmed.
Saturday, May 3, 2025
The Meaning Behind the "Teachlit" Design
"The job of an Artist is to always deepen the mystery." - Francis Bacon
Checking my Design Calendar for May shows that the first week is meant for a Teacher Appreciation Week. I thought of a unique design that I could come up to and I end up creating this design.
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Teachlit Teacher-Literature Appreciation Day Design T-Shirtwith discount in 48 hours |
Combining my love for mystery, books and literature and the teacher herself I come up with a dark and unsettling horror vector art illustration of an open old book severely ripped on edges. Blood-red roses are crawling over it.
In the book Threads Not Dead by Jeff Finley, it is important to have message in your design. What are you trying to say with your design? Although I would like to leave to you the message behind this design that you've chosen to give to your teacher friend, I'd like to say my piece of different interpretation depending on who it's coming from.
- Teachlit literally means "Teaching and Literature" all combined for a teacher friend who also loves reading books. If you would give this t-shirt to them, it would be more memorable to give it with her favorite book.
- Teachlit could also mean "Teach Lightly not Harshly" coming from a student who's not learning under a very strict teacher. This is a way of telling her that you can learn better if your he or she is kind to you.
- Teachlit could also mean a reminder for being a Hard Woking person coming from a friend who notices that the teacher is too hard- working and needed to mellow a bit. Give this t-shirt with an invitation to a movie, or eat out or going somewhere she can relax.
The over all illustration--worn book, crawling bloody roses is a glimpse to what may happen it the teacher would continue being so hardworking today that she sacrifices her health and wellness. Scary? Yes, but also serves as a reminder to take everything lightly.
Perfect for a proud Literature Teacher on a Halloween, too.
Jeff Finley is right, there should be meaning in the Arts we're creating and the meaning can come from the one who's buying the design and of course, the one who will receive the art as a gift.
Designers like me should not just create arts because it's the one selling on the marketplace or that everybody are doing it. We create design because there's something that we would like to express to someone.
In this design, I combined meaning and the kind of art I am fascinated at the moment. I guess this is a perfect formula because I am making art I love and at the same time send meaning to a specific audience
How do you interpret this art? Let me know in the comments.