original art

Original art

Make sure your LinkedIn Background image combines your personality with your skill set to help you stand out from the rest! Each touch point is a chance to make a lasting impression on potential employers and business connections shazam-codes.com.

Enhance your LinkedIn profile with a polished, tailored cover photo that aligns with your professional image. Showcase your expertise and set the tone for your profile with a design that speaks to your career achievements.

Yes, the AI-generated cover photos created using Venngage’s tools are copyright-free. You can use them for both personal and commercial purposes without any restrictions on copyright. However, it’s always good practice to ensure that any externally sourced content you include is also cleared for use.

Discover a world of design possibilities with our extensive collection of exclusive templates. Tailor each design effortlessly to echo your unique message and watch your ideas come to life. Say goodbye to the hassle of searching for the perfect cover photo dimensions. We provide every size you need, ensuring your images always look their best without the fuss.

Film graphic

Here is a really ace video about reaching out, and I’ll touch more upon my advice for talking to people in a later post. Just remember: people are busy, so brevity is key! Once you’ve got your foot in the door people will trust you and hire you, but before this you might need to offer your work for free in the form of work experience (alas, the world of creatives). You can also follow them on Instagram (again, if their profile is open and clearly slightly work-related, otherwise it’s probably a bit odd following pics of their dinner).

Motivation and consistency are integral to creative success – no matter if you are a graphic designer, a chef, or a writer. You have to tell yourself to get up, find inspiration when there’s none to be found, and create something new. Julie and Julia is a movie that talks about the struggle to find motivation and consistency. It tells the story of dealing with frustration, self-doubt, inner conviction, and soldering on when there isn’t a whole lot of light at the end of the tunnel.

Additionally, graphic designers are the go-to producers of elements that otherwise would consume a lot of time and money to use. Could you imagine how much would you have to pay a big corporate brand like Coca-Cola to show their actual product on a scene? Now multiply that for all the objects appearing on each movie/series scene. No budget would survive that.

empire of the sun artwork

Here is a really ace video about reaching out, and I’ll touch more upon my advice for talking to people in a later post. Just remember: people are busy, so brevity is key! Once you’ve got your foot in the door people will trust you and hire you, but before this you might need to offer your work for free in the form of work experience (alas, the world of creatives). You can also follow them on Instagram (again, if their profile is open and clearly slightly work-related, otherwise it’s probably a bit odd following pics of their dinner).

Motivation and consistency are integral to creative success – no matter if you are a graphic designer, a chef, or a writer. You have to tell yourself to get up, find inspiration when there’s none to be found, and create something new. Julie and Julia is a movie that talks about the struggle to find motivation and consistency. It tells the story of dealing with frustration, self-doubt, inner conviction, and soldering on when there isn’t a whole lot of light at the end of the tunnel.

Additionally, graphic designers are the go-to producers of elements that otherwise would consume a lot of time and money to use. Could you imagine how much would you have to pay a big corporate brand like Coca-Cola to show their actual product on a scene? Now multiply that for all the objects appearing on each movie/series scene. No budget would survive that.

Empire of the Sun artwork

Vonnegut was a prisoner of war in Dresden when what he called ‘possibly the world’s most beautiful city’ was destroyed by incendiary bombs, and struggled to write his war book for almost 25 years. Kawada was a young photographer working in post-war Hiroshima when he began to take the strange photographs of the scarred, stained ceiling of the A-bomb Dome – the only building to survive the explosion – that he would eventually publish on August 6 1965, 20 years to the day since the atomic bomb was dropped on the city.

The first featured a ruined castle that was blown up intentionally by the Japanese army during the Second World War. The second comprised photographs taken a decade after the atomic bomb exploded in Hiroshima. They showed the stains and flaking ceilings of the Atomic Bomb Dome, the only structure left standing at the heart of the detonation zone. The third part concerned Tokyo during the period of economic recovery: images of advertising, scrap iron, the trampled national flag and emblems of the American Forces such as Lucky Strike and Coca-Cola, all twisted together, their order shuffled again and again. Some appeared as a montage to be presented as a metaphor. I dare not say the meaning of it.

“In 1992 I was commissioned to make work by the Neue galerie in Graz, Austria and the theme was war or “krieg” as it is in German. Graz is on the border with Yugoslavia and there was war in Yugoslavia at the time. I think they were hoping that I would make something to do with the war that was taking place between Croatia and Serbia and Bosnia. I did go to the war; you went to Zagreb and got a UN pass and went in to the war zone. It was very interesting to be taken into the war zone but ultimately I got back to England and I decided – to the annoyance of the gallery – that I was thinking about Austria instead. At the time, the president of Austria, Kurt Waldheim, had been exposed as a member of the SS and had been informing Yugoslavia during the war and the Austrians were very unconcerned about this. I thought I’d much prefer to make work that had the Austrians confronting their Nazi past rather than about the current conflict. I knew about the prison in Barry Island in South Wales where the SS were held before they were sent to Nuremberg for the trial and I started taking a series of photographs in the prison. It was lucky that I did because it was demolished the following year by the MOD. It’s gone now. When I got there, I saw the prisoners had been drawing on the walls. They’re mossy and crumbling but you can see Germanic lettering and Bavarian landscapes and women with 1940s haircuts. They are evocative and powerful given the emotive history. ”

Vintage graphic

4 Lavender Botanicals This lovely set of Lavender botanicals. In particular one these is from an 1852 encyclopedia of useful and ornamental plants. It shows three purple flower stems and leaves. This would be wonderful for labels for bath and body products or great for sachets.

2 Kitchen Vegetables Prints This is a wonderful pair of botanical free printable wall art pictures. One in these in the set set shows some lovely vibrant vegetables, including a bright green cabbage, a turnip and cauliflower. This would look great framed and hanging in a kitchen. This image was scanned from an 1860 antique British botanicals book in my collection.

U.K. based illustrator Toby Rampton creates colorful, graphic illustrations for children and the young-at-heart. His illustrations are expressive with captivating shape and line work reminiscent of famous illustrators of the 50s and 60s while maintaining their own modern twists.

4 Regency Fashion Plates There are several lovely Vintage Print options here for you including a fun French Actress Print! This lovely costume print shows an actress with a regal dark blue dress with lace & fur trims. She wears a blue banner across her shoulder, and her hair (or wig) is piled high on her head, with a pretty pink ostrich feather in her hair.

As a style created purposefully and skilfully by graphic designers and architects, this retro graphic design style is particularly popular amongst graphic designers today. Geometric elements, grids, and playful colors make this a retro graphic design style with a distinctly contemporary appeal.

Tags: No tags

Add a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *