HELP NEEDED CHOOSING BEST PORTFOLIO LAYOUT
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@Neha-Rawat oh great point Neha! It makes the portfolio feel less rounded as well seeing so many similar images right at the top
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@Kevin-Treaccar @NessIllustration @Melissa-Bailey-0 @ambria @Matthew-Oberdier @idid @Neha-Rawat @Jeremy-Ross @Jeremy-Ross @carlianne Thank you so much for the input everyone. You've sold me with Option 1. It's an oldie but definitely a goodie. Again, thank you!
Here's my portfolio https://nyrrylcadiz.com/
it's not finished. there's still a lot of this to arrange and buttons to link. Maybe it will be ready by next week.
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@idid @Neha-Rawat @carlianne Oh no, my current gallery is no where final or intentional. the only reason the Gingerbread illustrations are on top is because I uploaded them first completely by chance. I prefer showing my strongest piece first (which is my mermaid and other personal work imo). The gingerbread pieces will probably be placed in the center as filler. Tho I agree that limiting the number of illustrations per project will lessen the redundancy. I'll keep that in mind. Thank you!
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@Nyrryl-Cadiz I am also a fan of option 1 . The first layout where you get a quick view of all of your beautiful would be more impactful to art directors I think.
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@K-Flagg @christaelrod thank you!
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@ambria personally I agree, #2 feels more clean. If you could change option 1 up a bit, bigger pictures, more spacing, and maybe having project title separations as you scroll down you could convince me.
another option. what if your second and third pictures for option 2 were the home page. I think it would be the best solution. you show a lot of your work from the start, but it is still clearly organized, and interested people could learn more about the projects they like without having to scroll through everything... good luck
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I'm late to the party. I like version 1 as well. I agree with the statement to choose the best pieces from a project and only show those in the initial page since you have a projects page where the rest could be seen.
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hello, everyone! so I've finalized my website.
Here's the link https://nyrrylcadiz.com/home
@R-Fey-Realme @burvantill Thank you so much for the input guys!!!!
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@Nyrryl-Cadiz Not sure if it's just me, but the art styles don't seem that different. If you were going to break it up I would do "comics" and "illustration" at most, but I don't know that you have to
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@carlianne @Nyrryl-Cadiz I agree.
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@carlianne oh i totally agree. the only difference between Style 1 and 2 is the outline in my opinion. But in my experience, ADs are so specific that they can drop you in the running if you donât have the specific look theyâre going for. I want to get into MG so I need to mimic that mainstream look a bit which means adding linework despite practically drawing the same still.
I had a potential Publisher client before who showed me one of my old pieces with outlines. I didnât know that they wanted the drawing style but not necessarily the line work. I shouldâve asked more questions but I just went with the piece they showed me. I gave them a sample with line work and needless to say, I did not get the job.
If I had separated the 2 styles then they couldâve easily said âWe want the Style 1â or âWe want style 2.â We couldâve avoided a huge misunderstanding. I donât want to repeat that again.
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@Nyrryl-Cadiz thatâs very interesting, did they say that was the reason why they dropped you?
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@carlianne yup, it was something like my sample not matching the style they were expecting. In hindsight, i shouldâve asked for more clarification when they pointed out the said pieces from my portfolio. I shouldâve asked what they specifically liked about that piece instead of assuming they wanted the exact same style.
They also pointed out pieces without outlines. I was confused back then but looking back at it now, i kinda understand what they meant.