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    Questions about portfolios

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    • Zachary Drenski
      Zachary Drenski last edited by

      @Nyrryl-Cadiz very helpful thank you! I hadn't considered showing a variety of ages

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • Zachary Drenski
        Zachary Drenski last edited by Zachary Drenski

        @Heather-Boyd I am going to aim for 12 but do them one at a time to make them as high quality as possible. I look forward to seeing your future work as well

        @arent-draper I'd love that. Send me a private message on instagram @zachdrenski. And please don't judge the current posts on there too harshly 🙂 actually you can if you want

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
        • Elinore Eaton
          Elinore Eaton last edited by

          There is a great class for this!
          https://courses.svslearn.com/courses/take/portfolio-and-self-promotion-with-james-yang/lessons/1038590-portfolio-and-self-promotion

          http://www.elinoreeaton.com/
          https://www.instagram.com/elinoreeatonart/

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          • Zachary Drenski
            Zachary Drenski last edited by

            @Elinore-Eaton thank you!

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            • Jad Bautista
              Jad Bautista @Zachary Drenski last edited by

              @Zachary-Drenski I recently listened to the 3point perspective podcast about building a strong portfolio and here is Will Terry’s list (i just copied from the show notes). Hope this helps!:

              Portfolio Perfection

              100+ Things you need to include in your children’s book portfolio.

              Formats and sizes: spot illustrations, vignettes, full page, spreads, room for text, covers

              Color schemes: full color, black and white, monochrome

              Ages: adults, teens, children, baby

              Gender: girls, boys, men, women Race: asian, Indian, Hispanic, Caucasian, African

              Groups Activities: families, friends, classmates, co-workers

              Character Consistency: animals, humans, creatures

              Animals: anthropomorphised: amphibians, mammals, fish, reptiles, insects, birds

              Creatures: robots, dragons, monsters, aliens, ghosts

              Vehicles: cars, trucks, busses, boats, planes, construction equipment, submarines, space ships Props: household items, garage, kitchen, farm, office, food, bathroom, attic, school, games, toys

              Environments: interiors, exteriors, modern, vintage, ancient, houses, apartments, land, sea, earth, outer space, dessert, forest, tropical, arctic

              Seasons and weather: winter, spring, summer, fall, rain, lightning, wind, snow, fog, cold, hot Lighting: morning, noon, evening, night, spotlight, fire, ambient, on camera, on camera hidden, off camera

              Surfaces: shiny, matte, textured, furry, translucent, rough

              Action: falling, breaking, sliding, moving fast, running, jumping, flying, rolling, skidding

              Emotion: anger, excitement, happiness, sadness, fear, confidence, curiosity, love, sleeping, pain

              Scale: huge objects, tiny objects

              Camera Angles: establishing, close ups, medium, distant, high angle, low angle, profile, dynamic, POV.

              Complex Images: multiple figures, multiple objects

              Https://jadbautista.com
              Https://instagram.com/jadbautista

              Heather Boyd 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
              • Heather Boyd
                Heather Boyd @Jad Bautista last edited by

                @Jad-Bautista

                Basically a little bit of everything done well lols

                Instagram: www.instagram.com/heatherboyd.illustration/
                Website: https://heatherboydillustration.ca
                Shop: https://www.inprnt.com/search/products?q=HeatherBoydIllustration
                Ko-Fi: https://ko-fi.com/heatherboydillustration

                Be blessed,

                Jad Bautista 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                • Jad Bautista
                  Jad Bautista @Heather Boyd last edited by

                  @Heather-Boyd that’s right haha!

                  Https://jadbautista.com
                  Https://instagram.com/jadbautista

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                  • ?
                    A Former User last edited by

                    Hey Zachary,

                    I'd recommend you get a domain name but try to keep all your profiles online the same as your website. Like my website is lovetherobot, as is my instagram and twitter.

                    I usually pick the strongest pieces that you feel most confident about yourself and you are happy showing to everyone. Then I'd ask 3/4 fellows creative or non creatives to view my selections and see if its a decent cross section of my work and my style.

                    You could always set up a Tumblr or a Behance project which would be like an Image Dump of work that you didn't end up using or that you haven't shown to the public...even rough sketches or development drawings because its good to shoot those to a potential client if they ask for them.

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                    • Zachary Drenski
                      Zachary Drenski last edited by

                      @Jad-Bautista thank you! I copied this for later reference. I also started checking out the videos that people have been talking about here. It may have taken a little while to stumble upon them myself, there's so much content. But anyway, time to get busy working on this list.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • Zachary Drenski
                        Zachary Drenski last edited by Zachary Drenski

                        @lovetherobot thanks for the suggestion. I know personally I have a hard time remembering all the names of the artists I like but can look them up by project names. Then on the other hand, it seems like most professionals use their name-dot-com. I'm kind of up in the air about which is better and think it probably doesn't matter much anyway (as long as the work is compelling).

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