Right-reading (adj): Having the proper orientation (used in printing)

Today is Thursday, March 18, 2010 8:49 pm (U.S. central time).

“It's not whether you win or lose, it's how you place the blame.”
-- Oscar Wilde

Topics


 

On this date on this blog

Some Recent Comments

  • JD: as I said- the eyes have it
  • xensen: As noted in an update to the post above, in response to Jim Hale-Sanders’s arguments in favor of the Sanders...
  • JD: The eyes in all four portraits are consistent. Perhaps they are all correct. Different painters have different...
Tom Christensen
("xensen") . tom [at] rightreading.com
 

Subscribe

rss feed button

Search This Blog



12 Recent Posts

Most posts appear early weekday mornings.


 

Some Popular Pages

1 How to Get a Book Published
2 Persian Ceramics
3 Chinese Jade
4 Creative barcodes from Japan
5 Taoism and the Arts of China
6 The digital divide
7 New graphic design 8 Gutenberg and Asia
9 The Yi jing
10 Glossary of Book Publishing Terms
11 Books for Writers
12 Famous Last Words
13 On Julio Cortazar
14 On Lewis Caroll's Sylvie and Bruno
15 Daybook: September
16 The Making of Masters of Bamboo




Some popular blog posts, 2006-2008

How does one become a book designer?

Several answers are offered in comments to a post on this topic at the Book Design Review. Many people suggest the “traditional” route of design school. The Book Designer offers some good advice (if not the tightest sentence grammatically), saying “barge into as many cafes, design conferences and publishing houses with your portfolio till you meet the right person.”

I didn’t notice anyone speaking up who had followed my route. I started on the editorial side, got into a little design for some folks I knew, meanwhile working my way up to director and editor-in-chief of a publishing company, until I reached the point were I could assign myself design jobs when I wanted to. Now I design museum art books (or assign them to free-lancers if I prefer). Why isn’t crossover between design and editorial more common?

I hope not to sound complacent, since I know this career stuff is hard and doesn’t necessarily work out quite the way one might like, but at the same time it is often the case that if you resist selling out, are persistent, and pursue what interests you, then when a break happens you will be positioned to take advantage of it. Of course, you always have to keep improving your skills. You have to pay your dues.

Anyway, it’s good to do different things, changing course from time to time. Otherwise your brain gets lazy working the ruts of habit, and you stop growing in a creative way — I say that wondering whether I might be treading some ruts myself these days. It could be time to shake things up …

.

Print, e-mail, bookmark, share
  • Print
  • email
  • del.icio.us
  • StumbleUpon
  • Google Bookmarks
  • Facebook
  • Reddit

Write a comment