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Tag your #Inktober2018 works

01 Oct 2018

Did you do the Inktober Challenge during 2017? As we did last year, we created a special index in "Discover Artists" to showcase all the inktober works from our users.

To be shown there, just upload your inktober works to your portfolio website, go to "Edit" on each picture and tag it with the "inktober2018" (no need to put #) tag in "Tags".

Still don't know what Inktober is all about? Well, illustrator Jake Parker started this challenge on 2009, and now artists all over the world do and share one ink drawing a day the entire month of october, following a new list of themes proposed each year.

Here's the list for this year, and we hope to see your works featured in Discover Artists!

Tag your #Inktober2018 works

Optional gallery titles in galleries index

09 Jul 2018

The feature we are bringing today is just a small detail, but was highly requested from a lot of users. Until now, if you were showing the galleries index in your website's home page, the gallery titles were showed in the index. We do this to improve navigation and search engine optmization on your site.

But sometimes, specially in mobile devices, having long gallery titles could be visually annoying. You could always write some custom CSS code to hide it, but we decided to make things even easier. You can now enable or disable the "Show gallery titles in galleries index" option in "Appearance" -> "General" -> "Title and Description".

Optional gallery titles in galleries index

For any doubt, question, suggestion or problem, please contact us at uservoice or write us at [email protected].

Summer Sales: -30% on first year of your PRO Plan

02 Jul 2018

As it is traditional in Drawfolio during the summer months, we are launching the thing we like the most: discounts!

From this day to next September, you can have a 30% discount on your first year of PRO Plan, to make it more easy for you to have a great portfolio website that will get you opportunities and new customers.

You don't need to do anything special: the first year of all PRO plans will just cost 53,40$ instead of 77$.

Summer Sales: -30% on first year of your PRO Plan

Interview with illustrators: David de Ramón

21 Jun 2018

Keeping on with our interview series, we are bringing you today one of the most outstanding illustrators in Spain: David de Ramón. As in our last interview, we met David after his talk on the last edition of Ilustrasal. David has lots of experience illustrating for publicity, publishing, press, magazines, festivals, or album covers. And even more, he works in all this fields keeping a very unique and personal style. We talked with him about this and more stuff, we hope you enjoy the interview!

Interview with illustrators: David de Ramón

Tell us a bit about yourself: how did you end in the illustration and design world?

Well, I think that it was more about "beginning" and "keeping in", because I didn't end in that world: it's the only thing I'ever done professionally!

I always wanted to work on illustration. I loved reading comics, and I always admired the artist's techniques. The more "pictorial" they were, the more I admired them (Bilal, Kent Williams, Sienkiewicz).

I used to decide which comic, book, magazine, or music albums to buy just watching their covers. I have bought some music albums from bands which I wasn't interested at all, but had beautiful cover art. Cover art had the ability to make me dream of the story I was about to read or the music I was about to listen to, they allowed me to enjoy the experience even before opening the product itself.

That kind of fascination and the joy of drawing always came hand by hand, and working in illustration was something very natural to me.

How is your process? Do you mix analog and digital tools?

My process always begins in my head, even before getting to pencil and paper. I almost never begin doodling without a clear idea of what I would like to do. Mine is a bit more meditated process, and then I try to make things happen on the sketchbook: which composition can be more interesting, how can I make things as simple as possible, etc.

When I have made a sketch that I think may work, I sometimes do a more detailed drawing of it (if I have to show the idea to clients), or rather scan it and begin digital painting over it.

Sometimes, that early stage can be a mixture of traditional and digital: I scan that early sketches, change dimensions and composition in the computer, print it and use that as basis for a new drawing.

When the pencil and paper stage is done, the rest of the work is entirely digital. All color work is digital, although I try not to show it much. I like things to seem "hand-made" even in digital illustration. That's why my technique is very painting-like, and I try to avoid filters, gradients or any tool that makes the result feel less natural.

Interview with illustrators: David de Ramón

You work mainly for advertising and publishing. How are these worlds? What qualities does a client and project need for you to feel comfortable and motivated?

