18 things I learned in the first semester of fart school
Tuesday, January 20th, 2009I wanted to write down some of the big ideas that I learned while attending my first semester at CCA. I took Graphic Design 1, and History of Modern Art. I learned more in the first one.
This quote from Paul Rand sticks out in my mind:
Simplicity is not the goal. It is the by-product of a good idea and modest expectations.
- It’s true. Everyone that added any sort of adornment or unnecessary frill to their work was asked why they did it. Pretty soon, I could tell the shitty answers (“it just didn’t feel right without it”) from the good ones.
- Don’t leave widows in a final project. Widows are single words, usually at the end of a paragraph, that have been knocked down the next line of text all by themselves. They create unsightly white space.
- Don’t letter-space upper and lowercase
- Doing anything to cut corners is quickly noticed and drastically effects your grade. Doing things that look like they were difficult and took a lot of time are appreciated, but don’t necessarily bump up your grade.
- Good design should be invisible. Generous leading may look chic, but not if it was done for no reason.
- Symmetry is boring.
- The details in typefaces can be extremely subtle, and teachers may think it’s ridiculous that you don’t notice them.
- Just because a teacher is a successful designer, doesn’t mean they are fun to kick it with. This came as a shock, as I thought that all designers would be tons of fun. Sounds dumb now, but it totally made sense in my head.
- Art school is not for dummies and it is not easy.
- Art degrees can get you in just as lucrative businesses are normal degrees. As long as you’re studying graphic design.
- All nighters aren’t that bad.
- I was an idiot to ever go to school for something I didn’t love.
- Someone has had, and used every good idea you’ve ever thought of, but it’s still fun to try.
- Turning in a project you had fun doing is more fulfilling that getting a good grade on something you hated.
- Sketching with a pencil is better than sketching on a computer.
- The more work you do up until you start the project, the easier and better the project will be.
- Don’t take feedback personally, even if it really was an attack, and the person meant it.
- Be weird. Push it. I didn’t do this enough. Now I’m regretting it