“i am a full-time student working hard to get my degree in design and pursue a career in animation, graphic design, or illustration.”

27. Astrophysicist, writer, artist. Michigan. Business inquiries: kaijunobiz@gmail.com
I am disgusted and I am offended and I am a lil bit drunk
“i am a full-time student working hard to get my degree in design and pursue a career in animation, graphic design, or illustration.”

i finished him

update: my portfolio professor wanted him in a series



i think i’ve done some good work today
I hope you’re never hired anywhere
I hope you get the job of your fuckin dreams.
Anonymous asked:
Oh yeah! I do mainly local stuff these days, a few graphics for web pages or local TV shows (mostly the local weather and their social media accounts). I design the shirts for the physics department. But one time, many moons ago, I did poster designs for Rooster Teeth. Mainly just as a community member and I made them for free but some of them got recognition on the website even
Some of it’s posted on my blog at tagged/doodles
This is a fantastic logo.
wow that rly is
This is the best piece of graphic design I’ve ever seen.
About 90% of my accomplishments were accomplished only out of pure spite. And people’s lives get about 900% more interesting and ridiculous when you accomplish things out of spite. Spite led me to do graphic design for a (albeit local) TV show, help create a robotics club in highschool that went to nationals the very next year, be the youngest person to be qualified to host my local planetarium, and help host a politician exhibition with our mayor, a senator, and a representative of our state. I did all of that literally only because people told me I couldn’t.
Anonymous asked:
picsart! it’s been my go to photo editing app for years. it’s simple enough for beginners just adding filters and stuff and advanced enough for graphic design. its free and wonderful
Byrne’s Euclid—Oliver Byrne, a 19th century engineer, designed this version of Euclid’s Elements, replacing symbols and letters with colored shapes and lines. Not only is it a beautiful feat of graphic design, it also pushes the boundaries of algebraic conventions, revealing the dependence of modern mathematical languages on letters as constructs, rather than necessities.
