ocircle Wrote:mirina Wrote:You're an art student, right? Then... why not work freelance? You got an art degree for a reason, didn't you?
Ha! If only that was so easy!
Man, I'll be lucky to earn a total of $1000 from my "skills" in my lifetime.
Study marketing (on your own, I mean; don't pay for it)? There are millions of businesses that use artwork in their logos, commercials, et cetera. Obviously there's work out there, and obviously people are getting paid.
esgrove Wrote:It feels like I woke up in the middle of the night and wrote the first post and forgot about it. This is very similar to my life. I'm an art major currently working as an ALT near Nagoya.
After almost 3 years of this same work, I'm looking forward to not renewing my contract in the spring and starting freelance. I have no idea where to start, but any suggestions people could write would be appreciated. I figure if I make at least 200,000 a month it should be sufficient. How much should I charge?
I work in freelance and I make about $400 a month (I could a lot make more, but I choose to work shorter days because of a nerve disorder). Granted, I write, so it's a little bit of a different animal, but I think the general process is similar.
There are a couple of ways you can go about finding jobs:
(1) There are a lot of sites that post freelance jobs. Most of the time, you submit a copy of your resume, and a portfolio of your work. If they like you're stuff, they'll contact you. A lot of the time, the amount of pay you're expected to receive is already posted, but you can always try to negotiate a better deal. If you're just starting out and have little experience, however, I wouldn't try to do the latter until you have a more substantial resume.
(2) Sell commission work. When you're writing, you submit proposals to editors of publications to see if they're interested in publishing your piece, but I'm not exactly sure how this works with art. Perhaps you can submit work to art galleries?
(3) Brush up on your marketing skills. It sucks, but 90% of making it as a freelancer is about marketing, finding jobs and getting your name out there. The remaining 10% is doing the actual work. Even if your artwork isn't fantastic, if you are skilled at marketing yourself, you'll be way more successful than someone with amazing artwork, but whom has poor marketing skills.
Edited: 2010-01-18, 1:58 pm