Freelance illustrators in London (the businesss of it all)
-
@sigross ah okay, is that if you earn £1000 just once that you need to register self employed or if you earn something like that each month?
I find all the self employed stuff on the HMRC website so confusing! -
@sigross Thank you. I will look into it and mybe join as well. I need someone to sit down next to me and advise me as if i were a kid with all this stuff. Like a tutorial of sorts because i never was selfemployed and am confused by all that. Can i ask how much is an accountant? and how do you do your books? do you just keep all receipts from prints you sell and from contracts and so on or things you buy for the usiness and so on? And just pass them to the accountant?
I am at the moment trying to get my nino but it#s a pain because they keep messing up my name on bills and proof of address etc. It#ll sort itself out, just takes time
I would love to meet as well. Will look into joining that community. Thank you so much
-
@irina Yes I have trouble with all the admin stuff and it took me ages to get my head around it all. I just want to draw and paint and take pictures! Admin is like doing chores. It's so boring.
My accountant is pretty good and he saves me time and money. Costs £510 to do my taxes. For my books I have income, expenses and non-business. I just keep all my receipts in a box and divide them at the end of the year into Business and Non-business. I've started using adobe scan to make quick PDF's so I have less paper in boxes. You're meant to keep records of transactions for 5 years. Just in case the tax man audits you (check all your accounts from previous years). I'm thinking of using quickbooks for next year as that looks like decent software for keeping things in order. At the moment I just make a simple spreadsheet (date, what it is, Money in, money out) and hand that over to my accountant. Then pay the tax man and cry. But the upside is you don't have to answer to anyone but yourself.
This is the next Be Smart About Art event: Building a versatile and multi-faceted creative enterprise: A discussion between gallerist Soo Turner and Susan J Mumford
I'm on insta and twitter @sigross if you want to message me on there about meeting up.
-
@hannahmccaffery It's once you have reached £1000 then you have to declare your earnings by registering self-employed. Just to keep the maths simple. If say you were earning £1000 a month so you got £12000 a year from that. Next year you would pay tax on £150 (£12000-£11850 (your income tax allowance)). Which would be £30 (at 20% base tax rate).
It gets more complicated when you include expenses too or earn over £34,500. Quite often though expenses can get higher than your earnings so then you don't pay taxes and even can get a rebate (Money back off the tax man).
-
@sigross Thank you. It is so confusing
are you working freelance fulltime or do you also have income from a regular job?
i#m not sure what to do when or if i will have commissions from outside the UK or what happens if i sell prints online, or go to art fairs or receive royalties from a book i do and so on.
also, do you think joinging SCWI is important and helpful/worth it?
-
@irina I've always worked freelance doing creative stuff. It's only recently I'm putting all my effort into improving my skills in illustration. Most of my income comes from editorial photos/videos online, in mags and newspapers. Now I just want to make art and just use photography for research. I think it's worth the risk. Never know until you try! Working in newspapers is such a burnout industry as everything has to be published so quickly, being 24/7, just not for me anymore.
One of the SVS courses on how to make money in illustration made me think. I considered going into editorial illustration but now I'm thinking this would just be more of the same relentless short turnarounds. So it's worth considering the lifestyle, process and how long it takes you to make something. So go to art fairs and see how they work. Consider how to get your work to market. If you get that book I suggested from The Printspace it tells you exactly how to sell prints online and social media approaches (its free). Also the SVS courses on how the industry works were invaluable to me.
I don't know about SCWI, not something i'm familiar with. Maybe someone else is a member who knows about them.
-
Yeah, i got the book. But it doesn~t offer that much information apart from things that we already know. There are some good things on market but that~s about it. I don~t know *sorry for my lack of proper punctuation, i#m on a bizarre keyboard..
what i think i need the most help with is finding an actual human being who can show me or answer questions on how to receive the monez i ask for from different things. Like for example if i receive money from royalties on a book i did in Romania every 6 months. Do i have to tax them here or in Romania? And if i go to a fair, do i need a permit to sell stuff? if i organize workshops or meetings where i ask for money for attendence do i need a permit for that? can i organize one in my house or in my garden? If i sell prints online do i only register as a sole trader after i reach 1000 pounds etc. If i make videos online that make money or bring in a monthly fee, i just add all these incomestreams at the end of the year? Or if i make patterns and trz to generate a passive income like this. How do i write a tax form etc etc etc Many questions that are easier to be talked about with a person. Over the phone with various organisations from companies to council to whatever they seem to have so little patience and benevolence ..
It/s all things i/ve never dealt with
and
-
Have you seen any illustrators on social media that you think are in the position you want to be in earning wise? Do they attend fairs etc? If so, then you can always send them a message asking for their advice and i'm sure they'd be happy to help and point you in the right direction.
It might also be worth looking into seeing a financial advisor if you have the funds, so they can try and explain the ins and outs of it all! Especially if you'll be receiving money from Romania. -
@irina Tax wise it depends where you are registered to pay tax. For example, I get paid in dollars from two US agents so I have to fill out a US Tax exemption W8-BEN form and they register it with the IRS so I don't get a US tax bill. Earning internationally doesn't mean you have to pay tax in that country.
If you want to sell patterns through something like an picture/stock agent then I think you have to register self-employed before you've earned any money. If you are doing workshops then you will probably need public liability insurance just in case anyone gets injured.
All these things are classed as income on a tax form. Just add them all together minus expenses.
-
Just to add that I registered self-employed before I had any money coming in, as I got a grant to setup my business and got a laptop with the funding and a business bank account to put my earnings into. Worth looking into getting funding off arts organisations or sponsorship.