Every project is different. The main variables at play are budget, creative freedom, and time.

In advertising, budgets are bigger, as our work is useful for obvious commercial purpouses. We need to make images to attract people to products or brands. Art Direction is usually more strict, and a lot of people are deciding on the creative side of the agency and the client. Deadlines are way more tighter, because all the filters your work has to go through.

In editorial and publishing work we have more creative freedom, because our image is "opinion", not just a simple translation of text to images. Budgets are lower, but deadlines are not that tighter, except in newspapers, where things are even more fast than in advertising. In my experience, the more comfortable deadlines in the publishing world are in books, somewhat less in magazines, and a lot less comfortable in paper press.

That being said, everything can happen: corporative magazines with a very clear line of things they need, or advertising campaigns that seek your way of seeing things, and give you total creative freedom (but few are like that!).

But money-wise, things are always like that. It's more difficult to get bigger budgets on editorial work that in advertising, at least in Spain. Editing firms abroad usually have reasonable budgets.

To feel motivated with a project, I just need to let be free to work most of the times. I need the client to understand my work and not micro-manage me. The best projects are the ones where I work knowing the client really trusts me.

Do you think it's important for an artist to find a well-defined and unique style, or it's better to be versatile? Is it possible to find an equilibrium between these two?

There are people who enjoy being versatile and fitting in any kind of project. There's no flawless approach to this work, but my personal attitude is totally opposed to that. I try to feed my own creative, artistic needs through my work, so having my own style (or rather, my way of doing and thiking) is key.

It's not just a job to me. I try to get personally fulfilled with what I do, aside from the communication or commercial goals of the project. Seeing things this way, I think it's inevitable to have that "well-defined" style. It's something that comes naturally, bit by bit.

Interview with illustrators: David de Ramón

Where do you find inspiration for your work, and how do you melt your sources of inspiration to create your own way of art?

I get influenced by everything surrounding me. Personal relationships, movies, books, travels. And, of course, other artists, illustrators, photographers, etc.

I'm very fond for images and events from the first half of the 20th century. It's a wonderful time, very active and kind of innocent in posters, travel photography or spectacles. But, as I said before, everything we live sneaks into what we do.

And last, but not least: any advice for aspiring illustrators just starting up their careers?

There's always a lot to learn, no matter if you are beginning or you've been years into this profession. If you are passionate about what you do, you'll have no problem to spend all the time needed, and it's going to be a lot of time! You only improve by work and curiosity.

You've got to be constantly learning from masters and manage that frustation when you think you'll never be that good. You've got to transform that frustation into something positive that makes you want to improve.

Awards or followers are worthless if we are not fulfilled with what we do. When we enjoy our work, is when we begin to do it right.

Thanks a lot, David!

Privacy Policy for your website

11 Jun 2018

As you'll know after lots of email, the new European General Data Protection Regulation became mandatory a few days ago. Lots of our users did ask us if they had to do something about that on their portfolio websites. Although we are not legal experts, we are writing this blog to help you get informed about GDPR:

If you have a Drawfolio free acount, no action at all is required. In the regular, free portfolio websites at Drawfolio no personal data from visitors is captured. We do use cookies to analyse traffic and visits, but that is covered by our own privacy policy.

If you are subscribed to PRO Plan, but you didn't enable the contact form in your portfolio website, no action is required, as you are in the same situation described above.

If you are subscribed to PRO Plan and enabled the contact form in your site, then you'll notice we made some changes to comply with regulation. To contact with you through the form, people now have to enable this checkbox accepting your privacy policy.

Privacy Policy for your website

And where can you edit the privacy policy for your site?. You'll see now a new item in the left menu of Drawfolio administration page: "Terms and Privacy". You can edit your privacy policy there. As you'll see, we already pregenerated one in spanish for you, and are currently working in an english version of it. It'll come soon!

Privacy Policy for your website

For any doubt, question, suggestion or problem, please contact us at uservoice or write us at [email protected].

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